Los Angeles Times

Don’t expect police to reform themselves

Their instinct is defensive, even with egregious misconduct. That’s why the Justice Department needs to compel changes.

- By Erwin Chemerinsk­y Erwin Chemerinsk­y is dean of the UC Berkeley School of Law and a contributi­ng writer to Opinion. He is the author of the forthcomin­g book, “Presumed Guilty: How the Supreme Court Empowered the Police and Subverted Civil Rights.”

Atty. Gen. Merrick Garland’s announceme­nt Wednesday morning that the Justice Department is starting an investigat­ion into the Minneapoli­s Police Department for unlawful policing practices is one step toward systemwide reform. This is a welcome change from the Trump administra­tion’s refusal to use this federal power.

The reality is that it is very difficult for cities to reform their own police department­s. Their instinctiv­e reaction is defensive, even in response to egregious police misconduct, like Derek Chauvin’s killing of George Floyd. The first statement put out by the Minneapoli­s police the day after Floyd’s death was not about the need to investigat­e. Instead, it said, “Man dies after medical incident during police interactio­n,” suggesting that nothing happened between Floyd’s arrest and his transport to the hospital.

Police unions often exercise significan­t political influence and are obstacles to major changes. Highprofil­e instances of police abuse

might trigger efforts at reform, but as public attention wanes, reform efforts fade as well.

That’s why using federal authority to compel reforms in police department­s is critical. The Justice Department can sue local and state government­s if there is a pattern of constituti­onal violations and seek appropriat­e remedies. In most instances, the department’s investigat­ion forces cities to enter into a settlement and a consent decree, without going through protracted litigation. Jeff Sessions,

former attorney general in the Trump administra­tion, however, essentiall­y banned the use of consent degrees, saying they harmed police morale.

These consent decrees are enforceabl­e through the federal court, usually with a court-appointed monitor who oversees the implementa­tion of the reforms. Typically, these agreements include provisions to stop racial profiling, improve investigat­ions of accusation­s of excessive force and reform police discipline. The court can impose sanctions on the local government if it does not carry out the terms of the agreement.

The Justice Department has used this authority on many occasions — such as in Baltimore, Cincinnati, Los Angeles, New Orleans and Pittsburgh — to reform police department­s. In each instance, major changes in policing resulted.

A study in 2017 examined 23 police department­s that had been subject to consent decrees and found that “civil rights suits against these department­s dropped anywhere from 23% to 36% after a federal interventi­on.” Consent decrees overseen by a monitor have led to a 29% decrease in civilian fatalities at police hands.

The Justice Department investigat­ed the Los Angeles Police Department after the Rampart scandal came to light; it involved police violence, their planting evidence on innocent people and lying in court to gain conviction­s. The department informed the city that it would sue unless a settlement was reached.

In November 2000, Los Angeles entered into a consent decree that affected almost every aspect of policing in the city. The decree created a database to track police use of force and police discipline, among other actions. It required police to record informatio­n with regard to every stop. It changed how police use of force was to be investigat­ed. It altered control of the anti-gang units; it was an antigang unit in the Rampart Division that led to the scandal. A monitor was appointed and for 12 years, until 2013, a federal judge oversaw the operation of the consent decree.

The Harvard Kennedy School did a detailed study and found that the consent decree significan­tly changed policing in Los Angeles. The study found, for example, that serious use of force incidents decreased by 15%.

Did it solve all of the problems of the LAPD? Of course not. But by any measure it instituted reforms and improved policing in a city that had a long pattern of police misconduct. For those who worry that enforcing a higher standard of police behavior may hinder crime fighting, it is worth noting that crime declined significan­tly in Los Angeles during the years that the consent decree was in effect.

There is clearly a need for additional federal legislatio­n to reform policing — to outlaw practices like the use of the chokehold, to expand the ability to hold officers and the cities liable for abuses, to increase transparen­cy and monitoring of police behavior.

Getting the Justice Department back into this work is a crucial first step after four years of neglect by the Trump administra­tion.

 ?? Andrew Harnik Associated Press ?? ATTY. GEN. Merrick Garland said the Justice Department will investigat­e practices at the Minneapoli­s Police Department.
Andrew Harnik Associated Press ATTY. GEN. Merrick Garland said the Justice Department will investigat­e practices at the Minneapoli­s Police Department.

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