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City Hall
601 W. Jefferson Street
502-574-1110

 

Metro Call: 311 or 574-5000

Air Pollution: 574-6000

Animal Services: 363-6609 or 361-1318

Louisville Forward/Economic Development: 574-4140

Planning & Design Services: 574-6230

Community Services & Revitalization: 574-4377

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PARC: 569-6222

Legal Aid: 584-1254

IPL (Code Enforcement): 574-3321

Congressman John Yarmuth: 582-5129

Solid Waste Management (SWMS): 574-3571

Metro Parks: 456-8100

Metro Police: (Non Emergency) 574-7111 or 574-2111

LMPD 4th Division: 574-7010

LMPD 5th Division: 574-7636

LMPD 6th Division: 574-2187

Anonymous Tipline:
574-LMPD (5673)

Metro Safe: 572-3460 or 574-7111

Vacant & Public Property Administration 574-4016

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District 10 news


Independent review of LMPD points out significant challenges and ‘clear roadmap’ to address them

An independent review of the Louisville Metro Police Department (LMPD) outlines significant challenges, as well as “a clear roadmap” for addressing those challenges and realizing Mayor Greg Fischer’s goal for LMPD to be the best police department in the nation.

The city and LMPD “will need to overcome many challenges to establish the trust and collaboration necessary to ensure the LMPD’s policing services meet everyone’s goals and desires,” said Robert Davis, Senior Vice President for Hillard Heintze, the Chicago-based company hired in July to conduct the review. “We are confident that the will and leadership exist within the LMPD to make this happen.”  

Mayor Fischer agreed: “We have committed to reimagining public safety, and that requires an unflinching, comprehensive look at what LMPD is doing well, and what can be done better. An independent audit like this is an extraordinarily valuable tool in making an organization better, and we plan to lean into the findings here – good and bad.”

The 150-page report notes that LMPD has been at the center of the national spotlight on police practices after the tragic death of Breonna Taylor and that many people of color don’t trust police officers “due to generations of problematic relations.” In addition, it says many LMPD officers are unsure they want to continue this career path. Davis said these are challenges that police departments across the country are facing, and his team is “confident” LMPD can overcome them.

“Our experience has shown us that even when facing significant operational difficulties and a critical need to rebuild community trust, agencies that embrace our recommendations succeed in building that trust and raising their level of professionalism in line with some of the most progressive police departments in the country,” Davis said. “With the leadership provided by Chief Erika Shields and others, we fully expect that in the next few years, policing agencies across the country will turn to the LMPD to learn how to make such positive operational changes.”

Working since late July, Hillard Heintze pored over data and statistics, conducted interviews and reviewed LMPD’s policies, procedures, protocols and training on the use of force, de-escalation, search and arrest warrants, crisis intervention, crowd control, community-oriented policing, bias-free policing and procedural justice.

The report noted several areas where LMPD is aligned with or leading on national best practices, including its de-escalation training and use-of-force continuum, which have led to a reduction in use-of-force incidents, as well as fewer injuries to residents and officers.

However, the report also found significant disparities in arrest numbers and areas of inconsistency in training and leadership. “These are areas that demand our attention,” Mayor Fischer said. “It can be difficult to face up to our failings, but that’s exactly what we have to do, if we want to improve and move forward,” he added, noting many substantive reform measures already underway:

  • Breonna’s Law, which bans no-knock warrants and mandates the use of body cameras for officers serving search warrants.
  • Creation of a civilian police review board and Office of Inspector General to add a new layer of independent review to Louisville Metro Police Department disciplinary matters, as well as work to change state law to bolster this new system with subpoena power.
  • Encouraging officers to volunteer in the neighborhoods they serve and establishing a housing credit program to incentivize officers to live within a Qualified Census Tract.
  • A commitment to establishing a system to have the best first responder on each call, whether it is a social worker or a police officer.
  • And, after a national search, hiring a new police chief, Erika Shields, “who has the skill and the commitment to act on these recommendations for reform.”

Shields said of the report: “It does us no good to try to sugarcoat it: We have challenges. We have work to do. And, we are going to do it, together.”

The full report can be found at https://louisvilleky.gov/sites/default/files/2021-01/hillard-heintze-report.pdf