'Sad
day for Seattle': City officials clash as police monitor submits oversight plan
The independent monitor tasked with overseeing Seattle
Police Department reforms submitted his proposed plan to a federal judge for
approval Tuesday.
Monitor Merrick Bobb said the plan will serve as a roadmap
to meaningful reforms stipulated under a settlement agreement between the city
and the Department of Justice after a federal investigation found Seattle
police officers have a pattern of using excessive force.
Meanwhile, City Attorney Pete Holmes called Tuesday a
"sad day for Seattle," and accused Mayor Mike McGinn of preventing
the city from moving forward "to achieve lasting reform of our Police
Department."
Bobb's plan, which the city will have an opportunity to
agree upon, would govern only the first year of reforms. It establishes clear
deadlines for implementation of reforms in "priority areas," such as
training, supervision, use-of-force and bias-free policing.
Under the plan, the monitor would submit semi-annual reports
on the city's progress and would deliver his first formal review in February
2014.
Bobb's proposal comes amid a very public battle between City
Attorney Holmes and Mayor McGinn that escalated after KIRO Radio released a
pointed email between the two officials last week.
In it, McGinn accused Holmes of undercutting the city's
objectives in matters of police reform and breaching attorney-client privilege
by sharing confidential information with Bobb.
Due to what he called a "clear conflict of
interest," McGinn called on Holmes to agree to an "ethical
screen," which would bar him from representing the city in ongoing
negotiations with the Department of Justice.
Holmes refused to do so and said Tuesday that McGinn's
accusations were counterproductive.
"Now is the time when City leaders should be working
together to achieve lasting reform of our Police Department," he said in a
statement. "It is especially sad for the women and men of SPD who want us
all to move forward, together."
In a memo sent Tuesday, McGinn told Holmes that the city has
concerns with Bobb's proposed reform plan, which he claims includes
requirements that would lead to unnecessary delays.
"Accordingly, do not represent to the court or the
monitor that the city has approved a monitoring plan until you have received
written authorization from me that the plan satisfactorily meets our
objectives," McGinn wrote.
McGinn also expressed ongoing concerns with the monitor's
billing practices.
As KIRO Radio first reported, the city took issue with
several items Merrick Bobb and his team expensed, including "alcohol and
alcohol-related items."
According to numbers released by the City Budget Office
Tuesday, the city has been unable to resolve $11,612 in "undocumented or
questioned travel and accommodation charges" submitted from November 2012
to January 2013.
The monitoring team has also declined repeated requests from
the city that they provide a breakdown for $167,145 in hours they billed during
the same time period.
"That being said, the City Attorney has approved all of
these charges for payment," City Budget Office Director Beth Goldberg said
in a memo Tuesday.
McGinn has directed Holmes to hold off on approving further
bills from the monitoring team without written approval from Goldberg.