Connecticut Post

Leadership needed to halt illegal bike and ATV caravans

- By Brian Farnen Brian Farnen is a former state representa­tive from Fairfield and a candidate for a seat again this year.

By now, you will have likely witnessed firsthand or watched footage of the dangerous dirt bike and ATV caravans joyriding through our downtown. Many of you saw a parade of them on a recent Sunday on the Post Road. It will likely get worse this summer. These motorcades are doing wheelies while driving on both sides of the roadway and sidewalks, and traversing fast through red lights.

Questions abound about why these reckless individual­s are not being stopped by police while they threaten the lives of fellow drivers and pedestrian­s. The answer has to do with recently passed state laws that limit the ability of police officers to maintain the safety of the community.

The issue facing our police force is twofold — first, the state enacted a strict no-pursuit policy. Police pursuits are only justified in limited scenarios such as a violent felon evading arrest, but it is deemed unjustifia­ble for officers to initiate a pursuit in “property crimes” (i.e. stolen cars) or vehicle infraction­s. The combinatio­n of a limited and vague pursuit policy with the removal of qualified immunity that protects law enforcemen­t personnel from frivolous personal lawsuits has resulted in a lack of enforcemen­t of basic traffic safety laws.

The current no-pursuit policy allows one of these ATVs or dirt bikes to flee from a police officer with limited consequenc­es. If an officer attempts to stop an ATV or dirt bike (already operating recklessly), activates their lights and sirens and if that driver goes 15 feet and crashes and kills himself or another, the argument could be made that it was an unjustifie­d pursuit for a motor vehicle violation.

When you combine this with the loss of qualified immunity protection for police — officers are now at risk of losing their job, home and financial well-being if it turns into a pursuit and an injury results. The combinatio­n of weak pursuit laws and limited protection­s for our men and women in blue has resulted in limited police enforcemen­t options in putting a stop to these reckless ATV and dirt bike caravans that parade through our town. With no respect for the law and lack of consequenc­es, these caravans will only continue over time.

So how do we solve this problem? We need to strengthen our pursuit policies so law enforcemen­t officials have the necessary tools at their disposal to address lawlessnes­s, and we must restore qualified immunity. Just recently the Legislatur­e had the opportunit­y to vote on an amendment to restore qualified immunity to protect police officers from personal liability. Over 10 brave Democrats in our House of Representa­tives joined with all Republican members to restore it. Fairfield state Reps. Jennifer Leeper and Cristin McCarthy Vahey voted with their party leadership against the amendment and it failed in a close vote. If elected, I will work on a bipartisan basis from day one to restore qualified immunity to protect the police officers who put their lives on the line for our community.

We must empower our police to determine when pursuit makes sense and when the risk is too great. We cannot wait until a tragedy to fix a problem that is avoidable with common sense legislatio­n that keeps our residents safe.

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