Dayton Daily News

Some want outside prosecutio­n of police while others think it should remain local

Groups back change in state law, mainly for sake of transparen­cy.

- Cornelius Frolik Staff Writer

A growing number of groups and elected leaders in Ohio have called for special independen­t prosecutor­s to investigat­e cases in which police officers use lethal force to avoid any perception of bias and conflict of interest and build trust in the criminal justice system.

Montgomery County Prosecutor Mat Heck Jr. recently announced his office will appoint special prosecutor­s to review and handle officer-involved shootings in the county.

Heck’s decision was praised by some other county prosecutor­s, the head of a state associatio­n of prosecutin­g attorneys, Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost and state Rep. Phil Plummer, R-Dayton, who said they hope other prosecutor­s follow in his footsteps.

These individual­s and groups say they support changing state law to mandate outside prose

cutors review police shootings and in-custody deaths and handle presenting cases to grand juries and filing charges.

“I applaud him (Heck) for taking leadership that brings more transparen­cy to the system,” Plummer said.

But some local prosecutor­s say they do not think a statewide policy change is necessary or appropriat­e because they are independen­t from local law enforcemen­t agencies and are accountabl­e for their decisions via elections.

“I believe that this is part of the job the people of Clark County have asked me to do,” Clark County Prosecutor Dan Driscoll said. “I am not sure that people will have any more faith in an outside prosecutor or the attorney general’s office.”

He continued, “I am directly accountabl­e to the people in Clark County, through the ballot box, in a way that an outside prosecutor or the attorney general’s office is not.”

A policy change

In late July, Heck notified local law enforcemen­t agencies that his office no longer will handle officer-involved shootings in the county.

Moving forward, his office will appoint special prosecutor­s to these cases, with a stated goal of improving public perception of justice. An office spokespers­on said Heck already has assigned four officer-involved cases that were under investigat­ion or review to special prosecutor­s from other counties.

Montgomery County is home to about 30 police agencies. Two of the largest, the Dayton Police Department and the Montgomery County Sheriff ’s Office, have had 11 and three officer-involved shootings since 2018, respective­ly, according to their data.

Heck’s decision is the right call and is in line with a June vote by the executive committee of the Ohio Prosecutin­g Attorneys Associatio­n, said Louis Tobin, the associatio­n’s executive director.

The committee voted to support state efforts to require outside prosecutor­s to review lethal use-of-force cases involving police, he said.

“Our decision was about public trust in the process,” he said. “It is our sincere hope that review by an outside prosecutor in these cases will help build confidence in our criminal justice system.”

Changing perception­s

Gov. Mike DeWine and Attorney General Yost are pushing to change state law to require outside review, evaluation and potential prosecutio­n of police shootings and in-custody deaths.

Yost said it’s hard to seem impartial and fair when it looks like law enforcemen­t is investigat­ing itself.

“I am for having a statute that requires an independen­t investigat­ion of a lethal, officer-involved useof-force,” Yost told this newspaper. “It’s not that I distrust the investigat­ors — it’s that we need to have the buy-in and trust of the communitie­s we serve.”

Yost commended Heck’s decision to relinquish review of these cases, saying Heck is doing what he can within current law to create a more trustworth­y process.

But Yost said prosecutor­s should not be in charge of deciding who to appoint to these cases, because potentiall­y they could steer them to other attorneys with whom they have a close relationsh­ip.

“When a judge recuses from a case, the judge doesn’t get to decide who the new judge is — the Supreme Court appoints somebody to do it,” Yost said.

Yost said he’d like a similar kind of independen­t decision-maker for selecting outside prosecutor­s.

Possibly there could be a rotating list of prosecutin­g attorneys randomly assigned police lethal use-of-force cases, Yost said, or an outside body or the governor could make special appointmen­ts.

Legislativ­e proposal

Plummer, who has proposed some police reform legislatio­n, says his bill likely will include some of the recommenda­tions backed by the governor and attorney general, including those related to outside reviews of fatal police incidents.

Plummer, who previously served as Montgomery County sheriff for a decade, said he thinks what Heck has done and what the governor and attorney general want to do will improve transparen­cy in the criminal justice system.

Plummer said he held 15 town halls on his bill and there is widespread support for the changes, including from prosecutin­g attorneys, law enforcemen­t unions and other influentia­l and relevant stakeholde­rs.

“I have worked really hard on this bill, and I haven’t encountere­d any real roadblocks, because it makes sense,” he said.

But not everyone has been won over. Butler County Prosecutor Michael Gmoser said he does not support using outside prosecutor­s in officer-involved deadly use-of-force cases.

He said the people of Butler County voted to hire him to do this job, and what’s being proposed suggests he and other prosecutin­g attorneys are not qualified and capable of making decisions without favoritism and bias.

Gmoser said every case of an officer-involved homicide goes to the Butler County grand jury, which is a policy he adopted after coming into the office in 2012.

Gmoser said he personally handles these cases and will personally prosecute any police officer who is indicted, which means his assistant attorneys who work most with the police agencies aren’t affected.

“I do not consider favorites in any respect in anything that I do,” he said.

Driscoll, the Clark County prosecutor, said his office is independen­t of law enforcemen­t agencies and, unless there is a conflict, his office will continue to handle these cases.

He said trust in the process differs greatly between communitie­s based on experience­s citizens have had with their elected prosecutin­g attorneys.

“That’s one of the reasons I think local prosecutor­s should make these types of decisions and not the General Assembly,” he said. “Solutions in Franklin and Cuyahoga counties are rarely a fit for smaller counties.”

 ??  ?? Montgomery County Prosecutor Mat Heck
Montgomery County Prosecutor Mat Heck

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