Detroit Free Press

RenCen security to give up arrest powers

Private firm’s problems began with abuse allegation­s in ’23

- Andrea May Sahouri

The private security police force tasked with patrolling Detroit’s iconic Renaissanc­e Center is expected to give up its state license to make misdemeano­r arrests by March 12, the Michigan

Commission on Law Enforcemen­t Standards confirmed Tuesday.

It’s the latest action taken after the Free Press first reported in November that white officers within the force, Renaissanc­e Center Management Co., were accused of harassing and abusing Black visitors at the RenCen for over a decade.

RCMC has a state license to operate as a private security police agency through MCOLES under Public Act 330, giving its officers the legal authority to make misdemeano­r arrests.

The commission confirmed that RCMC had given notice that it will be “voluntaril­y relinquish­ing” its license.

And that the security firm has “renewed” its relationsh­ip with Detroit police to assist in patrolling the RenCen, according to Timothy Bourgeois, executive director of MCOLES.

The commission had been investigat­ing potential licensing violations. On Tuesday, it said the security force obtained its license properly. It is now waiting for the results of Michigan State Police’s ongoing investigat­ion into the abuse allegation­s against the security firm’s officers, he said.

MCOLES wants to be able to have those results in case the security force or anyone associated applies for a state license in the future, said Joseph Kempa, deputy executive director of MCOLES.

In December, General Motors ordered the security firm to stop making arrests at the RenCen and officers were no longer allowed to

carry handcuffs, according to Kevin Kelly, a spokespers­on for GM. The number of officers allowed to carry guns had also been reduced.

And before that, GM kicked those security officers accused of abuse and racism off its Detroit properties and mandated racial sensitivit­y and de-escalation training, the automaker confirmed a day after the Free Press reported the allegation­s in November.

The private security force is majority-owned by G4S Secure Solutions, an internatio­nal security company based in Florida, according to court documents filed in 2022. Allied Universal acquired G4S in April 2021.

A General Motors spokespers­on previously said company officials were “disturbed” by the allegation­s and have “zero tolerance for harassment or discrimina­tion.”

Allied Universal and attorneys representi­ng G4S and RCMC did not immediatel­y respond to a request Tuesday for comment.

“Allied Universal has zero tolerance for discrimina­tion and use of force of any kind,” the security company said in a previous statement in November. “We were shocked and appalled upon learning of the incidents taking place at the Renaissanc­e Center.”

Two pending federal lawsuits allege a pattern of white officers assaulting, targeting, harassing and unlawfully detaining Black people in a basement cell of the RenCen.

GM, G4S and RCMC have each been named in various lawsuits.

That includes a federal lawsuit filed in early 2023 by a man who said white officers assaulted him so severely he suffered a brain injury. He was detained in a basement cell for hours, denied use of a restroom and was forced to urinate on himself, the lawsuit alleges. He was never charged with a crime.

Also a plaintiff in that suit is a Black woman who, in August, was struck in the face by a white officer after an argument over whether she could bring her bike into the building, according to the federal lawsuit. The woman suffers from mental illness, the lawsuit states.

Video reviewed by the Free Press shows the security officer slamming the woman into a concrete pillar before forcing her to the ground and punching her in the face repeatedly while on top of her. There is no audio in the video.

A Detroit Police Department official has said that the woman allegedly attacked a Renaissanc­e Center officer with a tree branch. A court check found that no criminal charges have been filed against her as of late last year.

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