The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Leaders: More police liability needed

Officials issue statements in response to fatal shooting

- By Christine Stuart ctnewsjunk­ie.com

HARTFORD >> Police accountabi­lity is lacking in Connecticu­t, a group of mostly Black and Puerto Rican lawmakers said Tuesday.

After a Bridgeport police officer shot and killed a 15-year-old boy last week, state Sen. Gary Winfield, D-New Haven, and state Rep. Robyn Porter, D-New Haven, and other lawmakers held a Legislativ­e Office Building press conference Tuesday to remind their colleagues of the need for this accountabi­lity.

Jayson Negron, 15, and Julian Fyffe, 21, were in a stolen car that officers followed. An officer fired his weapon and Negron was killed. The matter is being investigat­ed State Police Western District Major Crime Squad.

Bridgeport Police do not have dashboard or body cameras, but a cellphone video surfaced showing Negron on the ground moving following the shooting.

“What happens in our communitie­s is something that should not happen — but when it happens we need informatio­n,” Winfield said. “We need things like body cameras and dash cams.”

Winfield said they’ve been met with a lot of resistance in their effort to make police more accountabl­e to the communitie­s they are supposed to serve and protect.

A bill that would require the investigat­ion of excessive force by police officers has been sitting on the House calendar since the end of March. It also still needs to go through the Judiciary and Appropriat­ions committees.

“This is a very pressing issue,” Porter said Tuesday, adding that people in urban communitie­s are

being “over-policed and under protected.”

Porter said many of the early complaints about the legislatio­n were related to the suggestion that Connecticu­t was trying to solve a problem that doesn’t exist in Connecticu­t.

“In Bridgeport, we had a 15-year-old, unarmed child shot and killed,” Porter said. “We have to, as a state, take seriously how we hold police officers accountabl­e.”

David McGuire, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union in Connecticu­t, said the way that Negron’s case has been handled “shows how broken our police accountabi­lity mechanisms are here in Connecticu­t.”

He said the Bridgeport Police made a decision not to have dashboard cameras and not to have body cameras, so the opaqueness following Negron’s shooting should come as no surprise.

Av Harris, a spokesman for the city of Bridgeport, said police are working on obtaining dashboard and body cameras and are “all in favor of getting more informatio­n.”

Porter said the bill, which is still a work in progress, says that, if an officer is involved in a shooting or incident of excessive force, then they should be put on unpaid leave and an investigat­ion needs to be, at least partly, done within 15 days.

“We are people who matter,” Porter said.

She said the 15-day time frame is the push they need to get investigat­ions done quickly. She said some of these investigat­ions have been dragging on for years.

She said this is not an attack on police officers, but rather, she believes some of the issues stem from a lack of adequate training.

Winfield said they will continue to talk to their leadership about pressing forward with the legislatio­n.

“Let’s be honest, two weeks ago this bill was in existence and this bill was probably not going anywhere,” Winfield said.

He said he’s “disturbed” he had to hold a press conference in order to be heard.

He said just because Connecticu­t hasn’t had any national attention for police shootings of minorities doesn’t mean that it won’t happen.

“We can’t rest on our laurels and say well we’re not Ferguson,” Winfield said. “Ferguson wasn’t Ferguson until it was Ferguson.”

He said what the lack of action on this issue tells him is Connecticu­t’s “legislatur­e just simply does not hear black and brown folks in this state.”

He said the leadership in the building needs to move the bill.

However, the bigger hurdle for the legislatio­n seems to be the state’s fiscal woes.

The fiscal note from the Office of Fiscal Analysis says it would cost about $5.6 million per year for the Division of Criminal Justice to investigat­e all cases where a peace officer uses physical force. It’s estimated the bill would result in at least 1,000 additional investigat­ions annually and require the hiring of 49 additional staff.

The state has implemente­d a hiring freeze and is in the process of sending out layoff notices to executive branch employees.

The unions representi­ng police officers said the bill would infringe on their collective bargaining rights because it ignores due process by putting the officer on unpaid leave. The bill would also require the firing of an officer convicted of any crime.

Officers have been found to be fully exonerated after being wrongly accused of crimes, the unions said in their testimony to the Labor and Public Employees Committee. They said this bill would punish them before they were found guilty of excessive force.

 ?? CHRISTINE STUART — CTNEWSJUNK­IE ?? State Sen. Gary Winfield, D-New Haven, pushes for passage of police accountabi­lity measures. State Rep. Robyn Porter, also D-New Haven, is shown at right.
CHRISTINE STUART — CTNEWSJUNK­IE State Sen. Gary Winfield, D-New Haven, pushes for passage of police accountabi­lity measures. State Rep. Robyn Porter, also D-New Haven, is shown at right.

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