San Diego Union-Tribune

WHITE HOUSE TO ISSUE EXECUTIVE ORDER ON POLICING

Signing will come on 2nd anniversar­y of Floyd’s death

- BY TYLER PAGER & DAVID NAKAMURA

President Joe Biden is expected to sign an executive order today aimed at bolstering police accountabi­lity, according to multiple people briefed on the announceme­nt, a step that could re-energize federal reform efforts as the nation marks the second anniversar­y of the police killing of George Floyd.

The order — which appears to have the support of some major policing organizati­ons — will call for the creation of national standards for the accreditat­ion of police department­s and a national database of officers with substantia­ted complaints and disciplina­ry records, including those fired for misconduct.

It also will instruct federal law enforcemen­t agencies to update their use-offorce policies, said the people briefed on the matter, some of whom spoke on the condition of anonymity because the order had not yet been released.

Advocates have been urging the White House to take such action since a sweeping police-reform bill failed in Congress last year. The bill was named for Floyd, a Black man whose death under the knee of a Minneapoli­s police officer in 2020 prompted mass social justice protests across the country.

Floyd’s family members, civil rights advocates and law enforcemen­t officials are expected to join the president at the White House for a ceremony at which the order will be signed.

“If you had asked me six months ago, I would have said it’s not time for an executive order yet because we should be focused on federal legislatio­n, the George Floyd bill in particular,” Damon Hewitt, the president and executive director of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, said on Tuesday. “But once that effort was sabotaged, the administra­tion has stepped up as much as it could via executive action.”

Biden’s bid to act unilateral­ly comes amid a rise in violent crime and concern among civil rights groups that the White House has lost a sense of urgency around police reform. Yet the president has little direct authority over the nation’s 18,000 state and local law enforcemen­t agencies.

In addition to setting new guidelines for federal officers, the executive order aims to offer a template for the broader policing community, asking state and local agencies to embrace the document’s goals.

“It’s the nature of American policing. We don’t have a national police force, no national standards and no way of making every department comply with national standards,” said Chuck Wexler, executive director of the Police Executive Research Forum, which has consulted with the White House on policing issues. “What this does is, when you don’t have Congress acting on a police bill, you have the president of the United States setting the tone: ‘Here’s what I expect of federal agencies and, therefore, I think state and local will follow.’”

The order will authorize the Justice Department to use federal grant funding to encourage local police to tighten restrictio­ns on the use of chokeholds and noknock warrants — steps that federal law enforcemen­t agencies have already taken. It also will set new restrictio­ns on the sale of military equipment to local law enforcemen­t agencies.

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