The Capital

Maryland prosecutor­s say they’re best equipped to prosecute police misconduct

- By Pamela Wood

AsMaryland lawmakers consider policing reforms, local prosecutor­s are pushing to maintain their authority to prosecute cases of police misconduct.

Elected state’s attorneys told a group of lawmakers Thursday that they are better suited to take problem officers to court — not the attorney general, the state prosecutor or another entity.

“My office is the best equipped to handle police misconduct that occurs in the community,” Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby told members of a House of Delegates work group on police accountabi­lity.

Taking that away, she said, would undermine the will of the people who elected her to prosecute crimes in the community.

“If I don’t do my job, guess what happens?” saidMosby, a Democrat. “They vote me out.”

As lawmakers grapple with ways to make policing more equitable and how to hold police officers accountabl­e, one of the many suggestion­s has been to have independen­t authoritie­s investigat­e and prosecute cases of alleged police misconduct.

Four state’s attorneys who testified Thursday said they support having an entity outside the police department investigat­e accusation­s against police officers. But they want to maintain their role in taking those cases to court.

They cautioned specifical­ly against having the Office of the State Prosecutor, which already handles political and government corruption cases, take on the duties of prosecutin­g police. The prosecutor is appointed by the governor, which they suggested could cause politics to leak into prosecutor­ial decisions.

Prince George’s County State’s Attorney Aisha Braveboy, a Democrat, said transferri­ng police prosecutio­ns out of state’s attorneys’ offices would amount to usurping a constituti­onal obligation that prosecutor­s have.

Whenthere are legitimate conflicts of interest, Braveboy said, there are policies in place, such as sending the case to a different county for prosecutio­n.

The state’s attorneys also said their prosecutor­s are the best trained and most experience­d, especially when it comes to handling homicide cases.

Public defenders, on the other hand, countered that state’s attorneys have an inherent conflict of interestwh­en it comes to prosecutin­g problem cops, because they work day-in and day-out with police officers to build their cases.

The concern is magnified in small and rural jurisdicti­ons where “everyone knows everyone,” said Chasity Simpson, district public defender for the Lower Eastern Shore.

Deborah Katz Levi from the Baltimore Office of the Public Defender said if another agency takes over prosecutin­g police misconduct, it could recruit top prosecutor­s onto the team.

“You could staff any agency with the best from around the state that would know reasonable­ness for use of force and would have no direct allegiance to those they are investigat­ing,” she said.

During a three-hour online meeting, the prosecutor­s and public defenders also touched on issues about gaining access to police disciplina­ry files, the challenges of handling voluminous amounts of body camera footage and how the state’s Law Enforcemen­t Officers’ Bill of Rights makes it difficult for police chiefs to fire problem officers.

The House of Delegates work group has spent monthsweig­hing these issues with an eye toward introducin­g bills related to policing during the 2021 General Assembly session. Last month, lawmakers heard from representa­tives of police, many of whom advocated against repealing the LawEnforce­ment Officers’ Bill of Rights.

The state Senate also is moving forward on policing issues, with three afternoons of online public hearings on 15 bills scheduled for the Judicial Proceeding­s Committee nextweek.

Among the draft bills are proposals that would change how police misconduct cases are investigat­ed and prosecuted, require officers intervene when other officers use excessive force, ban police department­s from obtaining certain military surplus weapons, require psychologi­cal exams for police officers every three years, and modify or eliminate the Law Enforcemen­t Officers’ Bill of Rights.

The Judicial Proceeding­s Committee allowed up to 35 people to sign up to testify for each day’s hearing; all slots were claimed within hours of opening online registrati­on Thursday.

Both chambers are doing their work with an eye toward January, when the General Assembly opens its next regular legislativ­e session and Democratic lawmakers hope to pass legislatio­n addressing violent and inequitabl­e policing.

Some progressiv­e interest groups have pushed lawmakers to hold a special session on this and other issues, butHouse of Delegates Speaker Adrienne A. Jones and Senate President Bill Ferguson said thisweek that’s not going to happen.

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