NOPD: When Cops Loot, It's Not Looting
Published March 24, 2006
Meanwhile, Lt. David Benelli, the president of the Police Association of New Orleans, said "It's all a matter of perception." The Times-Picayune's Michael Perlstein quotes Lt. Benelli as saying,
"[I]t was easy for witnesses to misinterpret the actions of police in the chaotic environment after the storm. He said he was the target of uneasy glares when he went to the Lower 9th Ward in September and retrieved jewelry and other valuables through the window of his mother-in-law's house on Caffin Avenue...."There were wild aspersions that the NOPD had run amok, but a lot of these stories came out before all the facts had been gathered and investigated. We were the whipping boys right after the storm. What you don't see is, months later when a police officer is exonerated, the media coming back to do that story."
If the stories about police officers looting were fake or matters of mistaken "perception," why can't Chief Compass get his job back?
But the police officers weren't exonerated; they were given a pass as part of a bungled official cover-up. There's a huge difference between the two.
If Chief Riley, Assistant Chief Defillo, and Lt. Benelli's purpose is to guarantee that the NOPD remains the butt of jokes, they're doing a bang-up job.
Are New Orleans burglars now going to be able to get off by claiming that the arresting officer "misinterpreted" their actions?
"The butt of jokes" brings us to the Times-Picayune, whose editors and some staffers perpetrated to my knowledge the most ambitious media cover-up ever, when on September 26 they essentially told the public, regarding the early reports of anarchic, Post-Katrina violence, "Who are you going to believe, us or your lying eyes?"
The odd thing is, though the reporters who wrote the cover-up story wouldn't admit it, the Times-Picayune had itself been the source of the most gruesome stories.
Do editors now lead staff meetings by saying, "Today, we're telling the truth about story X, but we're lying about story Y"?
In any event, for those of you keeping score — and you really do need a scorecard — the NOPD is covering up for post-Katrina police looters, while the Times-Picayune is covering up for violent civilian criminals.
- NOPD: When Cops Loot, It's Not Looting
- Published: March 24, 2006
- Type: Opinion
- Section: Culture
- Filed Under: Politics: Law and Rights, Culture: Society, Culture: Media
- Writer: Nicholas Stix
- Nicholas Stix's BC Writer page
- Nicholas Stix's personal site
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Comments
"If I recall on a 60 Minutes profile a few years back, the NOPD is one of the lowest paid police forces in North America."
That's highly unlikely, since all police forces in Mexico pay less than the NOPD.
Plus, at the time Katrina hit, the NOPD's 1450 actual officers also enjoyed a 17 percent fraud bonus, based on th federal taxpayer money that paid for 250 non-existent "ghost" policemen. The ghost money was divvied up among the rest of the department. And that's not even including whatever NOPD officers were "earning" in thefts, bribes, and robberies.
"The other little piece of info that sticks in my mind was the observation that no one arrested for killing a police officer in New Orleans has ever lived to stand trial (despite being healthy when arrested) except one...wait for it...who was a police officer."
Since it sticks in your mind, could you please source that little piece of information? I've done a study of the NOPD, and found that the department seems not to have a lot of shootings and attacks on officers, compared to other cities (like, say, Cincinnati, where the police have the choice between killing psychopaths in self-defense and de-policing).
P.S. New Orleans is more famous for killer-cops than for cop killers. At present, two former NOPD officers are on Death Row for murders they either committed or commissioned while they were officers. Len Davis, who was a crime kingpin while in uniform and during job hours, ordered a drug dealer-associate to murder Kim Greaves, after Greaves had witnessed Davis' partner for beating the hell out of a teenager (her nephew?) for no good reason, and sworn out a complaint. When Davis got word from the killer that the deed had been done, he exclaimed, "Rockabye, baby!"
Antoinette Frank was more hands-on. During a robbery she murdered three people, including one off-duty NOPD officer who was working security, at a Vietnamese restaurant where Frank also worked as a security guard.
Actually I do cite my source - 60 Minutes. Unfortunately 60 Minutes doesn't seem to provide a story archive online that I can point you to. As I noted, I'm going by memory, so no guarantees.
As for Mexico, apologies I was thinking of only Canada and the US, so yes, Mexico is excepted.
Your citing of Antoinette Frank does sound familiar as I believe it was a female police officer that committed the murder.
Sorry for the lack of precise memory.
"Actually I do cite my source - 60 Minutes. Unfortunately 60 Minutes doesn't seem to provide a story archive online that I can point you to. As I noted, I'm going by memory, so no guarantees."
Oh. I didn't realize 60 Minutes was the source in both cases.
"As for Mexico, apologies I was thinking of only Canada and the US, so yes, Mexico is excepted."
No sweat. I think most people forget or don't know thta North America has three countries.
"Your citing of Antoinette Frank does sound familiar as I believe it was a female police officer that committed the murder.
"Sorry for the lack of precise memory."
No sweat. It was 11 years ago; even I had to double-check the date (March 4, 1995). Only hours after being sworn in as chief of police, Richard Pennington finds himself at the crime scene with a detective telling him that he's sure the killer is a cop. Welcome to the Big Easy, Chief!
I was down there for 4 months working electrical contracts.
I met a lot of folks, drank piss warm beer and ate crappy food the whole time.
Wal-mart, rather than throw their damaged goods away told the cops to take what they needed, just keep the store from getting torched by the gangbangers.
So they did! Wal mart was filing claims anyway, and in good NOLA fashion greased a few palms, saved their storefront and were able to get some infrastructure up and running.
I will have to comment that a lot of people on this blog didn't go there, and STILL don't understand the magnitude of destruction, and how massive an undertaking it was to even get power through the destruction to other zones. It was HUGE. And that's just the power side of the recovery. There is still ships up on dry land, fishing boats (BIG FISHING BOATS) up on 4 lane highways, all of which can't be moved, and have to be de-fueled, stripped and cut up (by hand) and trucked off to scrap yards.
So titter tatter away like you have been for months. Most of you (I'm sure there's a few who are from there, and have seen the damage) haven't been there... and the reality is... you cannot fathom the damage sitting your blessed assurance sucking brews and keyboarding like the wind.
"There is still ships up on dry land, fishing boats (BIG FISHING BOATS) up on 4 lane highways, all of which can't be moved, and have to be de-fueled, stripped and cut up (by hand) and trucked off to scrap yards."
There's no such thing as a fishing boat so big it can't be moved.
"So titter tatter away like you have been for months. Most of you (I'm sure there's a few who are from there, and have seen the damage) haven't been there... and the reality is... you cannot fathom the damage sitting your blessed assurance sucking brews and keyboarding like the wind."
What is your point? That we should adoringly accept nonsense you spout about fishing boats, and grant you a monopoly over what can be said and thought about New Orleans? You're the one tittering and tattering away, pal.





If I recall on a 60 Minutes profile a few years back, the NOPD is one of the lowest paid police forces in North America.
The other little piece of info that sticks in my mind was the observation that no one arrested for killing a police officer in New Orleans has ever lived to stand trial (despite being healthy when arrested) except one...wait for it...who was a police officer.