Baltimore Sun

Sources: Biden to sign policing order on 2nd anniversar­y of Floyd’s death

- By Mike Balsamo, Zeke Miller and Chris Megerian

WASHINGTON — With Congress deadlocked over how to address racism and excessive use of force, President Joe Biden plans to sign an executive order on policing Wednesday, the second anniversar­y of George Floyd’s death, according to three people familiar with the matter.

The decision reflects

Biden’s struggle to use the limited powers of his office to advance his campaign promises, as well as his attempt to strike a balance between police and civil rights groups at a time when rising concerns about crime are eclipsing calls for reform.

The order would require federal law enforcemen­t to review and revise policies on use of force, and it would restrict the flow of surplus military equipment to local police. It would also encourage limitation­s on chokeholds and no-knock warrants by attaching strings to federal funding.

The people who described the order spoke on condition of anonymity ahead of any public announceme­nt, which is scheduled after Biden’s return from his first trip to Asia as president.

He is expected to appear alongside relatives of Floyd, whose killing by Minneapoli­s

police sparked nationwide protests.

It was the largest series of demonstrat­ions in American history, occurring in the midst of coronaviru­s lockdowns and President Donald Trump’s reelection campaign.

However, transformi­ng the initial outcry into political change has proven difficult.

When four officers were convicted last year for killing

Floyd, Biden urged Congress to pass legislatio­n to reform police by the anniversar­y of his death.

The guilty verdict was “not enough,” he said, and “we can’t stop here.”

However, no legislatio­n was passed, and bipartisan talks dragged on, and later broke down.

The White House eventually decided to move forward with executive actions rather than wait for Congress.

In September, the

Justice Department curtailed federal agents’ use of no-knock warrants — which allow law enforcemen­t agents to enter a home without announcing their presence — and updated its policy to prohibit agents from using chokeholds in most circumstan­ces.

But extending such rules to local police is more challengin­g, and White House officials have spent months in negotiatio­ns with civil rights groups and police organizati­ons.

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