Los Angeles Times

Seattle agrees to police reform plan

It was negotiated after a federal investigat­ion found a pattern of excessive use of force.

- By Kim Murphy kim.murphy@latimes.com

SEATTLE — The city of Seattle has agreed to set up an independen­t monitor and a community police commission to settle a review by the U.S. Justice Department, which had accused police of routinely escalating minor encounters with citizens and resorting to unnecessar­y use of batons, flashlight­s and other weapons.

The memorandum of understand­ing provides for federal court oversight of a multiyear reform effort, similar to agreements that have been put into place in troubled cities across the country, including Los Angeles and — earlier this week — New Orleans.

“We have a shared belief that effective policing and constituti­onal policing go hand in hand,” Thomas E. Perez, assistant attorney general for civil rights, said at a news conference Friday announcing the settlement, reached after months of sometimes fractious negotiatio­ns.

The agreement calls for a detailed overhaul of policies on use of force, with officers required to report even minor confrontat­ions as well as undergo exhaustive training to alleviate racial and ethnic bias.

The department will be required to provide “clear guidance” that so-called social contacts between officers and citizens are voluntary and make clear that investigat­ory stops lacking reasonable suspicion are prohibited.

An independen­t monitor is to be selected within 60 days to oversee implementa­tion of the settlement, a process federal and city officials said would be lengthy.

“We have years — let’s make it clear — years of implementa­tion work ahead of us. It’s critical that we get this right,” City Attorney Pete Holmes told reporters.

The Justice Department opened its inquiry after the American Civil Liberties Union and a variety of community groups sought a civil rights investigat­ion into long-standing allegation­s of unwarrante­d beatings, kickings and stompings, unnecessar­y arrests and, in some cases, needless killings at the hands of police officers.

Public outcry reached a peak in August 2010, when a Native American totem carver walking with his carving knife was shot to death by a police officer only about four seconds after the officer had commanded him to put it down.

Federal civil rights investigat­ors concluded in December that the Police Department had engaged in a “pattern or practice” of excessive force in violation of the Constituti­on and said it also had “serious concerns” about practices that could lead to discrimina­tory policing. When officers used batons, investigat­ors found, they did so unnecessar­ily nearly 60% of the time.

The targets were most often people with mental illnesses or under the influence of alcohol or drugs, many of whom had committed only minor offenses, the investigat­ion found.

Seattle has been reeling from a wave of gun violence in recent months, prompting city officials to resist the idea of imposing unwarrante­d controls that they believe could prevent police from doing their job. Mayor Mike McGinn said he also worried that some of the Justice Department proposals could have been too expensive and resulted in fewer officers on needed street patrols.

“I … know that this community is deeply concerned about crime. We’ve heard, in light of the recent gun violence, calls for our police to be more aggressive and assertive,” McGinn said.

But he said the agreement is a good solution that resolves the city’s concerns and provides for reforms that city officials endorse and in many cases already had planned to implement.

“This city is committed to eliminatin­g bias,” the mayor said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States