The Morning Call

Can Camden be a good model for rebuilding police?

New methods, structure may have helped New Jersey city avoid violence during protests

- By Allison Steele

Camden, New Jersey, disbanded its police department and built a new one. Can others learn from it?

As fires burned and Philadelph­ia police clashed with protesters, across the river, Camden remained calm. It had its own protest, but Police Chief Joe Wysocki marched in front.

Camden was once known as the nation’s poorest and most dangerous city, where police brutality sparked riots in the 1960s and ‘70s. But over the past seven years, the small city has drawn national attention for its policing.

When the Minneapoli­s City Council pledged this week to disband that city’s troubled police department, some law enforcemen­t experts and others pointed to Camden, which in 2013 dismantled the city police in favor of a county-run force. A crop of new officers was hired and trained in deescalati­on tactics and community policing. Violent crime has dropped.

“This has been sustainabl­e through the empowermen­t of the community,” said former

Chief Scott Thomson, who held the position from 2008 until he stepped down last year. “As soon as they felt they had a department they could trust and work with, it was their work that reclaimed the city.”

But as cities such as Minneapoli­s and Philadelph­ia consider reforms in the wake of protests over the police killing of George Floyd, some Camden residents caution against using their city’s unique story as a playbook.

The Camden County police force was created with little public input, using political muscle and a process some called union-busting. And though many residents now agree the department has reduced crime and improved relationsh­ips with the community, mistrust lingers, and despite efforts to diversify, the force remains whiter than the largely nonwhite city it serves.

“Their hearts and heads have been in the right place,” Ojii Baba Madi, a 59-year-old pastor known in the city for his work with youth, said of the past and present police chiefs. “I know they want to do the right things. We see that. But the question remains: Can we make even greater changes that we need in order to assure us that another Minneapoli­s won’t happen here?”

In Philadelph­ia, a progressiv­e City Council and the political climate have opened the door to a more far-reaching police reform agenda than the city has ever seen. On Monday, 14 of Council’s 17 members signed a letter to Mayor Jim Kenney that calls for significan­t steps, like independen­t police oversight and changes to the arbitratio­n process. Kenney on Tuesday announced his own reform plan.

Council members said they are open to cutting police funding or forgoing a proposed $19 million budget increase for the department. Councilmem­ber Kenyatta Johnson, who wrote the letter, said that while he does not believe the department should be eliminated, he would support shifting funding to services that could prevent violence, like parks and youth recreation programs.

Councilmem­ber Katherine Gilmore Richardson indicated she would be open to an approach similar to that of the Camden department, which has drawn praise for its collaborat­ion with schools and other city agencies.

“Camden has been very successful in reducing violence, especially murder, violent crime, nonfatal shootings, assaults, and property crimes,” she said in a statement. “Their focus on social services, employment, and education has been an important part of that work.”

But Camden’s transition has not been seamless, and it was sparked by economics and politics, not questions over policing.

In 2011, state budget woes led to almost half the department’s approximat­ely 400 officers being laid off under then-Gov. Chris Christie. A period of devastatin­g crime followed, with the city of fewer than 80,000 people logging a record 67 homicides in 2012.

County leaders and George E. Norcross III, the millionair­e South Jersey businessma­n and political power broker, pushed for the creation of a new department that included a less-burdensome union contract they said would allow more officers to be hired. Even some residents who supported reforming the police were against the plan, afraid of losing officers they knew. Police unions also opposed it.

“There was uncertaint­y as to how it would work,” said Dana Redd, who was mayor at the time. “It was a tumultuous time.”

As the city department was dissolved, officers had to reapply for jobs on the county force alongside new recruits. Some veterans said they were offered lower salaries and fewer benefits, but other officers were promoted and got raises.

County officials proposed that other municipali­ties would join forces with the department to make it a regional police force, but those towns have declined.

The officers of the Camden County Police patrol only the city of Camden.

The budget for the new police force, which like the old one depends heavily on state aid, ended up millions higher that first year than what the city had planned to spend, and it has continued to grow. Camden budgeted $68.45 million last year for police. Paterson, a North Jersey city with almost double Camden’s population, estimated its annual police costs at $44.72 million.

Redd said county and city leaders built their plan based on national models, but customized it for Camden.

When the new department’s officers were sworn in, all were directed to focus on meeting residents, knocking on doors, and walking beats. For years, officers have held block parties, basketball games, and cookouts in neighborho­ods around the city.

“We were ridiculed by a lot of police department­s who said we were soft,” Thomson said. “But if we see that this is something that can be meaningful to even a few people, why wouldn’t we do it?”

Camden has still struggled over the years to retain officers, which was a challenge even before the new department was created. This week, there are 380 officers on staff, county spokespers­on Dan Keashen said.

Community advocates have said officers are overzealou­s in targeting residents over minor infraction­s, and have pressured the department to create an oversight board to review cases involving alleged police violence.

In the years after the new department was launched, it drew dozens of excessive-force complaints, including from a 21-year-old man who said officers broke his neck in 2014 and left him a quadripleg­ic. A lawsuit in that case is pending.

But in recent years, those complaints have dwindled, Keashen said. The department has also revamped its use-offorce policy, which Wysocki, a veteran Camden officer who replaced Thomson, has said reduces the chances of an incident like Floyd’s death happening in Camden.

Capt. Zsakheim James, a 28year law enforcemen­t veteran who grew up in Camden and was a member of the former city police force, said few would deny that a cultural shift is taking place.

“Us meeting with the community in the absence of crisis really changed the game,” he said. “There are people who still don’t like the police, but there is a level of trust. There are people who believe in us, and believe in their ability to hold us accountabl­e.”

 ?? TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP/GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/TNS ?? Camden County Police Department Officer Louis Sanchez patrols on foot in Camden, New Jersey, on May 24, 2017. In 2013, the city of Camden dissolved its police force, replacing it with a new county-run department that is helping to turn around a city that had one of the highest crime rates in the country. Police reform and falling crime statistics may have made Camden a poster child for better policing.
TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP/GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/TNS Camden County Police Department Officer Louis Sanchez patrols on foot in Camden, New Jersey, on May 24, 2017. In 2013, the city of Camden dissolved its police force, replacing it with a new county-run department that is helping to turn around a city that had one of the highest crime rates in the country. Police reform and falling crime statistics may have made Camden a poster child for better policing.

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