Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Governor unveils plan to appoint watchdog

- By Cynthia Fernandez

HARRISBURG — Gov. Tom Wolf will appoint a watchdog and create a commission to investigat­e alleged misconduct by the Pennsylvan­ia State Police and other law enforcemen­t agencies under his purview, he announced Thursday.

But additional reform — including changing when officers can use deadly force, improving access to body-camera footage, and strengthen­ing oversight of hundreds of municipal department­s statewide — will need approval from the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e.

The executive action comes in response to calls by legislativ­e Democrats to adopt reforms in the wake of the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s.

“Today, I’m taking steps to address concerns about long-standing violence and oppression against Pennsylvan­ians of color,” Mr. Wolf said at a news conference. “This is a call for reflection, improvemen­t, and most of all of learning. We must rise to the challenge because too many people have lost faith in our public safety institutio­ns and in our institutio­ns, in general.”

The head of the Pennsylvan­ia State Troopers Associatio­n said in a statement that Mr. Wolf’s Thursday announceme­nt made it seem as if its members and all state law enforcemen­t “are no better than those charged with Mr. Floyd’s death.”

“This is clear when he ignored his own order and marched in Harrisburg this week during a pandemic with people holding signs that read, ‘Blue Lives Murder,’ ” President David Kennedy said, referencin­g Mr. Wolf’s participat­ion in a march Wednesday.

Mr. Wolf told reporters he did not condone the sign and that he thinks the State Police are doing a “fine job.” The order also applies to the Department of Correction­s, the Capitol Police, and probation and parole officers.

“This is not an effort to point a finger,” he said. “It’s an effort to build trust.”

Among the other actions announced Thursday, Mr. Wolf said he will “direct” all law enforcemen­t academies to review curriculum and revise use-of-force training. He also backed the efforts of the Pennsylvan­ia Legislativ­e Black Caucus, which earlier this week proposed dozens of changes to how law enforcemen­t is trained, discipline­d and overseen.

The proposed measures are similar to those introduced after an East Pittsburgh police officer shot and killed Antwon Rose II, an unarmed teen, in 2018. Those bills have not been taken up by the GOP-majority House and Senate.

Attorney General Josh Shapiro,

with the heads of Philadelph­ia and Pittsburgh’s police department­s as well as police union leaders, announced their support for legislatio­n that would create a database of disciplina­ry actions that law enforcemen­t agencies would access when making hiring decisions.

“Officers who engage in misconduct or use excessive force erode trust in law enforcemen­t and make it harder for our communitie­s to be and feel safe,” the group — which includes Philadelph­ia police Commission­er Danielle Outlaw, Pittsburgh police Chief Scott Schubert and the Pennsylvan­ia District Attorneys Associatio­n — said in a statement released by Mr. Shapiro’s office.

“When they leave an agency or retire in lieu of terminatio­n, that record needs to go with them. We stand united in calling for reform of the hiring process so that law enforcemen­t agencies have the informatio­n to make informed decisions about the personnel they hire.”

Mr. Shapiro told Spotlight PA the endorsemen­t is the result of months of bringing lawmakers of color and law enforcemen­t representa­tives together to address reform.

“I realized they had never sat down and talked to one another,” he said.

The six months of work paid off Thursday, Mr. Shapiro said, when he called Antwon’s mother.

“It was an incredibly emotional discussion, and I told her that I will never forget Antwon and that his legacy will lead to this reform, and he will always be remembered as having done something that helped others,” Mr. Shapiro said.

There are already proposals in the House and Senate to create such a database. The Senate’s version, introduced by Minority Leader Jay Costa, D-Forest Hills, has been sitting in committee since March 2019.

The House measure, from Rep. Chris Rabb, DPhiladelp­hia, has been waiting almost as long for considerat­ion.

Mr. Rabb said it will be “politicall­y hard” for Republican­s to back away from the measure now that it has been endorsed by the statewide and Philadelph­ia chapter of the Fraternal Order of Police.

Mike Straub, a spokespers­on for House Republican­s, said lawmakers “strongly condemn acts of racism and violence” and thanked law enforcemen­t.

In a statement, Senate Majority Leader Jake Corman, R-Centre, said his caucus is “committed to engaging in a constructi­ve conversati­on about how we move forward together.”

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