Miami Herald

BEACH IN SHAMBLES

- BY MELBA PEARSON Melba Pearson is an attorney specializi­ng in criminal justice policy and civil rights. She is the director of policy and programs for FIU’s Center for the Administra­tion of Justice.

As former residents of South Beach, my husband and I visited last week and were shocked at what has become of this gem of a city. Where we used to stroll down Collins or Ocean Drive feeling safe and enjoying the many music venues, we found pimps and hookers in full view. Marijuana permeated the air everywhere we walked.

We saw a large group of young people walk on to the beach at First Street with large rolling coolers, right past a Miami BeachPolic­e Officer who was looking at his phone. We witnessed a half naked homeless woman sleeping in a doorway on Fifth Street, and loud cars speeding down Collins Avenue day and night.

What happened? Why aren’t police enforcing the law?

Sad to see this happening to what was once a prime destinatio­n.

– Karen Skruodys,

Estero

As the 2021 legislativ­e session begins, there are a number of bills dealing with police reform. One is being touted as a bipartisan solution. It requires implicit-bias and de-escalation training, while requiring officers to step in if a fellow officer is acting inappropri­ately. The question is, will this bring police accountabi­lity?

Last week, it was announced that the city of Miami police department will no longer be monitored by the U.S. Department of Justice. The initial agreement was put in place in 2016 after seven fatal shootings of young African-American men over eight months in 2011. Though the city was in compliance in that there were no further shootings, non-fatal incidents of excessive force are still a concern.

Meanwhile, Javier Ortiz, a Miami police captain known for making a string of offensive and racist comments, has cost taxpayers $565,000 so far in several settlement­s because of excessive-force complaints. Despite the number of bones he has broken, complaints, racist comments and incidents, he has not been prosecuted or fired.

Jesus Menocal, of the Hialeah police force, faces a string of charges based on allegation­s that he used his authority to pressure young women into having sex with him. Although federal prosecutor­s have moved forward with criminal charges, Miami-Dade prosecutor­s refused to prosecute him. He is now facing life in prison for sexually assaulting six women and underage girls — with more survivors continuing to come forward.

Officers in Fort Lauderdale were cleared for shooting peaceful protester LaToya Ratlieff in the face with a rubber bullet. The department’s own protocols were clearly violated, yet there was no accountabi­lity.

The department’s training manual states officers should shoot at a person’s head with rubber bullets only if deadly force is warranted. Video from the scene showed Ratlieff was stumbling away when the officer shot her. Two different officers who were caught on a body camera laughing and cursing after shooting rubber bullets at protesters were suspended for one day for violating the department’s policy against “vulgar, obscene or offensive language” while on duty.”

None of these cases reflects a lack of training.

There were policies in place governing use of force. Training will not change officers who think it’s funny to hurt the people they serve or who hold racist views. Many department­s already have implicit-bias and de-escalation training — it’s nothing new. Miami Police had to implement these trainings as part of their agreement. De-escalation is a good first step, but accountabi­lity is everything. If bad actors aren’t punished, there never will be community trust in the system.

The devil is in the details of the new bill. If de-escalation training is required but is an unfunded mandate – meaning the Legislatur­e doesn’t set aside any money for it — we will not see the results needed. On the flip side, money may be provided as funds for general training for police department­s. Will there be any quality control to ensure that this is a robust de-escalation program — like the one used in Camden, New Jersey — as opposed to a feel-good one-day event with no real implementa­tion afterward?

Training without a cultural shift is useless. It’s like putting a Band-Aid on a gunshot wound. If 20 percent of the officers cause 80 percent of the problems, then the only way we will see a change is if those 20 percent are being held accountabl­e.

If the argument as to why police-shooting cases are not being prosecuted is that there is a problem with the law (vs. an unwillingn­ess to charge these cases), then the law needs to be changed. There are two ways to do it — through legislatio­n or through case law, where judges issue rulings. It brings us back to the importance of the filing of such cases — with evidence — as a tool for change.

None of this is brain surgery. The Kerner Commission report on policing in 1968, which identified poverty and institutio­nalized racism as drivers of violence in communitie­s of color, and the 21st Century Task Force on Policing of 2015 give similar recommenda­tions. The Legislativ­e Black Caucus released a package of bills, including Sen. Randolph Bracy’s bill to make dashboard and body cameras mandatory for all police department­s. There are clear solutions as long as our legislator­s have the stomach to pass them. Unfortunat­ely, this has not been the case so far.

Accountabi­lity changes behavior. Without the prosecutio­n and/or firing of bad police officers — without allowing them to be rehired — we will never see the change we seek.

 ?? ELIJAH NOUVELAGE Getty Images ?? Police in many cities were accused of excessive use of force during protests after George Floyd’s death.
ELIJAH NOUVELAGE Getty Images Police in many cities were accused of excessive use of force during protests after George Floyd’s death.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States