Policy

Federal Government Ends LAPD Oversight

The department is much ... better ... now. We guess.

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A judge has officially ended more than a decade of federal oversight of the Los Angeles Police Department that was triggered by a corruption scandal involving abusive officers.

In two short sentences, U.S. District Judge Gary Allen Feess dismissed the final remnants of a consent decree on Wednesday, releasing the department from a transition agreement put in place in 2009 to ensure reforms that had been made were kept in place.

LAPD spokesman Lt. Andrew Neiman said the department had no immediate comment and was preparing a statement.

Tyler Izen, president of the Los Angeles Police Protective League, said the union was pleased the department was free of the federal monitoring.