Phoenix faces US Justice Dept probe for inflated kidnapping stats

Posted: 9:30 PM
Last Updated: 4 hours and 26 minutes ago
By: Dave Biscobing

PHOENIX - The Phoenix Police Department is the target of an ongoing federal probe to determine if they reported inflated kidnapping statistics in order to obtain millions in grant funds, ABC15 has confirmed.

Agents with the U.S. Department of Justice were in Phoenix earlier this month to interview police staff and audit the city’s kidnapping reports from 2008, federal and local officials said.

Read more: Are Phoenix PD kidnapping stats wrong?

If the department fails the audit, Phoenix could have to pay back millions of grant dollars plus incur fines and penalties. A former U.S. Attorney told ABC15 the police department could also face potential criminal inquiries.

Phoenix is often called the kidnapping capital of the United States. And in 2008, police reported 358 kidnappings.

A year later, the police department used those kidnapping statistics on applications to obtain $2.4 million in federal grants. Phoenix Mayor Phil Gordon and Public Safety Manager Jack Harris also testified to similar numbers before congress in the spring of 2009.

This is the second story of a three-part investigation. Tonight on ABC15 News at 10pm, the ABC15 Investigators reveal why Phoenix Police Department officials may have known about faulty kidnapping numbers.

We first told you about a possible federal investigation in December. Since then, the ABC15 Investigators have reviewed hundreds of the kidnapping reports, read thousands of pages and obtained internal memos, e-mails and recordings.

Our investigation found that Phoenix Police had major discrepancies in their 2008 kidnapping numbers, counting at least 100 that legal experts said should not have been counted.

Phoenix Police, the City Manager’s Office and Mayor Phil Gordon have declined to discuss specifics about the reports or federal audit. And while federal investigators are no longer in Phoenix, the DOJ Office of Inspector General confirmed that its case is still open.

“I would feel comfortable arguing to a jury that there was an attempt to pad some stats,â€