The NOPD consent decree will finally be allowed to go forward when we reach the point where the cost of legal fees associated with appealing it
exceed the cost of actually implementing it.
NEW ORLEANS -- The U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals has issued a
emergency stay in the federal case concerning the consent decree over
the New Orleans Police Department.
The temporary stay puts the case on hold, and eliminates a meeting
scheduled tomorrow to announce a monitor for the consent decree.
The appeals court will next look at whether to grant or deny the
city's motion to vacate, or toss out, the entire consent decree.
Also...
memories:
Landrieu, standing beside more than a dozen community
leaders, said at a news conference that he wants the Justice Department
to come in and do an assessment of the NOPD and the criminal justice
system.
Landrieu said he anticipates that the federal assessment would
eventually result in a consent decree, a move that could mean federal
oversight for the troubled department.
“It is clear that nothing short of a complete transformation is
necessary and essential to ensure safety for the citizens of New
Orleans,” Landrieu wrote in his letter to Holder.
At the time, the above item caused our friends at
The Lens to opine,
This represents the mayor’s clearest statement on the possibility of
federal intervention. He is not interested in negotiating a half-loaf
relationship with the Justice Department to appease anybody associated
with the incumbent regime. He wants the Civil Rights Division to use its
authority to sue the department to mandate reform measures under court
order. While the city may negotiate the terms of a settlement once that
lawsuit is filed, there would be very little wiggle room once that
consent decree is on the books.
Yeah well... not so much that, really.
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