Post-Tribune

Black Caucus pushes for more police accountabi­lity

- By Casey Smith

The Indiana Black Legislativ­e Caucus called Thursday for state lawmakers to increase accountabi­lity and transparen­cy for the state’s police officers.

Caucus members released a widerangin­g package of criminal justice reform proposals that they plan to push for during next year’s legislativ­e session. Key to their policy agenda is establishi­ng more frequent audits on public safety funds, funding body and dash cameras, reducing law enforcemen­t in schools, automatic external investigat­ions for officer-involved shootings, and requiring all law enforcemen­t agencies to obtain independen­t liability insurance.

Marijuana decriminal­ization, enhanced protester protection­s and studying racism as a public health crisis are among the more than three dozen other points outlined by the caucus.

“We’re trying to keep the movement going,” Rep. Robin Shacklefor­d, of Indianapol­is, said at a news conference Thursday. “We want to galvanize the voices of the streets into legislatio­n.”

The reform agenda follows protests across the state about racial justice and police brutality, spurred by the police killing of George Floyd.

In June, the caucus called on Gov. Eric Holcomb to address justice reform in Indiana with a list of “immediate action items” that includes putting bans on chokeholds, racial profiling and no-knock warrants.

Shacklefor­d said the governor has been “polite” and that caucus members have spoken with him several times, but added that she would like to “see more action from Gov. Holcomb, and immediate action.”

Rep. Earl Harris, of East Chicago, said the caucus has been working with various groups throughout the state — including the Indiana Sheriff’s Associatio­n, the Indiana State Police superinten­dent and victims of police-action shootings — to advocate for changes in police culture that can lead to racial profiling and police brutality.

Those changes include creating a whistleblo­wer complaint process to make it easier for officers to come forward with complaints against other officers, as well as creating a statewide tracking system of officers who have complaints or prior disciplina­ry action.

“The last thing different agencies want is for one of their officers that has been a problem to then be able to go to another agency, or for them to take in someone, that they don’t know has a history of problems,” Harris said.

The caucus also wants to pave the way for local leaders to establish independen­t civilian review boards to oversee public complaints of police violence, Harris said.

But while Shacklefor­d said the caucus believes in “re-imagining and restructur­ing the police,” they don’t support completely defending or eliminatin­g the police. Funding is needed to change how police officers are trained and to ensure that all are equipped with cameras — which Shacklefor­d emphasized requires legislativ­e oversight — but said there is still “the need for law enforcemen­t in our communitie­s.”

Lawmakers are required to have legislatio­n proposals together by December. Shacklefor­d said caucus members anticipate proposing several new bills to be addressed during the 2021 legislativ­e session, but because Democrats are the superminor­ity in the state’s General Assembly, they anticipate they’ll spend more time drafting amendments to current laws.

 ?? TOM DAVIES/AP ?? State Rep. Carolyn Jackson, D-Hammond, speaks during an Indiana Black Legislativ­e Caucus news conference Thursday outside the Statehouse in Indianapol­is.
TOM DAVIES/AP State Rep. Carolyn Jackson, D-Hammond, speaks during an Indiana Black Legislativ­e Caucus news conference Thursday outside the Statehouse in Indianapol­is.

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