The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Only 40% participat­e in FBI database on police use of force

- By Tom Jackman

On Tuesday, President Donald Trump signed an executive order calling for, among other things, the establishm­ent of a database on police use of force. On Wednesday, Senate Republican­s included a similar provision in their reform bill. But the FBI already has such a database — and so far a majority of police are not participat­ing in it.

The FBI launched that program, the National Use-of-Force Data Collection project, last year. Now, with another wave of protests against police brutality gripping the country, many police agencies have not responded to the voluntary call for informatio­n about their officers — only 40% submitted their data for 2019, the FBI said. And the database has yet to be published. The first report is planned for this summer.

In his executive order on police reform issued Tuesday, Trump called for “a database to coordinate the sharing of informatio­n” between law enforcemen­t agencies on “instances of excessive use of force related to law enforcemen­t matters,” and said that the Attorney General “shall regularly and periodical­ly make available to the public aggregated and anonymized data from the database.” It was not immediatel­y clear if the FBI’s Use-of-Force project will be the vehicle for that order.

Trump’s order also states that federal funds should be withheld if a police department doesn’t submit its data, as does the reform bill submitted by Senate Republican­s on Wednesday.

For decades, the FBI has collected crime data from police department­s across the country, in its Uniform Crime Reports, and participat­ion there is nearly 100%. But as with the annual crime reports, participat­ion in the Use-of-Force project is voluntary.

In a statement to the Senate Judiciary Committee on Tuesday night,

Steven R. Casstevens, the chief of the Buffalo Grove, Ill., police and president of the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Chiefs of Police, said “participat­ion in the national database collection effort should be mandatory.” He said the data would help both law enforcemen­t and the community “better identify and understand the totality of incidents, trends associated with useof-force incidents, and other outlying factors. It will also increase transparen­cy on a national level.”

Casstevens said making use-offorce reporting mandatory might mean tying it to existing federal grant funding, and he said the “IACP recommends those that intentiona­lly fail to participat­e in the National Use of Force database, be excluded from receiving federal grant funds or receive reduced amounts.”

A little over a year ago, at a meeting of the Major Cities Police Chiefs Associatio­n in Miami Beach, the head of the FBI’s criminal justice informatio­n services division implored police executives to get on board. Amy Blasher told the chiefs then that 19.6% of the nation’s department­s were participat­ing.

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