Bankrupt San Bernardino, Calif., says that it can’t afford to pay more than 100 people who have sued San Bernardino for injuries and deaths allegedly caused by its police officers and employees, the Wall Street Journal reported today. Under the city’s bankruptcy plan, the city would spend $56.5 million in the next five years to hire more officers and buy new vehicles. The plan, however, would inflict some of the deepest cuts on people who have sued over incidents of alleged police brutality or excessive force. San Bernardino’s bankruptcy plan proposes a 1 percent payment rate, though city officials promised to negotiate each lawsuit separately. Some might get insurance money, the city said, though it hasn’t provided details. San Bernardino faced 109 lawsuits seeking a total of $19 million in “personal injury and bodily injury” claims against the city and its employees as of Nov. 25. Bankruptcy Judge Meredith Jury is scheduled to review objections to the city’s bankruptcy-exit summary at a March 9 hearing. If she approves the plan, it would go to creditors for a vote.
