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    1. Command/HQ
    2. Corrections

    Prison Plan Forces LAPD to Shift Officers

    Aug. 20, 2013
    The department will spend an estimated $18 million on the reassigned officers in the current fiscal year.
    AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli, File
    Inmates are housed in three tier bunks, in what was once a multi-purpose recreation room, at the Deuel Vocational Institute in Tracy, Calif.
    Inmates are housed in three tier bunks, in what was once a multi-purpose recreation room, at the Deuel Vocational Institute in Tracy, Calif.

    The state's controversial push to relieve severe prison overcrowding has resulted in the Los Angeles Police Department taking dozens of officers away from regular patrol duties to monitor ex-convicts, according to a department report.

    Since state officials implemented the prison measures in late 2011, the LAPD has had 160 to 170 officers assigned full time to units responsible for keeping tabs on thousands of felons who are living in Los Angeles after their release from prison. Prior to the new rules going into effect, the felons would have been supervised by state parole officers.

    The report, which was requested by the City Council's Public Safety Committee and is scheduled to be discussed by the Police Commission on Tuesday, estimated that the department will spend about $18 million of its payroll and equipment budget on those officers in the current fiscal year.

    The tally brings into sharp focus the considerable added strain that the state's so-called prison realignment plan has had on the LAPD, which generally is considered to have too few officers to adequately patrol the sprawling city.

    Under the terms of realignment, people convicted of less serious felonies -- generally speaking those that were nonviolent and did not have a sexual component -- are sentenced to county jail facilities instead of state prisons. Beyond this, however, a second component of the law called for low-level offenders serving time in state prisons to be released at the end of their sentences into the supervision of county probation officers instead of state parole officers.

    Nearly 5,400 of those ex-convicts are living in Los Angeles, according to the report. From the outset of the realignment law, LAPD officials warned that the county's Probation Department did not have nearly enough staff to ensure that such a large population of former prisoners was adhering to the terms of their probation.

    "They had realignment thrust on them ... and have struggled to build up the capacity to provide effective supervision," LAPD Assistant Chief Michel Moore said of the county's Probation Department.

    To close the gap, the LAPD formed compliance teams at each of its 21 stations, as well as a larger citywide unit. The teams rate the risk posed by felons living in their area and identify the ones who they believe are most likely to commit new crimes. Officers make unannounced visits to those felons' homes to ensure that they are actually living there and to check for weapons, drugs and other contraband.

    Probation Department officials could not be reached late Monday for comment.

    When the department set up the teams, police officials said their requests for financial help from the county had gone unheeded. Eventually, the LAPD received $2.2 million in county funds and expects a similar amount for the current fiscal year, Moore said.

    The knowledge that a team of LAPD officers could show up is an important deterrent against felons committing new crimes or violating their probation, Moore said. Without the checks, he believes, crime rates in the city would probably be higher.

    Even with the compliance checks, the LAPD has arrested about 3,100 of the felons -- 57% of the total in Los Angeles -- either on suspicion of committing new crimes or for probation violations, the report said.

    Moore said he was hopeful that in the coming year the county Probation Department would increase the number of its officers who are assigned to work with the LAPD teams. Currently, five probation officers are embedded with the LAPD, but the department has asked for about 20.

    Copyright 2013 - Los Angeles Times

    McClatchy-Tribune News Service

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