Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

RESTORING ‘TRUST’

Lawmaker urges Pa. Legislatur­e to make it easier for attorney general to investigat­e police killings

- By Christina Baker

HARRISBURG — A Pennsylvan­ia lawmaker is urging the Legislatur­e to take action on a bill that would make it easier for the state attorney general to investigat­e when police use deadly force, a measure he said would “restore trust in law enforcemen­t.”

The legislatio­n, introduced by state Sen. Art Haywood, D-Montgomery, would require district attorneys to investigat­e the deaths of people killed by police without the involvemen­t of the officer’s department.

If a district attorney were to decide not to prosecute an officer, under the proposed legislatio­n they would be required to refer the case to Pennsylvan­ia’s attorney general.

Currently, Pennsylvan­ia law allows district attorneys to ask the state attorney general’s office to investigat­e a case if, for instance, they believe there’s an “actual or apparent” conflict of interest. Law enforcemen­t experts previously told Spotlight PA that this conflict is inherent because of the close relationsh­ip between district attorneys and police.

But the attorney general’s office cannot launch an inquiry without the district attorney signing off on the move.

Mr. Haywood said his bill would address the “appearance of bias” that erodes trust in law enforcemen­t. He cited investigat­ions into recent police killings, including those of Antwon Rose II in East Pittsburgh, Ricardo Muñoz in Lancaster, and Christian Hall in the Poconos.

Spotlight PA and NBC News previously obtained video that shows Hall — a 19-year-old Chinese American experienci­ng a mental health crisis — had his hands in the air when state police troopers shot and killed him in 2020.

Troopers from outside the local barracks investigat­ed the killing and turned the findings over to the Monroe County district attorney, who ruled it justified. Hall’s parents publicly asked the Monroe County DA to send the case to the attorney general, but the DA did not do so.

Hall’s parents have filed a lawsuit accusing troopers of using excessive force and misleading the public.

“Our law enforcemen­t system requires public trust,” Mr. Haywood said at a news conference earlier this week in the state Capitol, flanked by the bill’s supporters, including libertaria­n advocacy group Americans for Prosperity.

The legislatio­n — which has 10 Democratic co-sponsors but no Republican backers — has been awaiting considerat­ion in the Senate Law and Justice Committee since January. When approached in the Capitol this week, state Sen. Mike Regan, R-York, who chairs the committee, said he was not aware of the bill.

Mr. Haywood first introduced a version of the legislatio­n in 2015 after police killed Eric Garner in New York City and Michael Brown Jr. in Ferguson, Mo.

The original bill would have mandated the attorney general investigat­e all police killings, but Mr. Haywood said that provision was removed from this version to make it more likely to pass.

The Pennsylvan­ia State Law Enforcemen­t Citizen Advisory Commission — a panel convened by Gov. Tom Wolf to review the actions and policies of state-run police agencies — earlier this year

recommende­d independen­t investigat­ions of police killingsde­fended its current process in response to a 2016 shooting by state police. The department to the committee.

Mr. Haywood noted during the news conference that the USA Today Network’s PA Editorial Board “challenged” the state legislatur­e to pass his bill, and he said he hopes that has an impact.

“I’m committed to having trust in the law enforcemen­t system in Pennsylvan­ia,” Mr. Haywood said. “The citizens deserve it, law enforcemen­t officers deserve to have a trusted system.”

Spotlight PA is an independen­t, nonpartisa­n newsroom powered by The Philadelph­ia Inquirer in partnershi­p with PennLive/The Patriot-News, TribLIVE/ Pittsburgh TribuneRev­iew, and WITF Public Media. Sign up for our free newsletter­s. Christina Baker is an intern with the Pennsylvan­ia Legislativ­e Correspond­ents’ Associatio­n.

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