The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Democrats deflecting truths about police bill

- By state Sen. Len Fasano State Sen. Len Fasano serves as the Connecticu­t Senate Republican Leader. He represents the 34th Senate District, including Durham, East Haven, North Haven and Wallingfor­d.

On Friday, Gov. Ned. Lamont signed into law HB 6004, An Act Concerning Police Accountabi­lity.

Since the bill’s passage, Democrats have shared misinforma­tion about what the bill does. Many Democrats who promised to eventually revise the bill in the same breath they voted “yes” are now scrambling to spread these myths to rationaliz­e their votes and deflect criticism.

The reality is the Democrat bill will damage public safety and policing in Connecticu­t. If Democrats are so proud of this bill, they should be honest about what they voted for and stop spreading the following falsehoods:

Myth No. 1: Good police officers have nothing to fear.

The Facts: Democrats have now allowed officers, even when doing nothing wrong, to be personally sued in state court under state law for the first time in Connecticu­t’s history. The bill deliberate­ly removes the ability to have frivolous lawsuits dismissed early. Every frivolous case will move forward with no protection­s, putting good officers personally at risk and taxpayers financiall­y at risk for legal fees and forced settlement­s for even baseless claims.

Myth No. 2: This bill was crafted with everyone’s input.

The Facts: While there were conversati­ons between lawmakers, Republican­s never endorsed the bill and were always clear about what should be changed, but our voices were ignored on the larger issues. Also ignored were Connecticu­t’s police officers. New Haven Police Chief Otoniel Reyes explains: “The passing of this bill was done in haste . ... The elected officials that were a driving force behind this bill, particular­ly those that represent the New Haven community, crafted this bill without input from me as the chief of police in New Haven. They were in such a rush to pass legislatio­n, that they gave little to no considerat­ion to the negative impact it could have on good police officers.”

Myth No. 3: The bill doesn’t eliminate qualified immunity for police; only towns will be liable and only if someone commits a crime.

The Facts: Qualified immunity for good police officers is effectivel­y gone. Police officers can be personally sued if a court determines they acted in a “willful, wanton or reckless manner.” The definition of “willful” is completely open to interpreta­tion by the court, putting officers at risk for lawsuits with no ability to dismiss frivolous claims early. Even if an officer is found to have not acted willfully, wantonly or recklessly, the municipali­ty — and therefore taxpayers — will still be held liable. Faced with large legal fees even in frivolous cases, municipali­ties will be economical­ly forced to settle many cases, leaving blemishes on good officers’ records without ever giving them the chance to prove no wrongdoing.

Myth No. 4: The bill won’t hurt officer recruitmen­t or increase retirement­s.

The Facts: It already has. We began hearing accounts of young officers giving up their careers and older officers rushing to retire when the legislatio­n was only a proposal. Now that it’s law, police department­s are worried about understaff­ing and longer response times. Connecticu­t is already facing recruitmen­t issues. This year New Haven saw fewer than 300 new police applicants. Waterbury, which saw 1,000 applicants last year, had only 400 this year after extending their deadline. This bill worsens the situation.

Myth No. 5: The bill won’t impact good policing.

The Facts: Police will be forced to stop proactive policing. Protective policing will be a significan­t liability, therefore Democrats are forcing police to only be reactionar­y. This bill’s deadly force standards will unfairly limit officers’ ability to save the public and themselves, in complete conflict with the long-establishe­d rules by the U.S. Supreme Court. These new standards will chill police officers’ ability to save lives and will put lives at risk.

Myth No. 6: The bill won’t defund police.

The Facts: The bill doesn’t

“They were in such a rush to pass legislatio­n, that they gave little to no considerat­ion to the negative impact it could have on good police officers.” New Haven Police Chief Otoniel Reyes

directly defund the police, but its severe financial impact on cities and police department­s achieves the same result. Increased costs for things such as insurance and legal fees coupled with a crippled economy will push municipali­ties to cut back on policing. The Democrats’ plan of choice.

Myth No. 7: It will make bad cops accountabl­e.

The Facts: This bill does nothing to make it easier to fire bad actors or hold them accountabl­e. Eliminatin­g qualified immunity doesn’t make it easier to hold officers criminally accountabl­e, because qualified immunity doesn’t protect officers when they commit a crime. The bill does contain a new decertific­ation component, but it does nothing to change the collective bargaining arbitratio­n process that can supersede other laws and continue to block the firing of bad officers.

To learn more about these issues visit ctsenatere­publicans. com/myth-v-fact.

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