Boston Herald

Baker threatens veto, sends police reform bill back to Legislatur­e

- By erin Tiernan Herald wire services contribute­d to this report.

The fate of a set of sweeping police reforms debated in the Legislatur­e for more than seven months is in jeopardy if lawmakers — who lack a veto-proof majority — refuse to compromise on a number of amendments Gov. Charlie Baker has added to the bill.

The Republican governor sent the bill back to the Legislatur­e Thursday with amendments making changes to portions of the legislatio­n dealing with facial recognitio­n technology and police training.

In a Thursday afternoon memo to lawmakers, Baker agreed the bill “overall … promotes improved police accountabi­lity” but nixed a number of provisions he said “introduce barriers to effective administra­tion and the protection of public safety.”

In no uncertain terms, Baker said he would not sign a bill that bans police from using facial recognitio­n systems to solve crimes or leaves the developmen­t of training programs for police to a civilian-controlled commission.

Lawmakers are seeking to limit the use of the technology and only allow police to access Registry of Motor Vehicle databases with a warrant or in life-threatenin­g emergencie­s.

“This is about making compromise and I’m ready to do that on almost everything with respect to improving accountabi­lity for law enforcemen­t. But there are parts of this bill that were never part of that conversati­on about accountabi­lity that I can’t support,” Baker told the State House News Service.

The Legislatur­e last week sent Baker a compromise bill that would create the state’s first-ever licensing system for law enforcemen­t, but lacked the necessary margins to override a veto.

The Senate mustered a veto-proof majority in a 2812 vote, but the measure passed the House in a split 92-67 vote.

If lawmakers fail to compromise, they’ll have to start from scratch when the new session begins next month.

Police reform legislatio­n has been on the lips of civil rights and police leaders and lawmakers on both sides of the aisle after protests swept the nation this spring in the wake of the high-profile police killings of Breonna Taylor and

George Floyd.

The compromise bill includes a nine-member Peace Officer Standards and Training certificat­ion system that skews the balance toward the civilian side. It also attempts to deliver more widespread changes and begins to roll back qualified immunity protection­s, bans chokeholds and limits the use of tear gas and no-knock warrants.

Weighing in on the debate, the ACLU of Massachuse­tts urged legislator­s to “stand firm” and reject the governor’s amendment to the reform bill, calling it a “crucial due process provision” that would protect against unregulate­d use of face surveillan­ce technology proven to unfairly target Black and brown people.

“Unchecked police use of

surveillan­ce technology also harms everyone’s rights to anonymity, privacy and free speech,” said Exec

utive Director Carol Rose.

 ?? MATT sTONE / HErALd sTAFF ?? ‘PARTS ... I CAN’T SUPPORT’: Gov. Charlie Baker has sent a police reform bill back to the Legislatur­e, with amendments making changes to portions of the legislatio­n dealing with facial recognitio­n technology and police training.
MATT sTONE / HErALd sTAFF ‘PARTS ... I CAN’T SUPPORT’: Gov. Charlie Baker has sent a police reform bill back to the Legislatur­e, with amendments making changes to portions of the legislatio­n dealing with facial recognitio­n technology and police training.

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