Baltimore Sun

Consent decree work can be a slow process

First public court hearing on police reform project will be April 13

- By Kevin Rector and Jessica Anderson

One morning last month, U.S. District Judge James K. Bredar met with officials from the Baltimore Police Department and the U.S. Department of Justice and demanded an update on the sweeping police reforms required under Baltimore’s federal consent decree.

Bredar said he had been watching the corruption coming out of the Gun Trace Task Force trial, according to participan­ts, and said he wanted to know the parties were making progress — particular­ly as it related to police misconduct investigat­ions.

Michelle Wirzberger, director of the police department’s Consent Decree Implementa­tion Unit, said Bredar wanted to feel confident the department “understood its responsibi­lity to make change” — and soon.

“He understand­s the moment that we are in,” Wirzberger said. “That if we do not make these changes now, if we do not engage in this significan­t reform process intentiona­lly and boldly, [then] we are lost.”

One year after Bredar signed the consent decree, many in Baltimore are wondering whether the reforms are actually being implemente­d.

The independen­t monitor overseeing the process has held a few public forums, but much of the reform work so far has been conducted behind closed doors.

The first public court hearing on the decree since it went into effect is scheduled before Bredar on April 13.

Meanwhile, a shakeup in police leadership has left the reform effort without some of its most vocal internal champions. Mayor Catherine Pugh fired Police Com-

missioner Kevin Davis in January. Deputy Commission­er Jason Johnson and Ganesha Martin, the chief of consent decree compliance, then resigned.

Ray Kelly has closely tracked the consent decree process as director of the No Boundaries Coalition of Central West Baltimore. He said the federal prosecutio­n of the Gun Trace Task Force — eight members were convicted of racketeeri­ng after years of robbing people of money and drugs — and the shakeup at police headquarte­rs have left some residents “put off” about the process, and wondering whether real change will ever come.

“I know we are on track,” Kelly said. “But the track is so slow.”

Bredar declined to comment for this article.

The city and the Justice Department negotiated the consent decree after Justice Department investigat­ors found that officers in Baltimore engaged in widespread unconstitu­tional and discrimina­tory policing.

The court-enforced agreement imposes significan­t restrictio­ns on how officers can interact with individual­s on the street, including in stops and searches, and orders more training in de-escalation tactics and interactio­ns with specific groups, including youths and people with mental illness. It calls for increased supervisio­n of officers, enhanced civilian oversight of the department, and more transparen­cy. It requires new investment­s in technology and equipment.

It also calls on the department to take overt steps to tackle racial bias in its ranks.

The Justice Department, which investigat­ed the department from May 2015 to August 2016, found that black residents were more likely to be stopped and searched as pedestrian­s and drivers, even though white residents were more likely to be found carrying illegal guns, illicit drugs and other contraband.

Justice investigat­ors also found that “supervisor­s have issued explicitly discrimina­tory orders, such as directing a shift to arrest ‘all the black hoodies’ in a neighborho­od.”

Wirzberger said she understand­s people have concerns about the change in department leadership, but new Commission­er Darryl De Sousa is “100 percent committed” to the consent decree, and her team — which has nine members and is growing — hasn’t missed a beat.

She said her team has been working on an “aggressive schedule” revising police policies to reflect national best practices, launching studies into department staffing and technology needs and meeting with Justice Department counterpar­ts to set Hassan Aden, left, Kenneth Thompson, center, and Charles Ramsey attend a forum at Mount Pleasant Church. They serve as monitors on the Consent Decree Implementa­tion Unit, which is overseeing the Baltimore Police Department consent decree. deadlines for reforms in training, supervisio­n, discipline, data analysis and community-oriented policing.

In October, the city and the Justice Department picked a team of 22 lawyers, law enforcemen­t officials and civil rights leaders led by Venable attorney Kenneth Thompson to serve as an independen­t monitor. That team has held meetings throughout the city to discuss its plan for their first year of oversight, which Bredar approved in February. But the meetings have been sparsely attended.

Wirzberger said most of the work being done now isn’t “sexy,” but “foundation­al.” She said the work now is critical to success in coming years, when new policies go into effect, training is conducted, and officers are held to new standards.

She said her team talks with their Justice Department counterpar­ts “every single day, without fail.”

The Justice Department declined to comment.

At the recent community meeting, members of the monitoring team said they have been focused on issues they considered most pressing, including stops, searches, and arrests, the use of force and police misconduct and accountabi­lity. “You have to prioritize,” Thompson said. Chuck Ramsey, the principal deputy monitor, said the group has met with the police union and put together a focus group of officers to update them on progress.

Wirzberger, whose husband is a retired Baltimore police major, said it’s part of her job to explain to skeptical officers that the consent decree will help them with resources and staffing.

The police union did not respond to a request for comment.

The full cost and timeline for the consent decree are unclear. The deal ends when the city comes into compliance.

The Police Department has been working to improve its operations since 2015. That was the year Freddie Gray died of injuries suffered in police custody, the city erupted in riots, and the Justice Department launched its investigat­ion.

The department purchased a new fleet of vans to transport detainees and a new software system for disseminat­ing written policies to officers.

Martin, who led the consent decree implementa­tion unit before Wirzberger, said the improvemen­ts were designed not only to protect citizens and officers, but also to give the department a head start on reforms.

Davis, in his first public comments since being fired, said the consent decree is absolutely necessary.

“Long-avoided investment­s in policing are now being addressed in Baltimore thanks to this court-mandated and courtenfor­ced settlement agreement,” he told The Sun this week. “More cops, faster hiring supported by modern applicant management software, scenario-based deescalati­on training, better policies, comput- ers in cars, the strategic decision support center and other recent improvemen­ts have positioned the BPD to succeed in coming years.

“It's a long-term commitment, however. As the implementa­tion phases take place over the next few years, we must avoid talking about reform and crime reductions as separate issues. The latter can never be achieved and sustained without the former.”

Pugh has praised the consent decree. But while she has publicly highlighte­d successes, such as finding the funds to buy mobile computers for patrol cars, she has said less about the more challengin­g issues identified by the Justice investigat­ors, such as racial bias among officers.

Asked this week why she and the Police Department rarely talk about the investigat­ors’ core finding — that the police were racially biased — Pugh said some of the problems were no longer as serious as they once were.

“You’ve got to remember the consent decree was a 10-years-back look. This was not just about yesterday or last year or the year before,” she said.

“I don’t know that that is as great an issue now as it was 10 years ago when we had more mass incarcerat­ion of African-American males.”

 ?? KIM HAIRSTON/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Monique Smith, left, of Hamilton and Brian Seel of Upper Fells Point listen during a community forum at Mount Pleasant Church to update residents about progress on the federal consent decree affecting the Baltimore Police Department.
KIM HAIRSTON/BALTIMORE SUN Monique Smith, left, of Hamilton and Brian Seel of Upper Fells Point listen during a community forum at Mount Pleasant Church to update residents about progress on the federal consent decree affecting the Baltimore Police Department.
 ?? KIM HAIRSTON/BALTIMORE SUN ??
KIM HAIRSTON/BALTIMORE SUN

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