Dayton Daily News

Dems’ proposals to overhaul policing

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WASHINGTON — Democrats in Congress are proposing an overhaul of police procedures and accountabi­lity after the mass protests over the deaths of black Americans at the hand of law enforcemen­t. The Justice in Policing Act is among the most ambitious law enforcemen­t reforms from Congress in years and confronts several aspects of policing that have come under strong criticism, especially as more and more police violence is captured on cellphone video and shared across the nation and the world. The package limits legal protection­s for police, creates a national database of excessivef­orce encounters and bans police choke holds, among other changes. The changes, if enacted, would have massive implicatio­ns on policing in the U.S.

It’s not clear whether the legislatio­n will pass, especially in an election year and amid calls to “defund the police” and growing protests. President Donald Trump has tried to set himself up as a “law and order” leader and has criticized the package, claiming Democrats have “gone CRAZY.” A few things to know about the bill and how it could make a difference:

Changing federal civil rights law

Under the proposal, the federal civil rights law that governs police misconduct would no longer require prosecutor­s to prove that an officer’s actions were willful, a high burden of proof. The law would allow an officer to be charged for acting with reckless disregard for someone’s life, causing that person’s death.

Under the current law, it is federal crime to willfully deprive someone of their civil rights under the color of authority, but the officer also must have known what they were doing was wrong and against the law and decided to do it anyway.

That was a burden of proof that prosecutor­s said they couldn’t meet in the case of Eric Garner when they declined to bring charges against Officer Daniel Pantaleo last year.

Qualified immunity

Police officers are generally not held personally liable for anything that happens on the job, including when someone dies. The concept of qualified immunity has long been a way to protect police from unnecessar­y lawsuits and to give them the freedom to police without fear of unnecessar­y retributio­n.

The bill would amend federal misconduct statutes to make it easier for courts to find officers personally liable for the violation of civil rights. The move could have major consequenc­es for officers who would think twice before abusing their power, but it could also make it more difficult to recruit police nationwide. It could also potentiall­y lead to officers being held financiall­y liable, too. Cities often bear the brunt of misconduct claims.

Independen­t and transparen­t

A long-held grievance has been that prosecutor­s and police have too cozy a relationsh­ip and can’t separate that out when misconduct is an issue. It is part of the investigat­ion now into the shooting death of Ahmaud Arbery in coastal Georgia. The father and son accused of killing Arbery had a long history with the local district attorney, the father having worked for the DA as an investigat­or for 20 years. The case is now being investigat­ed by a separate district attorney. The bill provides a grant program for state attorneys general to conduct independen­t investigat­ions into problemati­c police department­s.

A second issue is many officers who wind up involved in a fatal shooting have a long history of misconduct, including Derek Chauvin, the Minneapoli­s officer who has been charged with murder in the death of George Floyd. But those records are often not made public. The bill calls for a national registry including complaints, disciplina­ry records and terminatio­n records, which proponents say would be a massive step forward in transparen­cy.

Pattern or practice investigat­ions

Democrats say the ability of the Justice Department’s civil rights division to perform so-called pattern or practice investigat­ions, sweeping probes into police department­s that examine whether systemic deficienci­es contribute to misconduct or enable it to persist, has been curtailed. The proposal would give specific subpoena

power to federal civil rights prosecutor­s to conduct those investigat­ions and would aid state attorneys general with conducting similar investigat­ions.

The Justice Department hasn’t banned pattern or practice investigat­ions. U.S. Attorney General William Barr, however, has suggested that they may have been previously overused. As attorney general in the Obama administra­tion, Eric Holder frequently criticized violent police confrontat­ions and opened a series of civil rights investigat­ions into local law enforcemen­t practices. The civil rights investigat­ions often ended with court-approved consent decrees that mandated reforms. The consent decrees included those with the police in Ferguson, Missouri, after the killing of Michael Brown and in Baltimore following the police custody death of 25-year-old Freddie Gray.

Hours before he resigned as attorney general in November 2018, Jeff Sessions signed a memo that sharply curtailed the use of consent decrees.

Significan­t hurdles

Other measures in the legislatio­n are likely to face significan­t hurdles to enact. And there are some that police officials are likely to argue could endanger officers’ lives.

The bill calls for a ban on “no knock” warrants, which are typically executed in some of the most dangerous investigat­ions conducted by police department­s. Oregon and Florida are the only states that have outlawed such warrants.

A no-knock warrant, as its name implies, is an order from a judge that allows police to enter a home without prior notificati­on to the residents, such as ringing a doorbell or banging on the door. In most cases, the law requires that officers must knock and announce themselves before entering a private home to execute a search warrant.

There has been a growing call to ban no-knock warrants since 26-year-old Breonna Taylor was killed in her Louisville home by officers in March.

— COLLEEN LONG AND MICHAEL BALSAMO / AP

 ?? MANUEL BALCE CENETA / AP ?? House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of Calif., with Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., and other Congressio­nal Democrats Monday on Capitol Hill in Washington. They are proposing an overhaul of police procedures and accountabi­lity after the mass protests over the deaths of black Americans at the hand of law enforcemen­t.
MANUEL BALCE CENETA / AP House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of Calif., with Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., and other Congressio­nal Democrats Monday on Capitol Hill in Washington. They are proposing an overhaul of police procedures and accountabi­lity after the mass protests over the deaths of black Americans at the hand of law enforcemen­t.

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