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aGameOfThrones
02-19-2015, 09:00 AM
WASHINGTON -- Dozens of African-American police officers in Memphis, Tennessee, are facing demotions to the positions they held over a decade ago in response to a ruling in a discrimination lawsuit the officers brought against the city.

African-American officers sued the Memphis Police Department in the early 2000s, alleging that the tests the city used to determine promotions discriminated against minorities. A lower court sided with the plaintiffs, and some of them were promoted afterwards. But last fall, a federal appeals court overturned the decision.

The officers may still appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court. But in the meantime, the city is considering demoting 28 of the 62 plaintiffs back to the positions they held when the lawsuit was first brought.


As the nation's attention has turned to cases of police brutality against African-Americans, the issue of how police forces represent the diversity of their communities has come under additional scrutiny. In Memphis, the potential demotions demonstrate how cases over disparate impact -- or practices that appear neutral but can be illegal if they disproportionately hurt minorities -- can be difficult to win and lead to unforeseen consequences for those who bring them.

"The city wants to give an ultimatum: If you all continue on [with the lawsuit], we're going to demote you back to patrolman," said Lt. Tyrone Currie, the treasurer of the Afro American Police Association Memphis branch, which supports the plaintiffs. He noted that most of the officers have over 20 years on the job and have earned equivalent benefits, while patrolmen tend to be officers in their early 20s.

"You should not retaliate against people just because they're exercising their constitutional right to an appeal," he added.

George Little, chief administrative officer for the City of Memphis, said that since some of the plaintiffs have made more money since their promotions in the wake of the initial ruling, it's also now within the city's right to get its money back. "We can say fine, not only are we going to bump you back to whatever your former position was, we want our money back that you weren't entitled to," he said.

However, he noted, the city considers collecting back pay from the cops to be a punitive measure, and "we're not out to punish the plaintiffs."

Absent a settlement agreement, "demotion is basically what we're looking at right now," he said. Later, he added, "They'd go back to the rank they were at when all this started."

Last month, Little floated that the demotions could begin in February, but this week he said he could not comment on the timeline. The Memphis Police Department did not respond to a request for comment.

Legal disputes have stretched on for decades over whether the tests Memphis uses to promote police officers have a disparate impact on minorities. All the way back in 1979, the city acknowledged in a consent decree that "historically, blacks have been excluded from or limited in hiring and promotional opportunities within its police department."

This latest lawsuit concerns testing issues that began in 2000. That year, the city implemented a promotional test that had both written and practical portions, but the practical part was leaked. So the city cut that exercise altogether, which some plaintiffs alleged discriminated against minorities.

A court agreed that the test was invalid. The city came back with a new test two years later. That time around, the results showed a clear racial disparity: Thirty-one percent of the African-American candidates were promoted, compared to 73 percent of the white candidates.

In 2006, a district court determined that the city's testing procedure in 2002 violated Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which prohibits employment discrimination based on race and other factors. Based on that order, 28 plaintiffs with passing exam scores and sufficient work experience were promoted.


http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/02/18/memphis-police-demotions_n_6707430.html

jmdrake
02-19-2015, 09:08 AM
Demoting someone who filed a discrimination lawsuit is a fast way to lose both that lawsuit and the subsequent harassment lawsuit.

Keith and stuff
02-19-2015, 10:10 AM
Demoting someone who filed a discrimination lawsuit is a fast way to lose both that lawsuit and the subsequent harassment lawsuit.

It wouldn't be demoting them because they filed a lawsuit. They were ordered to promote the police by the court. Than another court overturned that ruling. That's how I read the article, anyway.

tod evans
02-19-2015, 10:30 AM
Demoting or promoting due to race is wrong.

So is writing tests to favor a demographic.

But then everything about kopping for money is wrong so what the hell.........

juleswin
02-19-2015, 11:23 AM
It wouldn't be demoting them because they filed a lawsuit. They were ordered to promote the police by the court. Than another court overturned that ruling. That's how I read the article, anyway.

Right, the courts giveth, and the courts taketh. If it was OK for the courts to order a promotion, it is OK for the courts to order a demotion. At least the African American cops who didn't use the courts to get their promotions will keep it.