The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Trump speech signals sea change in local policing

President urges department­s to stock military gear.

- By Christian Boone cboone@ajc.com

In his speech Friday to graduates from an FBI training program, President Donald Trump wondered how anyone could defend his predecesso­r’s decision to prohibit local police from accessing surplus military equipment.

“Never understood that one,” said the president, whose administra­tion rescinded the 2015 ban by President Barack Obama. “Anybody want to stand up and explain it? It’d be tough.”

In fact, that decision by the Obama administra­tion, while criticized in some quarters, reflected a growing movement in the country concerned over a seemingly widening gulf between local law enforcemen­t and the communitie­s they serve.

A key catalyst for the ban was a botched drug raid one year earlier in Habersham County, when a 19-monthold baby was badly maimed and nearly killed after a flash bang grenade was mistakenly lobbed into his playpen. The heavily armed SWAT unit, which carried out the raid in the middle of the night, was seeking to apprehend a suspect who had sold $50 worth of crystal methamphet­amine. That suspect was not in the house at the time.

“People saw that and concluded there needed to be changes,” said attorney Mawuli Davis, who represente­d the parents of Bounkham “Bou Bou” Phonesavan­h, soon to turn 5 years old and still facing several major surgeries. “There was bipartisan support for it. People want more community policing, They don’t want to see a military occupation of their communitie­s.”

When the ban was enacted, Georgia law enforcemen­t agencies had received $70 million of decommissi­oned military gear, including grenade launchers, bayonets and tank-like vehicles. The need wasn’t always clear, such as in the southeast Georgia town of Bloomingda­le —- population, 2,745 —- which had acquired a grenade launcher to shoot tear gas, two M14 single-shot semi-automatic rifles and two M16 military-style rifles converted from automatic to semi-automatic.

“To the extent police are using military-style vehicles, tanks and armored, that stuff often sends the wrong message, especially to the minority community,” Marietta Police Chief Daniel Flynn said at the time. “The message that the police are sending to the minority community is we want to go to war against you, and that’s inappropri­ate.”

Trump repeated a familiar refrain in his speech Friday, telling the officers, “America’s police will have a true friend and loyal champion in the White House — more loyal than anyone else can be, I tell you.”

“Police department­s are overstretc­hed, they’re underfunde­d, and they’re totally under appreciate­d — except by me,” the president said.

Trump’s full-throated support has won him considerab­le support among officers on the street, many of whom have said they feel under siege for just doing their job. In 2016, 63 U.S. law enforcemen­t officers were killed by gunfire in the line of duty — 22 more than the previous year. So far in 2017, 43 officers have been fatally shot.

“There was a fundamenta­l lack of understand­ing about how police operate, “Cobb County attorney Lance LoRusso told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on recently. LoRusso is a former cop who has represente­d many officers. “Now, they see an administra­tion that has respect for the job they do.”

But Atlanta lawyer Chris Stewart, who has represente­d several families who lost loved ones after confrontat­ions with police — including relatives of Walter Scott, an unarmed motorist fatally shot in the back by an officer in South Carolina — said he worries about the tone set by the president.

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