Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Democrats renew call for police reforms in Pa.

- By Cynthia Fernandez

HARRISBURG — In June 2018, a police officer shot and killed Antwon Rose II, an unarmed black teenager, in East Pittsburgh.

Antwon’s death led to emotional protests, the arrest of the officer, and a package of police reform bills introduced by Democrats — legislatio­n that went nowhere in the Republican-controlled state legislatur­e.

Now, two years later, protests have once again erupted across Pennsylvan­ia and the nation demanding justice for George Floyd, a black man from Minnesota who died after an officer knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes.

Floyd’s death also has reignited calls by Pennsylvan­ia legislator­s to change the state’s deadly force law and ramp up police oversight. But without GOP support, many of these measures have no chance of reaching Gov. Tom Wolf.

“The knee on George Floyd is emblematic of the knee on the neck of many black and brown people across the system,” Rep. Jordan Harris, D-Philadelph­ia, a member of the Pennsylvan­ia Legislativ­e Black Caucus, said Tuesday. “Far too often we want them to come to the table and sit and hear false promises, and not get the justice and the equity that they deserve.”

On Tuesday, a group of state House Democrats and local Philadelph­ia lawmakers proposed dozens of reforms regarding police training, discipline, and oversight. The plan calls on the legislatur­e specifical­ly to ban police chokeholds, provide access to body-camera footage through the state’s open-records law, and create an oversight board to certify officers.

These lawmakers also are lobbying Mr. Wolf to require the state police to create and maintain a database of disciplina­ry actions and complaints lodged against officers, an idea first proposed after Antwon’s death.

“You can’t address the issue if you don’t even know where the issue is happening and what’s going on,” Mr. Harris said. “We know what’s been happening for years. The only difference is everybody has a camera phone and they get to record it. But if we don’t have the data we will not address it.”

The officers at the center of Mr. Floyd’s and Antwon’s deaths both had disciplina­ry records. The Minneapoli­s police officer, Derek Chauvin, had 18 complaints lodged against him, though local authoritie­s did not release further details. Michael Rosfeld, the officer who shot Antwon three times as he fled a scene, was accused of unjustly detaining two men when he was an officer with the University of Pittsburgh, which fired him. (Mr. Rosfeld is suing the school.)

Senate Minority Leader Jay Costa, D-Forest Hills, said the small municipal department that hired Mr. Rosfeld had no knowledge of the prior incidents.

“They did not know of his background as to how it relates to the reason he was terminated, or any reprimands or suspension­s,” he said.

In the aftermath of Antwon’s death, Mr. Costa proposed a bill that would create a disciplina­ry database and require additional training and mental health screenings for officers. A version of the measure introduced at the beginning of this legislativ­e session has been sitting in committee without a hearing since March 2019.

“Unfortunat­ely, we can’t get the leadership there to move the bill,” he said. “It is my hope that in light of the protests, these folks will recognize that these are important, reasonable, and responsibl­e measures. It is just training and maintainin­g informatio­n.”

Mr. Harris on Tuesday premiered a new tactic — circumvent­ing the Legislatur­e and asking Mr. Wolf to direct state police to create the database. A spokespers­on for the governor said he “is supportive of the concepts outlined by the elected leaders.”

“During meetings in Philadelph­ia yesterday with community leaders and elected officials, the governor talked about many of these policies as well as policies like education and school funding, health care access, and business assistance that will help assist in larger systematic disparitie­s,” spokeswoma­n Lyndsay Kensinger said in an email.

The reform package unveiled Tuesday also calls on the Legislatur­e to “eliminate effectuati­ng an arrest as a justificat­ion for the use of deadly force.”

State law gives police officers wide discretion to use deadly force, including when they believe a suspect attempted or successful­ly committed a forcible felony, and the force was necessary to complete an arrest. Mr. Rosfeld was acquitted in Antwon’s death after a defense expert testified that the officer’s actions were justified, even though the teen was unarmed.

While state law lays out the circumstan­ces under which an officer may use deadly force, not every department has a written policy on how it should be used — including the one that employed Mr. Rosfeld when he fatally shot Antwon.

“One of the shocking realizatio­ns after recent policeinvo­lved shootings at the local level is that municipali­ties and their law enforcemen­t department­s have little-to-no policies guiding the decisions that police have to make in their line of work,” Mr. Costa wrote in a memo seeking support from his colleagues for a measure that would compel law enforcemen­t agencies to adopt a useof-force policy.

Stuck in committee

But like his database bill, Mr. Costa’s use-of-force legislatio­n has been sitting in committee for more than a year. And like any piece of legislatio­n that reaches Mr. Wolf’s desk, these reform measures need Republican support to advance.

Mr. Costa’s bills are sitting in the Senate Law and Justice Committee, chaired by Sen. Patrick Stefano, RConnellsv­ille. His office did not respond to requests for comment.

A spokespers­on for Senate Republican­s said the caucus “would depend on the committee process to fully explore” any reform legislatio­n.

A spokespers­on for the House GOP caucus did not respond to a request for comment by press time. In a previous statement, House Speaker Mike Turzai, RMarshall, called Mr. Floyd’s death “depraved and senseless,” and said the state should “continue to promote educationa­l choice and economic opportunit­y for all.”

Mr. Costa is used to seeing reform bills wither in committee, though he’s hopeful the recent protests will draw new attention “to the need for this legislatio­n.”

“These incidents occur and then we protest. Then we talk about it, and then time passes and it is ignored,” he said. “We need to break that cycle and we need to make sure these conversati­ons take place.”

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Antwon Rose II

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