SECTION: Part A; Page 16; Metro Desk
LENGTH: 303 words
HEADLINE: THE RAMPART SCANDAL;
JUDGE REFUSES TO RESTRICT RAMPART OFFICERS
BYLINE: DAVID ROSENZWEIG, TIMES STAFF WRITER
BODY:
A federal judge refused late Tuesday to issue a temporary restraining order
that would have barred police from contacts with young male Latinos in the
Rampart area who have been identified as suspected
gang members and who might be illegal immigrants.
U.S. District Judge Margaret M. Morrow said the requested order was too broad
and would have impeded the current investigation into alleged misconduct by
officers in the Rampart Division's anti-gang unit.
The emergency order was sought by attorneys Gregory A. Yates and Dana B.
Taschner in connection with a civil rights suit they filed on behalf of four
Latinos. The four said they were targeted for deportation by the Rampart
CRASH--or anti-gang--unit to prevent them from testifying about police
misconduct.
Under a 21-year-old department policy, Los Angeles police officers
"shall not initiate police action with the objective of discovering the alien
status of a person." The policy, established by former Chief Daryl F. Gates, was intended to
overcome the reluctance of illegal immigrants to report crimes and testify as
witnesses.
In their request for a temporary restraining order, Yates and Taschner cited a
Los Angeles Times report last week that members of the Rampart Division
anti-gang squad
systematically circumvented the policy by colluding with a little-known unit of
the Immigration and Naturalization Service.
But Deputy City Atty. Kim R. Westhoff told the judge on Tuesday that there is
no evidence proving that the allegations are true. Gates' policy, she assured
the judge, is still in effect.
Morrow also rejected the plaintiffs' demand for a list of all young male
Latinos who were questioned by Rampart CRASH officers and whose names were
turned over to the INS. That request, she said, also was overly broad and
vague.