Los Angeles Police Department Shrinks To Smallest Size Since The 90s As Recruitment Fails To Keep Pace
Story by Gretchen Clayson •
19h
The Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) is struggling to fill its ranks as recruitment fails to keep up with projections, shrinking to levels not seen since the 1990s.
Though newly elected Democratic Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass has increased the budget for the LAPD, following cuts that came as a result of the Defund the Police movement, the city’s police force has fallen below 9,000 officers, NBC News reported Thursday night. Bass’s goal is 9,500 officers.
As of July 30, the LAPD force was comprised of only 8,967 officers, with an additional 29 waiting in the wings as graduates from the police academy. The LAPD fell short of its goal; Chief Michel Moore admitted to the Board of Commissioners that their effort was to hire 60 new recruits every four weeks, the outlet stated.
Along with the lack of recruits, seasoned officers have been leaving the LAPD at “alarming rates” for the past few years, compounding the problem.
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