Boston Herald

Trump signs better-policing executive order

- By Joe Dwinell Herald wire services contribute­d to this report.

President Trump’s executive order that will track bad cops, mostly ban chokeholds and offer financial incentives to improve policing is “exactly what we need to do,” a Massachuse­tts sheriff at Tuesday’s ceremony said.

The president said his new directive is “encouragin­g police department­s nationwide to adopt the highest profession­al standards to serve their communitie­s.”

Trump was surrounded by members of law enforcemen­t — including Massachuse­tts Bristol County Sheriff Thomas Hodgson — as he signed the order in the Rose Garden.

Trump’s executive order would establish a database that tracks police officers with excessive useof-force complaints in their records.

The order would also give police department­s a financial incentive to adopt best practices and encourage co-responder programs — something Boston Police Commission­er William Gross alluded to last week saying cops don’t need to be the only ones to respond to every call.

“We’re united by our desire to ensure peace and dignity and equality for all Americans,” Trump said.

“I can promise to fight for justice for all of our people and I gave a commitment to all of those families,” he added. “We are going to pursue what we said we will be pursuing it, and we will be pursuing it strongly.”

The president had just met with families affected by racially charged violence — including the family of Ahmaud Arbery, who died at the hands of two white men earlier this year in Georgia, Fox News reported.

The executive order comes after the killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s where a policeman kept his knee on the black man’s neck for 8 minutes and 46 seconds. That killing has sparked protests from coast to coast and has many calling for police to be defunded.

Hodgson, echoing what Trump said Tuesday, said good cops keep people safe and a national standard is what’s needed now to improve policing.

“The president knows how to tackle a problem to get to a better place,” Hodgson told the Herald. “He’s actually hearing from people with boots on the ground.”

Trump addressed that Tuesday saying: “Reducing crime and raising standards are not opposite goals.”

But, some said it does not go far enough.

Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said the order “falls sadly and seriously short of what is required to combat the epidemic of racial injustice and police brutality that is murdering hundreds of black Americans.”

Kristina Roth at Amnesty Internatio­nal USA said the order “amounts to a Band-Aid for a bullet wound.”

As for chokeholds, Trump’s order would only allow them if the officer’s “life was at risk.” Hodgson said “peer pressure” and grants would help improve police standards in the years to come.

 ?? GETTy IMaGES ?? ‘EQUALITY FOR ALL’: Surrounded by members of law enforcemen­t, including Bristol County Sheriff Thomas Hodgson, fourth from left, President Trump holds up an executive order he signed that will track bad cops.
GETTy IMaGES ‘EQUALITY FOR ALL’: Surrounded by members of law enforcemen­t, including Bristol County Sheriff Thomas Hodgson, fourth from left, President Trump holds up an executive order he signed that will track bad cops.

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