Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Let the Sun Shine In

The problem is the legal decision to keep the public’s business secret.

Ted S. McGregor Jr.

The Spokane Police Department is stuck in a ditch of bad public relations. A series of high-profile cases from Otto Zehm to Shonto Pete has the Spokane taxpaying public wondering how widespread the problem is. Are we stuck with a broken department that uses the code of silence to fend off real reform, or do we have just a few bad apples who get the punishment they deserve?

We, the media, really can’t answer that basic question. I know we have a lot of dedicated, brave officers here, but suspicion persists because the Internal Affairs reports on unsustained citizen complaints that would help us understand are kept secret.

That was the key finding of our four-month-long investigation published July 1, “Strong Arm of the Law.” Yes, the SPD’s PR problem has to do with cases of excessive force, but those are par for the course in law enforcement. It’s a tough job — really, the toughest — and every city deals with its share of such cases. The public judges how you deal with them when they inevitably happen — and how you prevent them from happening again.

In Spokane, a big part of the problem is the legal decision to keep the public’s business secret. It’s a practice unique to the City of Spokane, as law enforcement agencies all over the state, including Spokane County, make their IA reports (with appropriate redactions for privacy) available to the public.

Obviously we want our police to succeed and have the community’s trust and admiration, but why should one department be protected by a level of secrecy no other public employees enjoy? More openness will foster trust. Such secrecy also threatens the ombudsman’s credibility. How will we know if he is effective if no independent person can review the files he sees? Will the mayor ask to review every IA file? That would help, but Mary Verner could also just change the policy and release redacted versions of all IA reports.

Society functions best when the public trusts its institutions. We need that relationship of trust to be strong in the newspaper business, too, and we take it very seriously. We publish hundreds of thousands of words every week; we know we are human, and that mistakes are inevitable.

That’s why we own up to them, correct them and try to do better next time. We do this all as transparently as possible. Try it, Spokane Police. It might just agree with you.

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I found out the first of July that my room-mate had cleaned me out of my jewelry and family antiques over the past 10 months. I called crime check and got a case number and I have yet to hear from a police officer. I ended up finding some of my stuff at a pawn shop and called 911 and they didn´t want to send an officer out but upon my insistence they finally did. I had to call the front desk to find out who was assigned to the case and then I called and left a message for that dective to call me back. That was Monday and it is now Friday night and still no response. I gave them the name and address of the person who took my stuff but basically I was told they wouldn´t do anything.


It is no wonder that the Spokane Police Department has such a bad reputation and the Police Chief covers up for her officers. This is the second time I have had dealing with the Spokane Police Department and it hasn´t changed over the past 35 years.


Wake up Spokane. Jul 30, 2010 | Reply to this comment

 

 
 
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