San Diego Union-Tribune

LAWMAKERS OK POLICE REFORM BILL

Measure would ban chokeholds, some no-knock warrants

- BY FELICIA SONMEZ & COLBY ITKOWITZ Sonmez and Itkowitz write for The Washington Post.

• The House passes the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, an expansive police reform measure that would ban chokeholds.

The House on Wednesday passed the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, an expansive police reform measure named for the 46-yearold Black man who died last Memorial Day after a Minneapoli­s police officer pressed his knee against his neck for more than eight minutes.

The bill passed 220-212 along mostly party lines with two Democrats voting against it and one Republican voting for it.

Floyd’s death triggered a national outcry for a systemic transforma­tion of law enforcemen­t, but the push for policing changes couldn’t overcome partisan and election-year gridlock in Congress and the legislativ­e efforts failed last year.

Democrats were determined to try again, as they control the White House, Senate and House. The measure that passed the House last summer on a 236-181 vote was reintroduc­ed last month by Reps. Karen Bass, D-Los Angeles, and Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y.

“A profession where you have the power to kill should be a profession that requires highly-trained officers who are accountabl­e to the public,” Bass said during the House f loor debate.

The legislatio­n would ban chokeholds, end racial and religious profiling, establish a national database to track police misconduct and prohibit certain noknock warrants. It also contains several provisions that would make it easier to hold officers accountabl­e for misconduct in civil and criminal court. One proposal long sought by civil rights advocates would change “qualified immunity,” the legal doctrine that shields officers from lawsuits, by lowering the bar for plaintiffs to sue officers for alleged civil rights violations.

President Joe Biden praised the bill on Wednesday in a virtual call with House Democrats. The White House said Monday that it supports the legislatio­n and that the president “looks forward to working with the Congress to enact a landmark policing reform law.”

“To make our communitie­s safer, we must begin by rebuilding trust between law enforcemen­t and the people they are entrusted to serve and protect,” the White House said. “We cannot rebuild that trust if we do not hold police officers accountabl­e for abuses of power and tackle systemic misconduct — and systemic racism — in police department­s.”

Republican­s argued that the legislatio­n’s federal mandates go too far and would weaken the ability of officers to do their job. In a narrower proposal of their own last year, Senate Republican­s left intact the “qualified immunity” standard; the legislatio­n failed to advance in the Senate, where it needed 60 votes to proceed.

Ahead of the vote, GOP lawmakers assailed the legislatio­n as a defund-the-police effort.

“You say this is a reform bill and I say that’s B.S. Your own conference members have been advocating for the defunding of our local police officers, calling them names I cannot and will not repeat here today,” said Rep. Kathryn Cammack, R-Fla., who gave an impassione­d floor speech about being the wife of a first responder.

But Democrats pushed back on the GOP claim that the bill would hurt the police, financiall­y or otherwise.

“It would be an irresponsi­ble policy to defund the police and we are not for that,” said House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md. “You can say it, over and over and over again. It will be a lie, no matter how well it serves your political purposes.”

The House bill also faces the likelihood of a filibuster and other significan­t obstacles in the evenly divided Senate. Still, Bass said Democrats are full of “renewed hope that this bill will be signed into law.”

The vote was originally expected to take place today, but was moved up by House leaders after the Capitol Police warned that a militia group may be plotting to breach the Capitol.

Democrats noted Wednesday that the considerat­ion of the bill comes 30 years to the day after the Los Angeles police beating of Rodney King. They also underscore­d the urgent need for the federal government to address the issue of police reform.

Incidents of police brutality “create instabilit­y within communitie­s, and the longer the federal government waits to act or delays in acting, the more instabilit­y we potentiall­y have within communitie­s,” said a senior House Democratic aide, who was not authorized to publicly discuss the issue.

 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ AP ?? “I can’t breathe,” the words George Floyd cried out as an officer kneeled on his neck, are flashed on a wall during a protest in Portland, Ore., in July.
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ AP “I can’t breathe,” the words George Floyd cried out as an officer kneeled on his neck, are flashed on a wall during a protest in Portland, Ore., in July.

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