LAPD has around 10,000 officers today. For the 2028 Olympics, they want to hire 3,000 more.

Here’s Senior Lead Officer for the L.A. neighborhood of Studio City, Officer Shawn Smith, describing the projected growth (skip to 40:40):

“The mayor got us the 2028 Olympics. It is estimated that on a daily basis 13,000 officers will be needed to man that. That’s doing the regular jobs, and the extra jobs of security for that. We’re going to have nowhere near that, so I’m just letting you know that […] if they talk about cutting [the budget] for hiring, I just want to make sure that you know that we need to constantly hire, because these huge gaps have been there […] We have about 10,000 [officers] right now. Truly we need about 13,000.”

UNDOING THE WORK.

After the murder of George Floyd in May 2020 and the national uprising and demands for defunding the police that followed, the Movement for Black Lives successfully pressured the City of L.A. to explore unprecedented cuts to the police budget.

But the plan to expand local security for the Olympics would not only undo that progress — it would take us in the opposite direction.

Sure enough, the L.A. police union (LAPPL) is already using the Olympics to argue that L.A. “cannot afford” the proposed cuts. Here’s what the directors are saying:

 

“If you cut funding from us and delay recruit classes and hiring, it will create a domino effect and you’re looking at about a loss of about 800 officers over the next two years. And with the World Cup and the Olympics coming, I don’t think we can afford to do that.”

— LAPPL co-director Robert Harris

“[Mayor Garcetti] wants to cut the budget. What’s coming around the corner for Los Angeles? The World Cup. And beyond that? The Olympics. Now in 1981 they had a mass hiring for police officers gearing up for the ‘83 [sic] Olympics. If he cuts the budget, we’re going to be so far behind […] I don’t think it would be safe to have the Olympics here.”

— LAPPL leader Jamie McBride

Not Just LAPD — All cops love the Olympics.

The L.A. Sheriff’s Department wants to grow too. At a county board of supervisors meeting in January 2019, Sheriff Alex Villanueva said this about his department’s budget:

 

“We’re getting smaller when we need to actually get bigger. In anticipation of obviously the projected future growth — Olympics and all those things — we need to get back to full staffing in order to provide the training that we need for the entire organization […]”

And the coordination is just beginning. On February 23, 2021, LA City Council moved forward with an MOU on the California Olympic and Paralympic Public Safety Command (COPPSC). This will be co-chaired by LAPD Chief Michael Moore, but will also include representatives from potentially dozens of other law enforcement agencies. The goal: expand the footprint of policing in the region in preparation for the Games, and hire up more full-time officers to ensure that any efforts made to shrink local police forces in the name of racial justice are undone.

This doesn’t have to happen.

The Olympics do not create an actual need for more police.

They are used to justify the expansion of police.

Oh, and did we mention that LA28 is a designated “National Special Security Event” (NSSE)? That means that LAPD would be backed by the Department of Homeland Security forces — including I.C.E.

How will giving broad powers to I.C.E. affect the nearly one million undocumented people living in the L.A. area?

The LA28 committee, who is organizing the Olympics, says that Federal coordination will “only” begin one or two years before the Games. That represents potentially years of oppression for Los Angeles’ vulnerable immigrant population. This is an unacceptable loss of autonomy for a city whose people have no interest in further criminalizing this population.

The Olympics do not exist for LA. They will happen to LA. And the results will be catastrophic for Black and brown Angelenos.

At a 2017 forum about the L.A. Olympics, Dr. Melina Abdullah summed up what’s at stake:

“Any time you talk about putting more resources into policing […] you’re talking about diverting funds that could go to community programming, livable wage jobs, permanent housing, and putting it into a police system that’s designed to protect wealthy white folks from us. So what that means is greater contact between Black people, brown people, poor people, with police, which threatens our lives.”

We are again in a moment of awakening about the racism and violence inherent in policing. If we host the Olympics again, history shows us that they will ensure even more suffering for the communities that the Movement for Black Lives has risen up to defend.