Times Colonist

Washington state: Elected officials must OK tear gas use

- GENE JOHNSON

SEATTLE — Mayors, county executives or even the governor would have to give their approval before police could use tear gas to quell riots under a compromise reached Thursday in the Washington Legislatur­e.

The deal came as a conference committee of the House and Senate reconciled versions of a police tactics bill already passed by each chamber.

The measure, a centerpiec­e of the Democrats’ police-reform agenda, addresses a wide array of police tactics and gear in response to the killing of George Floyd and other Black people by officers, as well as the protests they inspired. It would ban the use of chokeholds, neck restraints and no-knock warrants, limit the use of high-speed pursuits, and restrict the acquisitio­n of military equipment by police department­s.

One of the thorniest issues in the bill has been restrictio­ns on the use of tear gas. The version passed by the House would have allowed it, with restrictio­ns, to quell public riots that threaten serious harm; for riots in prisons or jails; or to deal with barricaded people or hostage situations.

The Senate version banned the use of tear gas on the public at the behest of Democratic Sen. Jamie Pedersen, the chairman of the Law and Justice Committee, who lives on Seattle’s densely populated Capitol Hill — the neighbourh­ood that was at the heart of the city’s sometimes violent protests last summer.

In the midst of a respirator­y pandemic, residents who were uninvolved in the protest reported feeling the effects of tear gas in their apartments; one couple described dousing their baby’s eyes with breast milk to ease the burning.

Pedersen said he couldn’t imagine continuing to allow police to use tear gas on the public, but the measure’s lead sponsor, first-term Rep. Jesse Johnson, D-Federal Way, said he believed it was appropriat­e to address threats to life — not merely vandalism or property damage.

Under the compromise adopted Thursday, officers can deploy tear gas at riots, but only with the prior approval of the highest elected official in the jurisdicti­on. That would mean the county executive in counties, the mayor in cities, and the governor in the case of the Washington State Patrol.

“Although I would prefer personally a flat ban, I’m comfortabl­e that, particular­ly in a situation where tear gas is proposed to be used on members of the public, that there is going to be somebody who has real accountabi­lity to the voters for the decision,” Pedersen said.

The bill also requires police to exhaust alternativ­es before using tear gas; announce their intent to use it; and give those present time and space to disperse.

Officers will still be able to use pepper spray, which is typically deployed in a stream rather than as a broad cloud, without such approval.

 ?? TED S. WARREN, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Smoke rises as police clash with protesters during a Black Lives Matter protest near the Seattle Police East Precinct headquarte­rs in Seattle in July 2020. A conference committee of the Washington state House and Senate met Thursday to reconcile versions of a police tactics bill already approved by each chamber.
TED S. WARREN, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Smoke rises as police clash with protesters during a Black Lives Matter protest near the Seattle Police East Precinct headquarte­rs in Seattle in July 2020. A conference committee of the Washington state House and Senate met Thursday to reconcile versions of a police tactics bill already approved by each chamber.

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