City Signs Off On Police Race Bias Suit

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Conan71:
Our un-elected mayor has signed off on the suit, and by all accounts, Louis Bullock has made out like a bandit again with taxpayer money:

"U.S. Senior District Judge Terence Kern approved the settlement in a long-standing racial-discrimination lawsuit against the city of Tulsa.

Mayoral Chief of Staff Terry Simonson, acting as mayor pro tem while Mayor Dewey Bartlett is in Washington, D.C., signed the settlement document on behalf of the city.
The plaintiffs previously withdrew their support for a final settlement in the case because they claimed Bartlett refused to sign the document.

Plaintiffs' attorney Louis Bullock had written in a March 17 pleading that the plaintiffs, black Tulsa police officers, had settled their remaining differences with the city and agreed "that the time has come for this lawsuit to - at long last - come to a conclusion."

The settlement agreement is still under seal, although news reports have said it includes elements such as term limits on specialty assignments within the Tulsa Police Department and the possible installation of cameras in squad cars.

Until these latest developments, it appeared that the only real drama remaining in the often-acrimonious, 16-year-old lawsuit was the Fraternal Order of Police's lack of endorsement of the deal.

The FOP - an intervening party in the lawsuit - has concerns including that the settlement would violate its state arbitration rights as well as its collective-bargaining agreement with the city, according to a document filed by the city.

However, Kern today overruled the protest filed by the FOP.




Major events in the case
Jan. 14, 1994: Then-officer Roy Johnson files a racial discrimination lawsuit.

March 17, 1998: Case granted class-action status.

April 1, 2002: Proposed consent decree filed under seal.

April 5, 2002: Court grants preliminary approval of the settlement.

Aug. 16, 2002: Court rejects the pact.

Sept. 10, 2002: Fraternal order of Police is permitted to intervene.

Dec. 3, 2002: New consent decree between plaintiffs and city filed without FOP’s approval.

May 12, 2003: Court accepts latest decree over FOP’s objections.

Jan. 9, 2009: All remaining disputed issues referred to settlement conferences for final resolution.

Jan. 12, 2010: City asks that the consent decree be terminated.

March 10, 2010: Plaintiffs sign final settlement agreement with the city. The FOP does not sign the document, which is under seal and not yet approved.

May 12, 2010: Plaintiffs withdraw support for the agreement."

Read more from this Tulsa World article at http://www.tulsaworld.com/news/article.aspx?subjectid=14&articleid=20100519_14_0_hrimgs400457

tulsa_fan:
Funny, he can sign off on such a big thing, but when the mayor renigged on what Simonson offered at the negotiations table with the police, his answer was "I'm not responsible for what one of my staff members said" . . . the hypocrisy never ends.  And you are right, the only one that won in this deal was Bullock.    Ask Roy Johnson next time you are at Reasor's how it worked for him?  I still shake my head in awe that the one that started this entire ordeal, was fired for violating civil rights of whites . . . and there was no doubt he did that, over and over again.

I hope the specialty unit deal isn't as it's rumored.  What a waste to lose someone like Sgt. Huff in homicide.  I guess maybe they can hire him as a consultant or something. 

Hoss:
All of a sudden Mayor KT doesn't look so bad...

patric:
The court-ordered dash cameras are finally being installed, per Tulsa World.
http://www.tulsaworld.com/news/article.aspx?subjectid=11&articleid=20110226_14_A1_CUTLIN949833

Interesting thing is, although they are court-ordered, the officers can turn on and off the recording at will.
...sort of like someone on house arrest being able to slip on and off their ankle bracelet.   Otherwise, the units can record 24/7 for days on end if they are allowed to.

"Live video streaming capabilities are built in to the Arbitrator 360° as an additional safety feature. Police dispatchers can now monitor what’s happening in each patrol car from headquarters.  If an officer is in trouble, such as an altercation during a traffic stop, the dispatcher can remotely zoom the camera for a better picture, or change the frames-per-second bit rate for more details."

"Once the record button is pressed, either manually or through a designated trigger, the 90 seconds of video preceding it are automatically included to ensure all evidence is captured. Agencies can activate up to 16 triggers to start the recording, such as when the speedometer hits a certain speed, the sirens turn on, car doors open or impact is detected. " With 191 hours of video recording time they could also run continuously.

Now the big question could be "Are the recordings public record?" or will they be treated like OHP video where DPS lobbied the legislature to exempt them from the Open Records Act?  (i.e., is it going to take a "Trooper Martin"-like episode to get video released?)

cynical:
Good question.  If dash camera video recordings are considered "law enforcement records," as I believe they are, they are generally exempt from the Open Records Act unless a court orders them released.  Law enforcement investigative materials are not usually released. 


Quote from: patric on February 26, 2011, 11:21:05 am

The court-ordered dash cameras are finally being installed, per Tulsa World.
http://www.tulsaworld.com/news/article.aspx?subjectid=11&articleid=20110226_14_A1_CUTLIN949833

Interesting thing is, although they are court-ordered, the officers can turn on and off the recording at will.
...sort of like someone on house arrest being able to slip on and off their ankle bracelet.   Otherwise, the units can record 24/7 for days on end if they are allowed to.

"Live video streaming capabilities are built in to the Arbitrator 360° as an additional safety feature. Police dispatchers can now monitor what’s happening in each patrol car from headquarters.  If an officer is in trouble, such as an altercation during a traffic stop, the dispatcher can remotely zoom the camera for a better picture, or change the frames-per-second bit rate for more details."

"Once the record button is pressed, either manually or through a designated trigger, the 90 seconds of video preceding it are automatically included to ensure all evidence is captured. Agencies can activate up to 16 triggers to start the recording, such as when the speedometer hits a certain speed, the sirens turn on, car doors open or impact is detected. " With 191 hours of video recording time they could also run continuously.

Now the big question could be "Are the recordings public record?" or will they be treated like OHP video where DPS lobbied the legislature to exempt them from the Open Records Act?  (i.e., is it going to take a "Trooper Martin"-like episode to get video released?)

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