Texarkana Gazette

Maryland policing-bill veto overrides weighed

- BRIAN WITTE

ANNAPOLIS, Md. — Maryland lawmakers gathered Saturday with plans to override Gov. Larry Hogan’s vetoes of three measures seeking to overhaul policing.

The Republican governor vetoed legislatio­n Friday that includes the core components of a far-reaching police reform package. Lawmakers have been working on the reforms for about 10 months, beginning after the nationwide protests against racial injustice following the death of George Floyd in police custody in Minnesota.

The legislatio­n is a top priority of the Maryland General Assembly, which is controlled by Democrats. All of the measures passed with more than the three-fifths vote needed to override Hogan’s vetoes.

“The Senate will take the necessary action to ensure that we can have safer communitie­s and fairer policing throughout our state,” Senate President Bill Ferguson, a Baltimore Democrat, said moments after the vetoes were announced Friday night.

The House of Delegates got to work right away, voting 95-42 Friday night to override one of the vetoes of legislatio­n that repeals job protection­s in the police disciplina­ry process that critics say impede accountabi­lity. Maryland approved the nation’s first Law Enforcemen­t Officers Bill of Rights in 1974, and about 20 states have adopted similar laws setting due process procedure for investigat­ing police misconduct.

Hogan also vetoed a measure with a new statewide useof-force policy and mandating use of body cameras statewide by July 2025.

Another vetoed measure would expand public access to records in police disciplina­ry cases and limit the use of noknock warrants. Under the bill, police could use such warrants only between 8 a.m. and 7 p.m., except in an emergency.

In his veto message, Hogan wrote that he believed the measures would “further erode police morale, community relationsh­ips, and public confidence.”

“They will result in great damage to police recruitmen­t and retention, posing significan­t risks to public safety throughout our state,” Hogan wrote.

Clyde Boatwright, president of the Maryland State Fraternal Order of Police, thanked the governor for vetoing the legislatio­n and agreed the measures would hurt hiring and retention of police.

“It is our hope that we can work collaborat­ively with our elected officials to continue to enact meaningful police reform that improves public safety and improves trust in policing while protecting law enforcemen­t officers,” Boatwright said.

Hogan wrote that two measures approved by the legislatur­e would take effect without his signature.

One would create a unit in the attorney general’s office to investigat­e police-involved deaths and prohibit law enforcemen­t from buying surplus military equipment. The other would enable Baltimore voters to decide whether the state’s largest city should take full control of the police department from the state.

Maryland has struggled with police accountabi­lity problems in recent years. Baltimore’s police department entered into a federal consent decree after Freddie Gray suffered a broken neck in police custody and died, sparking unrest in the city in 2015. Lawmakers approved some police reforms the following year, but critics have said they were not enough.

One of the bills vetoed Friday would expand public access to police personnel disciplina­ry records now shielded under the state’s public informatio­n act. It is named after Anton Black, a Black 19-year-old who died in police custody in 2018 in a rural town on Maryland’s Eastern Shore.

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