NEW ORLEANS — The New Orleans Police Department can begin ending its longstanding federal oversight, a judge ruled Tuesday in response to a request from the city and the Justice Department to wind down monitoring.
The police department has become a more transparent and accountable agency, though work remains to be done, U.S. District Judge Susie Morgan said during a hearing.
Morgan approved a two-year ''sustainment period'' to allow the NOPD to fix outstanding problems and show that reforms remain in place while federal monitoring and support continue. The decision follows a joint motion filed by the city and Justice Department in September last year.
''The court is tremendously proud of the achievements the NOPD has made,'' Morgan said. ''The hard work of the civilian and sworn members of the NOPD paid off. The NOPD is a far different agency from the one that spawned the DOJ investigation in 2011.''
A transformed police department
In 2013, the city agreed to what it called ''the nation's most expansive'' federal oversight plan after a U.S. Justice Department investigation found evidence of racial bias, misconduct and a culture of impunity. The department had long mistreated the city's Black community and was plagued by high-profile scandals, including a 1994 murder ordered by a corrupt officer and an attempt to cover-up police killings of unarmed civilians after Hurricane Katrina.
Although critics say the police department hasn't done enough, Police Superintendent Anne Kirkpatrick told Morgan during a Monday court hearing that the NOPD has established a ''new culture.''
The department has created a framework of audits and data analysis, increased transparency by revising and publishing online training materials and policies, bolstered disciplinary processes, and enhanced efforts to cut down on longtime issues such as payroll fraud, police officials said.