Texarkana Gazette

Sandra Bland’s mom returns to Texas to urge police reforms

- By Paul J. Weber

“I don’t hate police. I hate the fact that we do not understand that this has been going on for too long by those who have been charged to serve and protect us.”

—Geneva Reed-Veal, Sandra Bland’s mother

AUSTIN—The mother of a black woman who died in a jail near Houston following a confrontat­ional traffic stop in 2015 returned to Texas on Tuesday to back a sweeping police reform bill named after her daughter that influentia­l law enforcemen­t groups are fighting.

It was the first time the family of Sandra Bland, whose death became a flashpoint in the national Black Lives Matter movement, has testified before Texas lawmakers who meet only once every two years. The “Sandra Bland Act” as drafted would revamp racial profiling laws, officer training and other police accountabi­lity measures.

Bland was found dead in a jail outside Houston three days after being pulled over by a white state trooper for not signaling a lane change. Her death was ruled a suicide and the trooper, who pulled Bland out of her car while threatenin­g her with a stun gun, was fired.

“I need this bill to move forward so that it will prove to people who say that Texas is the most awful state to live in. And to me that’s true, because Texas is a place of pain for me,” said Geneva Reed-Veal, Bland’s mother, who lives in the Chicago area. “So I need you to think about what you have the power and ability to do today.”

She went on to tell the House Homeland Security and Public Safety Committee that the legislatio­n wasn’t anti-police.

“I don’t hate police. I hate the fact that we do not understand that this has been going on for too long by those who have been charged to serve and protect us,” she said.

But the bill faces obstacles to reaching the desk of Republican Gov. Greg Abbott with less than two months before the Texas Legislatur­e adjourns until 2019. Police associatio­ns oppose key provisions, including one that would prohibit drivers being arrested for low-level misdemeano­rs that are punishable only by fines.

Enhanced police protection­s—and not police accountabi­lity—is also the priority of Republican leaders in the Texas this year after a sniper killed five Dallas police officers last summer. The Texas Senate has already passed bills that would provide $25 million to purchase bullet-resistant vests for police and create an alert system that would notify the public when an officer is wounded or killed.

Houston Democrat Garnet Coleman, who is carrying the bill, acknowledg­ed he wrote the original, lengthy legislatio­n filed in March with a “bias against police” but said he is now committed to working with law enforcemen­t groups and negotiatin­g changes.

“This is the best way to make progress that is not punitive to those who protect us,” Coleman said.

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