Welcome Guest [Log In] [Register]
Add Reply
Overtime case turned over to ...; SBI
Topic Started: Oct 1 2009, 04:22 PM (1,670 Views)
~J~ is in Wonderland
Member Avatar
~J~ is in Wonderland

http://www.bullcityrising.com/2009/10/08-secondary-employment-report-raises-more-worries.html

October 26, 2009

'08 Secondary Employment report raises more worries on Lopez's leadership in OT scandal

Update: This story has been reposted, modified slightly from its original form. Details here.

BCR may take the weekends off, but we expect our readers don't -- which means you probably already know that there were more follow-up stories on the Durham P.D. overtime scandal on Friday night and Saturday morning than you could shake a stick at.

Chief The new twists in the case came after the City released a 2008 report that was only briefly mentioned in the recently-released audit of overtime excesses alleged on the part of the department's Secondary Employment Coordinator (SEC), Alesha Robinson-Taylor. Robinson-Taylor was fired after the report's belief, while deputy chief BJ Council -- whose role as the OT approver came under a great deal of scrutiny -- unceremoniously left the department with early retirement.

(Robinson-Taylor was placed into the SEC role in summer 2008, amidst this earlier investigation into secondary employment; according to the N&O, she served as the back-up SEC coordinator at the time of the 2008 report.)

The 2008 report raises a number of new questions, including concerns over favoritism and possible racial bias in off-duty work assignments that led to the restructuring and full-time posting for the SEC role in the first place.

But the biggest question that arises in this observer's mind after reviewing the 2008 SEC report -- which made its way into the public eye on a Friday after multiple media requests -- comes down to the leadership Chief Lopez did, or should have, provided on the matter when the issue of questionable overtime claims arose in the spring.

Lopez was aware of the excessive overtime reports dating back to April of this year, but didn't take any action on the matter until a complaint reached the city manager's office, leading to the audit and staff changes. Robinson-Taylor earned over $60k on top of a $52k salary in one year's time.

Our eyebrows went up a couple of weeks ago after Lopez told the N&O that these excessive-hour issues "were not anything we could have known on a regular basis unless we conducted a full investigation ourselves."

But there's a few problems with Lopez's assertion:

* The 2008 SEC report came after Lopez received a letter in January of that year alleging impropriety in the management of the program.
* That report singled out BJ Council (as part of the former SEC's chain of command), noting "that it appears that there is an extremely detailed level of involvement at the (then) Bureau Commander level of the chain of command. Due to a lack of policies and procedures, there seems to be a constant stream of small decisions that are being made by this top level, including how to staff certain job pools, who to assign as coordinators, and how to open and run individual jobs. The immediate supervisor in the chain appears much less involved."
* The 2008 report details concerning biases in who received attractive, well-paying off-duty positions, including how many different officers received them. The report focused on jobs created and assigned same-day by a system administrator, those positions that had the least opportunity to be requested and bid upon by multiple people. Out of 79 people who took these jobs, 18 people received five or more jobs -- with the then-SEC, her backup, and her chain of command.
* And a racial bias may have existed: In particular, 26 white and 53 African-American officers received job postings -- but black officers received an average of 5 postings per, versus 2 per for white officers in a sample group of about 313 fast-assigned jobs.

So Lopez knew -- after himself initiating an internal investigation into SEC practices -- that there were significant concerns over favoritism and appropriateness in off-duty work assignments.

Yet when overtime concerns were raised with the new SEC, concerns that should have raised red flags and action on the part of the DPD's chain of command, Chief Lopez sat on the issue for months, defending the assertion of then-deputy chief Council that Robinson-Taylor deserved the extra hours since she was now prohibited from accepting off-duty work (something recommended by the 2008 investigation.)

The Herald-Sun goes into more details about some of the challenges and problems found in 2008, including the fact that the report's recommendation to have a civilian or more senior sworn staff member take over SEC duties (so as to have more experience in supervision), whereas Robinson-Taylor was a line officer.

But to our analysis at BCR, there's one additional, very big reason why Lopez's judgment seems very appropriate to receive further scrutiny in this matter.

The 2008 report released by the City, you see, lists 62 officers in its Appendix 5 who were "found in one or more of the possible favoritism categories" -- by appearing in ten or more job pools, having five or more open jobs assigned, or being listed as a coordinator on three or more open jobs.

Of those 62 employees, only five of them appeared in all three categories of possible perceived (if not necessarily actual) favoritism -- the officers who, the City report alleged, most benefited from the troubled overtime system Lopez had set to investigate in the first place.

Among those five: One "Alesha Taylor," according to the PDF released by the City and made available by WRAL on Friday.

Robinson-Taylor was the backup SEC at the time of the 2008 report, later assigned to the full-time SEC role. The 2008 report notes that the backup (Robinson-Taylor) had received "numerous compliments" from officers on her work and that she was working towards a fairer work distribution.

Yet, by name and by role, the report notes that she was among the employees receiving a substantial number of assignments relative to other officers granted off-duty work hours through the City program.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Now, as the DPD report notes, many of the issues that surrounded the SEC program in 2008 dealt with perceptions of impropriety, not actual violations of policy; in fact, the report called for better and more comprehensive policies to avoid such perceptions.

Still, when one of the five found by the report to be most clouded by concerns of possible favoritism (and who was already the back-up SEC in a troubled program) herself gets appointed to the SEC role, that seems like it raises a whole new range of perception issues.

When that officer is still in the chain-of-command of Council, whose role had already been scrutinized and questioned in the previous report -- that, too, raises a whole new range of perception issues.

And when, in that context, questions of excessive overtime were raised in April about Robinson-Taylor... well, one would think that, with the benefit of the background information found in the 2008 report, a certain police chief might find it useful to, you know, look into the situation further.

If anything, far from quelling concerns over this whole incident, the 2008 report raises even more reasons to have concerns and worries over the state of the department's leadership.

The public and the media have just learned about 2008's allegations. But the fact is that Chief Lopez knew about them -- and the concerns raised in them about members of the department -- long before 2009's overtime problems began.

Ultimately, public impressions are importance in law enforcement, a governmental function where public trust and confidence must run high for the department to have the support and backing of the community.

In that context, even while the report asserts that Robinson-Taylor (in the unnamed "backup" role) was receiving compliments, the perception problems created by the high assignment of work duties to her then-position certainly seems like it ought to have led to more scrutiny on the chief's part when the overtime mess began back in the spring of this year.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Tom Bonfield has played his cards close to the chest on the Lopez issue.

But given his hard-line approach to personnel management, it's impossible to believe that Lopez is on anything other than a short leash.

If there's a concern that extends beyond the financial hit taken by the City on the overtime, it's the fact that the entire episode calls into question the strength of the department's leadership, a leadership already under scrutiny after the lacrosse scandal.

The 2008 report -- and, more importantly, the DPD's actions in the 2009 overtime mess even in wake of the 2008 findings -- doesn't give a lot of new reasons to have more confidence in where that leadership stands today.

In urban neighborhoods, Operation Bulls Eye has been a success, though there's not signs of a clear direction in areas to which crime may have been displaced, a set of outside-the Bulls Eye districts that range from the McDougal Terrace public housing complex near Durham Tech to more prosperous neighborhoods like Northgate Park and Duke Park.

Crime rates are down, but the distribution of crime has changed. And even if that distribution has changed in a net socially positive way -- to the extent crime is displaced to neighborhoods with more social capital and money, it's more likely to be reported and squelched -- the resultant fracases over public safety would take every ounce of credibility from DPD leadership.

To say nothing of the well-publicized complaints over neighborhood speeding.

It's in that context that strong leadership is necessary... and it's in that context that the current overtime mess seems to this observer to leave the DPD vulnerable at a time when community support and trust is so greatly needed.

Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
~J~ is in Wonderland
Member Avatar
~J~ is in Wonderland
http://abclocal.go.com/wtvd/story?section=news/local&id=7085644

New info in Durham police scandal


Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Joan Foster

Is the N&O covering this story?
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
~J~ is in Wonderland
Member Avatar
~J~ is in Wonderland
Haven't seen anything yet Joan. I know for sure they know about it.


btw- Lopez is in Peru.

Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Joan Foster

I hope he's there on vacation and not on the Durham taxpayers dime.

The N&O is truly stunning in their "bias."
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Baldo
Member Avatar

chatham
Oct 27 2009, 01:55 PM
Thanks Baldo. My google search did not find one.
From the Vaults of LieStoppers' archives secured deeply underground with Fluffy guarding, on loan from Hagrid

Online Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
chatham

~J~ is in Wonderland
Oct 27 2009, 05:38 PM
Haven't seen anything yet Joan. I know for sure they know about it.


btw- Lopez is in Peru.

There was an article in the N&O on the 24th.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Joan Foster

chatham
Oct 27 2009, 07:16 PM
~J~ is in Wonderland
Oct 27 2009, 05:38 PM
Haven't seen anything yet Joan. I know for sure they know about it.


btw- Lopez is in Peru.

There was an article in the N&O on the 24th.
They're really exhausting themselves on the topic, aren't they?
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Joan Foster

Obviously, this story does not fit the N&O management's preferred metanarrative. More corruption, more reverse-racial bias ....not in Durham where "good things are happening..."
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
chatham

off topic comment:

It just hit me that I do not like the words reverse racism. It makes it sound like when someone mentions the word racist or racism it means a bias performed by whites only. This is not the case. Racism is racism and it does not matter who is doing it. It is wrong and there is nothing reverse about it. And if our barber friend form the naacp does not think that some people can be racist then that is his lie and as a supposed reverend, not very admirable.

:) thanks
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Joan Foster

That's an excellent point , Chatham. Furthermore, that is the lie that the Left is imposing upon us..that one set of people by virtue of skin hue have certain negative emotions , in some cases, from which other skin hues are miraculous free.

THAT idea is ridiculous, divisive and intolerable.

People are people.

But , no doubt this is why the N&O does not want to run a story where the the bias, favoritism and bad behavior in the Durham DPD was imposed by the Black leadership on whites. That would ruin the metanarrative of one VICTIM skin hue ONLY.

Telling the truth would demonstrate that we are, just all just ....humans. Can't have that!

I'm dropping that phrase as of now.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
~J~ is in Wonderland
Member Avatar
~J~ is in Wonderland
http://abclocal.go.com/wtvd/story?section=news/local&id=7150865

SBI wrapping up probe of DPD OT abuse

The State Bureau of Investigation is in the final stages of its probe into alleged overtime abuse within the Durham Police Department, according to a spokesperson with the NC Attorney General's Office.


Sources tell ABC11 Eyewitness News, investigators have conducted interviews related to the case of a Durham officer who raked in more than $62,000 in overtime--some of it while on vacation.

When SBI agents complete their investigation, the case will be handed over to the Special Prosecutor's Unit in the Attorney General's Office for review. For now, no decision has been made on whether to pursue criminal charges against Officer Alishia Robinson-Taylor or her supervisor former Deputy Chief BJ Council.

Related Content
Story: SBI investigating overtime abuse at DPD

Story: Audit shows overtime abuse in PD
A city audit claims Council signed off on most of the Taylor's overtime requests. Council is on paid personal leave until her retirement from the force at the end of the year.

In response to the scandal, Durham City leaders have made sweeping changes to its payroll and overtime policies and fired Taylor. Taylor has said she will fight to keep her job through the city's internal grievance process.

Eyewitness News has learned a hearing on the matter was set for today, but was rescheduled.

Taylor was in charge of coordinating off-duty work for Durham police officers. An inspection report, conducted more than a year before Taylor took over, showed the program was plagued by favoritism and allegations of racial bias.

According to the report, Taylor was listed as one of many officers who benefited from the program's mismanagement, raising questions about why she was promoted to the off-duty coordinator position.

Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Joan Foster

Just to clear this up in my mind....a Durham officer identified in an internal report as one of the "benefactors" of rampant abuse in the system is put in charge of the henhouse so to speak...and then pays herself more than her salary in overtime...some of these hours occurring while she is ON VACATION.

Is this right?

Now this woman is intending to fight to get her job back....going, of course, through that same cracker jack DPD internal system that put her in charge in the first place.

Correct?

If I lived in Durham, I would spend every night in ardent prayer that the Team would prevail in these suits and some outside faction would be imposed upon this police department and stop the insanity. Forget integrity...what is the average IQ on your police force? Are they just stuck on stupid or actually recruiting "stupid"... to keep the corruption going?
Edited by Joan Foster, Dec 3 2009, 07:14 PM.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Walt-in-Durham

Joan Foster
Dec 3 2009, 07:13 PM
If I lived in Durham, I would spend every night in ardent prayer that the Team would prevail in these suits and some outside faction would be imposed upon this police department and stop the insanity. Forget integrity...what is the average IQ on your police force? Are they just stuck on stupid or actually recruiting "stupid"... to keep the corruption going?
For that reason, the most important of the suits is Reade, Collin and Dave's. They are seeking an independent monitor. This is the most important prayer for relief in all the hoax related litigation, now that Nifong is disbarred.

Walt-in-Durham
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
abb
Member Avatar

Depositions is what counts. What did they know and when did they know it. Settlements would allow the cockroaches to escape the light.
Online Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
1 user reading this topic (1 Guest and 0 Anonymous)
Go to Next Page
« Previous Topic · DUKE LACROSSE - Liestoppers · Next Topic »
Add Reply