The Evening Leader

Ohio board developing mass protest law enforcemen­t standard

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COLUMBUS (AP) — A statewide standard for Ohio police department­s to follow when dealing with mass protests could assist small agencies that don’t have experience in handling such demonstrat­ions and give bigger department­s the chance to review procedures, according to the head of the state’s criminal justice services office.

Anyone watching the news in May and June saw protests of police brutality and racism with little to no conflict, often with police officers marching alongside protesters, but they also saw “things that didn’t go so well,” said Karhlton Moore, director of the Office of Criminal Justice Services.

“If you’re an objective person you would look at that and say, ‘That’s probably not the best response,’” Moore said.

The Ohio Collaborat­ive Community-Police Advisory Board, which is assisted by Moore’s office, is developing the standard at the direction of Republican Gov. Mike DeWine. The board previously created statewide police standards for use of force, use of deadly force, recruiting and retention, and body cameras, among others.

“We are not looking to give the small number of violent protesters a free pass. Far from it,” DeWine said in announcing the creation of the standard in June.

DeWine’s directive came as many department­s in Ohio and nationally were criticized for their handling of protests.

In Buffalo, New York, a 75-year-old man pushed back by police in June was hospitaliz­ed for about a month with a fractured skull and brain injury. Two police officers in Atlanta were fired and three others placed on desk duty for excessive use of force during a protest.

In Columbus, Ohio’s capital and the state’s biggest city, police officials investigat­ed the use of tear gas on student journalist­s from the Ohio State University newspaper The Lantern. In a separate episode, U.S. Rep. Joyce Beatty was hit by pepper spray as scuffles broke out near the end of a May demonstrat­ion.

One of the protests studied by the Ohio board happened June 1 in Troy in western Ohio, a predominan­tly white city of about 26,000. A Black Lives Matter protest ended when police arrested two men for refusing orders to disperse.

Among those was Tre’vone Archie, a Black junior college scholarshi­p basketball player who said he marched to try to change things for the better.

Archie was arrested and charged with resisting arrest, failure to comply with a lawful order and disorderly conduct. “You can kiss your basketball scholarshi­p goodbye,” a white officer told him afterward, Archie told the board.

The charges were dropped in exchange for Archie doing community service.

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