img

LAPD to send unarmed officials to respond to 'non-criminal' 911 calls

President of the Los Angeles Police Protective League Craig Lally said officers are often sent to respond to too many calls that may be better suited for unarmed service providers.

ADVERTISEMENT

President of the Los Angeles Police Protective League Craig Lally said officers are often sent to respond to too many calls that may be better suited for unarmed service providers.

Image
Ari Hoffman Seattle WA
ADVERTISEMENT
The union for Los Angeles Police Department officers has released a list of calls for service that it believes can be handled by unarmed responders.

President of the Los Angeles Police Protective League Craig Lally said officers are often sent to respond to too many calls that may be better suited for unarmed service providers and that the union has been working with the City of Los Angeles to develop the list.



Union reps say this will help with the department’s “chronic understaffing” and could ease concerns from the public regarding armed officers responding all calls for service.

Other cities have attempted similar strategies with mixed results. In 2020, while the Seattle City Council was voting to defund the police in the wake of the death of George Floyd and allocate money to social workers, a social worker was stabbed to death by a homeless client at a social services agency.

That same year, San Francisco Mayor London Breed announced that non-criminal calls would be handled by “trained, unarmed professionals,” rather than armed police officers modeled after a similar program that’s already been operating in Eugene, Oregon.

Cities such as San Francisco and Seattle have faced record crime since enacting the practice.

The union has agreed to work with the city and the department to develop protocols if an armed response becomes necessary after the first unarmed response has already been deployed.

A date has not yet been announced of when armed officers would stop responding to these calls, or which unarmed responders would be responding to the calls in the future.

The union is scheduled to hold a press conference to discuss the list and next steps Wednesday at 11:30 am at the union headquarters in Westlake. According to KTLA, the list includes:

1. Non-criminal and/or non-violent homeless and quality of life-related calls;
2. Non-criminal mental health calls;
3. Non-violent juvenile disturbance or juveniles beyond parental control calls; (won’t go to school);
4. Calls to schools unless the school administration is initiating a call for an emergency police response or making a mandatory reporting notification;
5. Public Health Order violations;
6. Non-violent calls for service at City parks;
7. Under the influence calls (alcohol and/or drugs) where there is no other crime in progress;
8. Welfare Check – WELCK; • Non-Criminal; • Courtesy request from Drs/Hospitals;
9. Non-Fatal Vehicle Accidents; • Non-DUI/Non-Criminal; Property damage only (including City property), Verbal disputes involving non-injury traffic collisions, refusing to share ID at traffic collisions;
10. Parking violations;
11. Driveway tow;
12. Abandoned vehicles;
13. Person dumping trash;
14. Vicious and dangerous dog complaints where no attack is in progress;
15. Calls for service for loud noise, loud music, or ‘party’ calls that are anonymous or have no victim;
16. Landlord/Tenant Disputes;
17. Loitering/Trespassing With No Indication Of Danger;
18. Code 30 Alarm Response (except 211 silent alarm);
19. Syringe Disposal;
20. DOT Stand-By;
21. Homeless Encampment Clean-Ups, unless officers are requested or prescheduled;
22. Panhandling;
23. Illegal Vending;
24. Illegal Gambling;
25. Fireworks;
26. Defecating/Urinating In Public;
27. Drinking in Public;
28. Suspicious circs-possible dead body, where no indication of foul play.
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

Join and support independent free thinkers!

We’re independent and can’t be cancelled. The establishment media is increasingly dedicated to divisive cancel culture, corporate wokeism, and political correctness, all while covering up corruption from the corridors of power. The need for fact-based journalism and thoughtful analysis has never been greater. When you support The Post Millennial, you support freedom of the press at a time when it's under direct attack. Join the ranks of independent, free thinkers by supporting us today for as little as $1.

Support The Post Millennial

Remind me next month

To find out what personal data we collect and how we use it, please visit our Privacy Policy

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
By signing up you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy
ADVERTISEMENT
© 2024 The Post Millennial, Privacy Policy | Do Not Sell My Personal Information