Baltimore Sun

A new standard

In key ways, the proposal city legislator­s are considerin­g for establishi­ng a Johns Hopkins police force would make it more accountabl­e than Baltimore police

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Our view:

Some of the people who object to the Johns Hopkins University’s proposal to create its own armed, sworn police force seem really to be objecting to the idea of police in general. Born of anger at the abuses bad cops and bad criminal justice policies have perpetrate­d on citizens — and most particular­ly against African-Americans and other minorities — this line of thinking holds that more police would threaten the community, not protect it. Data from multiple studies don’t support that notion. On the contrary, more police on the streets correlates strongly with lower crime, whereas the negative outcomes critics are worried about — harassment, intimidati­on, over-incarcerat­ion and excessive use of force — are functions of bad policy, bad training and bad management, not the number of cops. After years of runaway violence, we believe most Baltimorea­ns want police in their neighborho­ods, just a better, more constituti­onal version of them than we’ve gotten from the Baltimore police in recent years.

Would we get that from the proposed Hopkins police force? There are no guarantees, of course, but in key respects, the legislatio­n Hopkins is seeking would make its force substantia­lly more accountabl­e than the Baltimore Police Department.

Under this proposal, Hopkins police would be legally required to wear and use body cameras. Baltimore police’s body camera program is a matter of policy that can be abandoned at any time.

Hopkins would be required to include civilians on trial boards for cases of possible discipline against officers. Baltimore has only recently agreed to civilians on trial boards, and only at the forbearanc­e of the police union, which agreed to the provision as a matter of the most recent contract negotiatio­ns.

In addition to making its police subject to Baltimore’s existing Civilian Review Board, Hopkins would be required to establish a separate accountabi­lity board comprised of students, faculty, staff and residents of neighborho­ods adjacent to its campuses. The board would have the power to review police policies, training and metrics, and it would be required to hold public hearings to get input on the department’s performanc­e. No such body exists for the Baltimore police. The City Council fulfills some of those functions, but since the BPD is technicall­y a state agency, it has no direct oversight authority. The city’s General Assembly delegation can play that role, but it has historical­ly not done so in any systematic way.

A Hopkins police force could only exist under the proposed law if the Baltimore City administra­tion signs off on a memorandum of understand­ing between the university and the Police Department. Thus, the terms by which it would be establishe­d and its continued existence would be subject to oversight by the city government. Last year, a city legislator floated the idea of abolishing and re-establishi­ng the BPD; with the Hopkins police force, this or a future mayor could actually do it.

The proposed legislatio­n to authorize the Hopkins police requires it to adopt community-oriented policing strategies. The zero-tolerance tactics the BPD used in years past would actually be illegal.

The bill does not require Hopkins police to be city residents, but it does call on the university to “promote recruiting and hiring diverse candidates, including local hiring and residency initiative­s.” Hopkins’ track record on local hiring is substantia­lly better than the BPD’s. Three years ago, Hopkins set a goal to hire at least 40 percent of workers in certain job categories from lower-income ZIP codes in Baltimore City. It has exceeded that target in each year, adding up to1,017 new hires. Of the last recruit class to graduate from Baltimore’s police academy, three out of 26 (less than 12 percent) live in the city.

Hopkins officials clearly understand and embrace the reality that a police department establishe­d in 2019 will be subjected to a far greater degree of scrutiny than existed in the past. If city lawmakers have further ideas to make sure a Hopkins police force is fully accountabl­e to the public on campus and off, we’re eager to hear them. But we believe this legislatio­n provides a strong basis for establishi­ng the kind of police Baltimorea­ns want to see more of.

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