Police regain access to surplus Army gear
Trump signs order for controversial Pentagon program.
Local police departments will soon have access to grenade launchers, high-caliber weapons and other surplus U.S. military gear after President Don- ald Trump signed an order Monday reviving a Pentagon program that civil rights groups say inflames tensions between officers and their communities.
President Barack Obama had sharply curtailed the program in 2015 amid an outcry over the heavily-armed police response to protesters after several police kill-
ings of black men in Fergu- son, Missouri and other cities. The Trump administra
tion maintains the program is needed to protect public safety and support state and local police.
Restoring the program will “ensure that you can get the lifesaving gear that you need to do your job,” Attorney General Jeff Sessions told a cheering crowd at a national con- vention of the Fraternal Order of Police in Nashville, Tennessee. The group, America’s largest organization of rank- and-file officers, endorsed Trump for president after he promised to revamp the program.
Sessions said restrictions imposed by Obama went too far. “We will not put super- ficial concerns above public safety,” he said.
In issuing the order, Trump is fulfilling a campaign pledge made as he depicted crime as rampant and police forces
undercut by unfair criticism, with Obama failing to support them sufficiently. Trump, feel- ing increasingly under attack in recent weeks, has been doubling down on appeals to core supporters. Last week, he pardoned the controversial former Arizona sheriff Joe Arpaio, who had been found guilty of defying a judge’s order to stop racially profiling Latinos.
Sessions has been steadily restoring tough-on-crime policies while reshaping the way his Justice Department enforces civil rights law, particularly in the areas of polic- ing, in ways that have made advocates nervous.
Civil liberties groups and some lawmakers assailed Trump’s order as a sign of the militarization of local
police, arguing that the equip- ment encourages and esca- lates violent confrontations with officers.
Republican Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky called the plan a dangerous expansion of government power that would “subsidize militarization.” Another Republican, Rep. Mark Sanford of South Caro- lina, said the program “incentivizes the militarization of local police departments, as they are encouraged to grab more equipment than they need.”
But in Newberry County, South Carolina, Sheriff Lee
Foster said his department wouldn’t be able to afford equipment like night-vision goggles or ballistic helmets on its own. His deputies wouldn’t need body armor or riot shields daily, he said, but the items could save their lives in a rapidly unfolding situation.
“I don’t know of any police officer that would roam around with a Kevlar hel-
met on his head during routine situations,” Foster said. “The right to have access to this stuff doesn’t mean you’ve militarized your agency.”
Congress authorized the program in 1990, allowing police to receive surplus equipment to help fight drugs, which then gave way to the fight against terror- ism. Agencies requested and received everything from camouflage uniforms and bullet-proof vests to firearms, bayonets and drones. More than $5 billion in surplus equipment has been given to agencies.
Obama put limits on the program in 2015, partly triggered by public outrage over the use of military gear during protests in Ferguson, Missouri, following the shooting death of 18-year- old Michael Brown. Police responded in riot gear and
deployed tear gas, dogs and armored vehicles. At times, they also pointed assault rifles at protesters. The Justice Department under then-Attorney General Eric Holder blamed the militarized response for exacerbating tensions with the com- munity. Obama’s order prohibited
the government from provid- ing grenade launchers, bayonets, tracked armored vehi- cles, weaponized aircraft and vehicles, and firearms and ammunition of .50-caliber or greater to police.