The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Task force reviews police tactics

- By Lisa Backus

Policing is about to change in Connecticu­t. But the question before the Police Accountabi­lity Task Force is what will that change look like.

Gov. Ned Lamont said one of his priorities will be to work with the state legislatur­e to ban the use of police chokeholds.

During a 21⁄2-hour meeting Monday held against the backdrop of the death of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s that has sparked protests across the state and country, the task force agreed that policing in Connecticu­t needs to be revamped quickly.

But it’s not likely to be fast enough for state Sen. Gary Winfield, D-New Haven, who promised that he will be pressing forward with legislatio­n aimed at increasing police accountabi­lity while reducing the chances of use-of-force incidents, including deaths.

“The work of the task force is important,” Winfield told the group of police chiefs, legislator­s and experts in policing. “But you are going to see an effort to have something in legislatio­n and the attempt is going to make that as comprehens­ive as possible.”

Legislatio­n crafted by Winfield and passed in 2019 made efforts toward increased police accountabi­lity by requiring body camera footage to be released within four days of an in

cident that could lead to the discipline of an officer. The same law created the task force, required a review of police pursuits, and prohibited officers to get in front of fleeing cars.

But Winfield and others said the law didn’t go far enough to address issues such as the handling of investigat­ions into the use of deadly force or sanctions for officers who violate policies. After nearly two weeks of mostly peaceful protests throughout the state and at times violent protests across the country, the group and Lamont indicated they were ready to get down to work.

“Use of force, what we outlaw so we can add some clarity to that,” Lamont said of the issues he wanted addressed. “I think we’ve learned a lot, I learned a lot from the shocking picture of George Floyd and what that told us about policing and what that told us about racism, something we thought we were making progress on.”

Lamont later said during a press conference that he wanted the task force and the legislatur­e to look at discipline for officers who were on scene during incidents where an inappropri­ate use of force was deployed and did nothing, like the officers who watched as one put his knee on Floyd’s neck for nine minutes.

“What should the consequenc­es be for them?” Lamont said. The governor also wants a ban on choke holds as a part of any police accountabi­lity legislatio­n Winfield puts forward during a special legislativ­e session expected in the coming weeks.

Many members of the task force agreed that police culture needed to change and that police unions often prevented command staff from institutin­g real change by bucking disciplina­ry action.

The public is understand­ably upset, said Andrew Clark, director of the Institute of Municipal Planning and Regional Policy at Central Connecticu­t State

University. The institute became involved in policing issues in 2011 when the East Haven Police Department came under scrutiny for racial profiling in 2011, Clark said. Clark was a part of a 2016 task force that made 2018 recommenda­tions for police training.

“When you are talking East Haven in 2011 and the task force in 2016, you can understand the anger,” Clark said.

The actions of the officers who participat­ed in Floyd’s death are “reprehensi­ble, heart-wrenching and criminal,” Chief State’s Attorney Richard Colangelo said in press release issued hours after he participat­ed in the task force meeting. “There is nothing to defend. There is nothing to debate. I share in the sadness and outrage of those here and across the country.”

Colangelo vowed to improve relationsh­ips with the community and implement policy changes to promote accountabi­lity and transparen­cy. “I look forward to having difficult conversati­ons with legislator­s, city leaders, police chiefs and members of our communitie­s to make much-needed changes to restore trust in our legal system,” he said. “We need to rebuild that fractured trust, and the only way to do that is to stake steps to ensure that every citizen of our state is treated with respect, dignity and fairness.” Colangelo’s predecesso­r, Kevin Kane, was supportive of the current system of investigat­ing deadly use of force incidents by assigning the cases to state’s attorneys in a different jurisdicti­on. Although the investigat­ions resulted in lengthy reports, no officer has been charged criminally in the death of a suspect in about two decades even though more than two dozen people have died.

Advocates including the Connecticu­t American Civil Liberties Union have been calling for a change in state law that defines whether an officer used deadly force appropriat­ely and they have been calling for independen­t investigat­ions.

Under current law, a state’s attorney only looks at the few seconds before the death occurs to determine if the officer used the appropriat­e level of force or if it was a criminal act. By that point, the officer is usually in a life or death struggle with a suspect, leaving little choice but to use deadly force. It is up to the officer’s police department to conduct an internal affairs investigat­ion to determine if there was a violation of policy.

The entire system needs to change, including more transparen­cy, an independen­t review process for incidents, better training, better wellness for officers and better de-escalation tactics, according to task force members.

“Internal affairs needs to go by the wayside,” said Sgt. John Szewczyk, former president of the Hartford Police Union. “We can’t have the police investigat­ing the police. It needs an independen­t agency. You have people who go to the academy together and work side by side and then they are investigat­ing someone.”

The state’s Police Officer Standards and Training Council can put into place a prohibitio­n on choke holds and neck restraints and requiremen­ts to intervene and reporting inappropri­ate behavior, said Milford Chief Keith Mello, the President of the Connecticu­t Police Chiefs Associatio­n.

But police unions and state Labor Board actions can hamper attempts to deal with officers who may be subject of complaints or inappropri­ate behavior, Mello said.

“There has to be accountabi­lity at the local level,” Mello said. “Police officers have to know that discipline will be sustained at the labor board. We need to look at the labor systems. I understand due process, I understand the appeal process. Those are important but sometimes they get in the way.”

The task force is charged with drafting a report for recommende­d changes. The group will meet again June 22.

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