San Diego Union-Tribune

Some ask if spate of police reform laws are enough.

More than 30 states have passed more than 140 new laws

- BY STEVE EDER, MICHAEL H. KELLER & BLACKI MIGLIOZZI Eder, Keller and Migliozzi write for The New York Times.

In February, Illinois enacted a law that rewrote many of the state’s rules of policing and mandated that officers wear body cameras. In March, New York City moved to make it easier for citizens to sue officers. This month, the Maryland Legislatur­e — which decades ago became the first to adopt a Law Enforcemen­t Officers’ Bill of Rights — became the first to do away with it.

In recent months, state and city lawmakers across the country have seized on a push for reform prompted by outrage at the killing of George Floyd in May, passing legislatio­n that has stripped the police of some hardfought protection­s won over the past half-century.

“Police unions in the United States are pretty much playing defense at the moment,” said Brian Marvel, a San Diego officer and the president of California’s largest law enforcemen­t labor organizati­on. “You have groups of people that are looking for change — and some groups are looking for radical change.”

More than 30 states have passed more than 140 new police oversight and reform laws, according to a New York Times analysis of data from the National Conference of State Legislatur­es.

Amber Widgery, a policy expert at the organizati­on, said many of the laws — restrictin­g the use of force, overhaulin­g disciplina­ry systems, installing more civilian oversight and requiring transparen­cy around misconduct cases — give states far more influence over policing practices that have typically been left to local jurisdicti­ons.

“We’re seeing the creation of really strong, centralize­d state guidance that sets a baseline for police accountabi­lity, behavior and standards” for all department­s, she said.

It’s a remarkable, nationwide and in some places bipartisan movement that flies directly counter to years of deference to the police and their powerful unions. But the laws, and new rules adopted by police department­s across the country, are not enough to satisfy demands by Black Lives Matter and other activists who are pushing for wholesale reforms, cultural shifts and cutbacks at law enforcemen­t agencies.

“The focus has been so heavily on what do we do after harm has already been committed — after the police have already engaged in misconduct — and far less focused on how do we stop this from the beginning,” said Paige Fernandez, an advocate at the American Civil Liberties Union.

While Derek Chauvin, the Minneapoli­s officer accused of murdering Floyd, was on trial last week, episodes in Virginia, Minnesota and Illinois — which have all enacted reforms — underscore­d how the new laws would not always prevent traumatic outcomes.

A police officer in Virginia was seen on video pointing a gun at a Black Army lieutenant and pepper-spraying him during a traffic stop. A veteran officer in Minnesota fatally shot 20-year-old Daunte Wright, a Black man, after pulling him over. And video recordings showed a Chicago officer chasing and fatally firing at 13-year-old Adam Toledo, a Latino, after he appeared to toss aside a gun while obeying commands to raise his hands. The events ignited fresh protests and more questions about why police interventi­ons escalated into deaths of people of color.

“People aren’t necessaril­y happy with the change they’re seeing, because the same thing keeps happening,” said Stevante Clark, whose brother Stephon was killed by the Sacramento police in 2018.

California enacted a law named after his brother that raised the standard for using lethal force, but Clark sees a need for the federal government to impose national regulation­s.

House Democrats recently passed a sweeping police bill designed to address racial discrimina­tion and excessive use of force, but it lacks the Republican support needed in the Senate. President Joe Biden has also fallen short on a campaign promise to establish an oversight commission during his first 100 days in office.

Nearly 1,000 people have been shot and killed by police annually in recent years, according to data from The Washington Post, which also show that officers fatally shot Black and Hispanic people at a much higher rate by population than Whites.

Some activists have cheered new laws that could curb police misconduct, mainly in states and cities controlled by Democrats. But they also fear that those changes could be offset in Republican jurisdicti­ons that are proposing to expand police protection­s or impose harsher penalties for protestrel­ated activities like blocking highways and defacing public property.

Police unions, along with many Republican lawmakers, have resisted some of the reform efforts, arguing that they will imperil public safety. But there have been some signs of bipartisan­ship.

In Maryland, the Democratic-controlled legislatur­e overrode a veto by the state’s Republican governor to pass a sweeping reform package. Outlining his objections, Gov. Larry Hogan said the laws would be damaging to “police recruitmen­t and retention, posing significan­t risks to public safety.”

Importantl­y, the package erases the Law Enforcemen­t Officers’ Bill of Rights in the state, a landmark achievemen­t for police unions in the 1970s. Decades ago, similar protection­s spread across the country in union contracts and local laws, but its passage in Maryland gave broad protection­s to every department at once.

Critics said the policing bill of rights reduced accountabi­lity: Officers could wait days before being questioned about an allegation; only fellow officers could conduct interrogat­ions; some complaints could be expunged from an officer’s file after a few years.

“It is fitting that Maryland is the first state to repeal it as they opened this Pandora’s box in the first place,” said Caylin Young, public policy director at the ACLU of Maryland.

Maryland’s new laws contain a range of provisions to rein in policing: a body-camera requiremen­t for officers regularly interactin­g with the public, prison sentences of up to 10 years for violations of the state’s use-of-force policy, and restrictio­ns on so-called no-knock warrants. (Those warrants drew national attention last year when the police in Louisville, Ky., fatally shot Breonna Taylor, an emergency medical technician, after smashing through her apartment door during a botched drug raid. Louisville banned the warrants last summer, and state lawmakers limited their use this month.)

Maryland’s new standards follow a decision by the Baltimore state’s attorney, Marilyn Mosby, to stop prosecutin­g minor crimes like prostituti­on and drug possession.

“When we criminaliz­e these minor offenses that have nothing to do with public safety, we expose people to needless interactio­n with law enforcemen­t that, for Black people in this country, can often lead to a death sentence,” Mosby told the Baltimore City Council last week.

Other proposals to reduce police interventi­ons have caught on elsewhere. In February, Berkeley barred officers from pulling over motorists for not wearing a seat belt, misuse of high-beam headlights or expired registrati­ons. The moves were in part based on research showing that Black motorists in the city were about six times more likely to be pulled over than White motorists were, although the police union raised concerns that the reforms created “significan­t safety consequenc­es for citizens and officers.”

In Virginia, a law went into effect last month limiting the minor traffic violations for which officers should stop vehicles. It also prohibits officers from conducting searches solely based on smelling marijuana.

“As a Black woman who understand­s there’s been a disproport­ionate abuse of Black and Brown people by police officers, we had to do something to prevent these injuries and killings of people of color,” said L. Louise Lucas, a Democratic state senator from Virginia, who proposed the bill and spoke of her own mistreatme­nt by law enforcemen­t. “This is an ageold story for Black people."

Many of the new rules adopted by states and cities have similariti­es, focusing on the use of force or accountabi­lity after the fact. Two of the country’s largest states, California and New York, have been at the forefront of that push — and some cities have taken more dramatic steps.

Los Angeles, Oakland and San Francisco, for example, last year cut their police department budgets. Activists have called for reducing police funding and diverting some of that money to mental health initiative­s and social services. But those demands have often met with resistance, not only from law enforcemen­t but also from Black residents and officials who fear that crime would surge.

In fact, in Oakland, some of those cuts were reversed after a spike in homicides and attacks on Asian Americans.

“I understand the conversati­on about defunding and re-imagining the police, but these are real people dying,” said Sgt. Barry Donelan, the head of the Oakland police union.

The city has had more than 40 homicides so far this year compared with 13 at the same time last year.

Immediatel­y after Floyd’s death, the Minneapoli­s City Council voted to disband its police force, only to be overruled by a city charter commission.

Last year, Gov. Andrew Cuomo of New York ordered nearly 500 local jurisdicti­ons, including New York City, to devise plans to “reinvent and modernize” policing in their communitie­s, threatenin­g to withhold funding if they failed to do so.

The governor has spoken of the need to “resolve the tension” between police and communitie­s.

“You don’t have the option of ending the police, and you don’t have the option of continuing with distrust of the police,” he said Wednesday to reporters. “So the relationsh­ip has to be repaired.”

The police remain eager to be heard.

“Most of our members across the country are finding that you have state legislatur­es that are including law enforcemen­t in on the discussion,” said Patrick Yoes, the national president of the Fraternal Order of Police, which represents hundreds of thousands of officers. “Then you have those that are pretty much freezing them out and have already made up their mind about the direction they’re going — because they believe that this reform somehow is going to save the day.”

Police advocates point to statistics showing increases in violent crimes as evidence that early reforms are backfiring. Nationally, murder rates increased significan­tly last year, according to preliminar­y FBI data released last month, although experts have cited a number of possible factors that could be at work, including the pandemic. Excluding law enforcemen­t from the discussion­s is leading to bad policy, the advocates say.

“They’ve been largely shut out of this conversati­on, which I don’t think is a good thing because they have experience and knowledge,” said Rafael A. Mangual, a senior fellow at the conservati­ve-leaning Manhattan Institute.

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