Marin Independent Journal

Garland rescinds Trump-era memo curtailing consent decrees

- By Michael Balsamo

» Attorney General Merrick Garland on Friday rescinded a Trump-era memo that curtailed the use of consent decrees that federal prosecutor­s have used in sweeping investigat­ions of police department­s.

Garland issued a new memorandum to all U.S. attorneys and other Justice Department leaders spelling out the new policies on civil agreements and consent decrees with state and local government­s.

The memo comes as the Justice Department shifts its priorities to focus more on civil rights issues, criminal justice overhauls and policing policies in the wake of nationwide protests over the death of Black Americans at the hands of law enforcemen­t.

In easing restrictio­ns placed on the use of consent decrees, the Justice Department is making it easier for its prosecutor­s to use the tool to force changes at police department­s and other government agencies with widespread abuse and misconduct.

The memo in particular rescinds a previous memo issued by then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions shortly before he resigned in November 2018.

Democrats have long argued the ability of the Justice Department’s civil rights division to conduct sweeping probes of police department­s had been curtailed under President Donald Trump. The so-called pattern or practice investigat­ions examine whether systemic deficienci­es contribute to misconduct or enable it to persist.

“This memorandum makes clear that the Department will use all appropriat­e legal authoritie­s to safeguard civil rights and protect the environmen­t, consistent with longstandi­ng Department­al practice and informed by the expertise of the Department’s career workforce,” Garland said.

The Justice Department didn’t totally ban pattern or practice investigat­ions under Trump, but former Attorney General William Barr suggested 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 courtappro­ved consent decrees that mandated reforms.

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