Convicted cop hired as Maywood CA police chief
I live so close to the Maywood police dept that I can step away from this computer right now and walk over there right now in just 2 mins, so for me this is very disappointing that the Maywood City Council would vote in favor to hire a convicted cop as police cheif. The past couple of years the city has been on the spotlight for all the corruption in the police dept its gone so far that the FBI has been investigating them. On friday was a sad day for the all the residents of city of Maywood, its really ridiculous.
Al Hutchings, formerly with the LAPD, got the job despite opposition from rank-and-file officers and the city's attorney.
By Matt Lait, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
February 2, 2008
A man who was convicted of theft and resigned from the Los Angeles Police Department was hired Friday night as the interim chief of the Maywood Police Department, an agency that has a reputation as a haven for misfit and criminal cops.
Despite fierce opposition from some rank-and-file officers and the city's own attorney, Al Hutchings was selected for the position by the Maywood City Council in a 3-2 vote at a special meeting.
Hutchings' unlikely ascension to the job comes amid ongoing investigations by state and local authorities into allegations of police corruption and brutality in Maywood.
The move stunned many city residents who viewed his consideration as another setback for the troubled Police Department, which patrols a gritty square-mile city south of downtown Los Angeles.
Last year, a Times investigation into Maywood found that at least a third of the officers on the force had either left other police jobs under a cloud or had brushes with the law while working for Maywood. Several officers in recent years left Maywood after being convicted of crimes.
Hutchings was one officer who was hired at Maywood in 2006 despite a checkered past.
Court records show that he had pleaded no contest to bilking the LAPD for bogus overtime pay while he was an officer. He has since received a court order expunging his record.
In an interview, Hutchings said that all of the overtime he worked was approved by a supervisor but that he entered the plea so as to quickly dispose of the case, which he said was filed in retaliation for reporting misconduct against a high ranking-LAPD official. Hutchings was also fired from Los Angeles Valley College in 2005, where he worked as a professor and was terminated for acts of dishonesty.
When Hutchings joined the Maywood Police Department, he said he found that many of his fellow officers were brutal, racist and corrupt. He cast himself as a whistle-blower, working to expose problems.
Before his probationary year was finished, however, Hutchings was accused of misconduct of his own. Police and city officials said he agreed to resign from the Police Department after he was allegedly videotaped having an on-duty liaison with the female owner of a doughnut shop.
Hutchings, 45, has said the allegation was fabricated "to blackmail me into stopping the work that I was doing." He said he voluntarily left the department last summer.
In an interview hours before he was hired, Hutchings said Maywood Police Department was a dysfunctional agency with incompetent officers and that he hoped to "shut the place down and bring in the Sheriff's Department."
He said he would donate his salary to the Catholic church and to people who had been victimized by Maywood officers.
Hutchings replaces another interim chief who was convicted of beating his girlfriend and resigned from the El Monte Police Department before being hired at Maywood. That chief's conviction was overturned on appeal, and he was ultimately convicted of a lesser charge of making a verbal threat.
Known among law enforcement circles as a department of "second chances," Maywood Police Department is one of nearly 50 independent police agencies in Los Angeles County. The department, whose officers are mainly white and Latino, serves a densely populated city of roughly 30,000 that is 96% Latino.
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Al Hutchings, formerly with the LAPD, got the job despite opposition from rank-and-file officers and the city's attorney.
By Matt Lait, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
February 2, 2008
A man who was convicted of theft and resigned from the Los Angeles Police Department was hired Friday night as the interim chief of the Maywood Police Department, an agency that has a reputation as a haven for misfit and criminal cops.
Despite fierce opposition from some rank-and-file officers and the city's own attorney, Al Hutchings was selected for the position by the Maywood City Council in a 3-2 vote at a special meeting.
Hutchings' unlikely ascension to the job comes amid ongoing investigations by state and local authorities into allegations of police corruption and brutality in Maywood.
The move stunned many city residents who viewed his consideration as another setback for the troubled Police Department, which patrols a gritty square-mile city south of downtown Los Angeles.
Last year, a Times investigation into Maywood found that at least a third of the officers on the force had either left other police jobs under a cloud or had brushes with the law while working for Maywood. Several officers in recent years left Maywood after being convicted of crimes.
Hutchings was one officer who was hired at Maywood in 2006 despite a checkered past.
Court records show that he had pleaded no contest to bilking the LAPD for bogus overtime pay while he was an officer. He has since received a court order expunging his record.
In an interview, Hutchings said that all of the overtime he worked was approved by a supervisor but that he entered the plea so as to quickly dispose of the case, which he said was filed in retaliation for reporting misconduct against a high ranking-LAPD official. Hutchings was also fired from Los Angeles Valley College in 2005, where he worked as a professor and was terminated for acts of dishonesty.
When Hutchings joined the Maywood Police Department, he said he found that many of his fellow officers were brutal, racist and corrupt. He cast himself as a whistle-blower, working to expose problems.
Before his probationary year was finished, however, Hutchings was accused of misconduct of his own. Police and city officials said he agreed to resign from the Police Department after he was allegedly videotaped having an on-duty liaison with the female owner of a doughnut shop.
Hutchings, 45, has said the allegation was fabricated "to blackmail me into stopping the work that I was doing." He said he voluntarily left the department last summer.
In an interview hours before he was hired, Hutchings said Maywood Police Department was a dysfunctional agency with incompetent officers and that he hoped to "shut the place down and bring in the Sheriff's Department."
He said he would donate his salary to the Catholic church and to people who had been victimized by Maywood officers.
Hutchings replaces another interim chief who was convicted of beating his girlfriend and resigned from the El Monte Police Department before being hired at Maywood. That chief's conviction was overturned on appeal, and he was ultimately convicted of a lesser charge of making a verbal threat.
Known among law enforcement circles as a department of "second chances," Maywood Police Department is one of nearly 50 independent police agencies in Los Angeles County. The department, whose officers are mainly white and Latino, serves a densely populated city of roughly 30,000 that is 96% Latino.
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To add to the irony of these circumstances, a highly respected commander (Frank Hauptmann) stepped down from his post today (Feb 03, 2008) refusing to work under a chief with a corrupt background. Commander Hauptmann (a retired Garden Grove lieutenant) was hired to help restructure the department. He was also in the running for the chief's job when the city counsel gave it the Hutchings. Hauptmann has an outstanding reputation at Garden Grove and is described as having exceptional integrity and work ethic. He was the best candidate for the position. But, it appears the mayor and some city counsel members do not really want reform. They want a chief they can manipulate so they can continue to deal under the table.
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Just like South Gate, another corrupt police department; another corrupt Chief of Police; another corrupt City Council. All protected by corrupt politicians!!
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I used to work for Maywood. Hutchings is a dirty as they come. He called the Hispanic girlfriend of one of the officers a "Pesant and told him he should move up and marry a jew. I hope he crawls under a rock and dies.
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Where you working there as a Police Officer?
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The Department sounds like it needs to do a more thorough background check. Even speaking with prior employers and neighbors will give you a pretty good idea of what type of person he is. We all have are "GEMS" we have to deal with on the job. Unfortunately, when you hire someone in law enforcement, good or bad, your're stuck with them for 25 years, unless they really screw up.
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Actually, peace officer background investigations are regulated by POST (Peace Officer Standards and Training). POST is a regulating agency for police agencies and regularly audit police background investigations. There is a manual that sets forth guidelines on PO background investigations, they are very extensive. The problem with Maywood (and others that fall into corruption), is that any process can be circumvented. Hutchings pulled out of the chiefs candidate process when he found out the city manager agreed to a complete and impartial investigation on him prior to his acceptance of the position. Hauptmann has since signed back on and the department is back on its course to reform. A side note: Hauptmann took major steps to protect the city and police department the weekend prior to the day Hutchings was supposed to take the chiefs chair. These actions caused the District Attorney's office and some state agencies to threaten the city with legal action should Hutchings be given the chiefs spot without a background investigation. Hauptmann should be commended for his efforts which ultimately led to Hutchings withdrawal.
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