Texarkana Gazette

George Floyd death prompts states to limit or ban chokeholds

- By Farnoush Amiri, Colleen Slevin and Camille Fassett Report for America/The Associated Press

Democratic Rep. Leslie Herod had no luck persuading her colleagues in the Colorado Legislatur­e to ban police from using chokeholds after the death of a 23-year-old Black man in suburban Aurora in 2019.

She couldn’t gather enough support to even introduce a police reform bill that included a ban. That changed when George Floyd died after being pinned under the knee of a Minneapoli­s police officer and the video set off a summer of protests over police killings and racial injustice.

Within a month of Floyd’s death, Colorado lawmakers took the step they had avoided after the death of Elijah McClain and approved a ban on chokeholds as part of broader police reform legislatio­n. The law overrode more limited chokehold restrictio­ns that were put in place four years earlier.

“Making it clear that is completely banned in all circumstan­ces has the potential to save lives,” said Herod, who is Black.

Colorado is among several states to prohibit or severely limit the use of chokeholds and neck restraints by police officers in the year since the world watched Floyd plead for air as he was pinned under the knee of former officer Derek Chauvin, who was convicted of murder and manslaught­er last month.

At least 17 states, including Minnesota, have enacted legislatio­n to ban or restrict the practice, according to data provided to The Associated Press by the National Conference of State Legislatur­es.

Before Floyd was killed, only two states, Tennessee and Illinois, had bans on police hold techniques that restrict the airway or blood flow to the brain when pressure is applied to the neck.

A majority of the bans enacted over the past year are in states controlled politicall­y by Democrats, as Colorado is. They include California, Illinois, Nevada, Oregon and Virginia, among others.

This past week, Washington Gov. Jay Inslee signed a broad legislativ­e package that will implement numerous police accountabi­lity and reform measures, including an outright ban on chokeholds and neck restraints.

The efforts also have generated support among some Republican­s. Bans or restrictio­ns have been signed into law by GOP governors in Massachuse­tts and Vermont, which have Democratic legislatur­es, and have passed in fully Republican-controlled states such as Indiana, Iowa and Utah.

Just a month after Floyd’s death, Utah lawmakers voted to ban knee-to-neck chokeholds, though the legislatio­n stopped short of a ban on all types of neck restraints. The bill was sponsored by Democratic Rep. Sandra Hollins, the only Black member of the Utah Legislatur­e.

“Our community is feeling unsafe,” Hollins said at the time. “That’s why you’re seeing the protests. They are in fear of their lives. This bill sends a very powerful message as legislator­s.”

Many of the new laws include criminal penalties for officers if a chokehold or neck restraint leads to death or injury, unless they can show it was necessary to protect their life or someone else’s. In Vermont, officers can face up to 20 years in prison and a fine of up to $50,000.

Those consequenc­es are important to gain compliance, said Lorenzo Boyd, director of the Center for Advanced Policing at the University of New Haven in Connecticu­t.

“If we say chokeholds are prohibited, police will still use chokeholds,” he said. “If we say, ‘Chokeholds are now felonies and if you use a chokehold we can now prosecute you,’ I think that would change the narrative.”

Floyd’s death was not the first police case involving a neck restraint to capture wide public attention.

In 2014, a New York City police officer put Eric Garner in what appeared to be a chokehold while arresting him on suspicion of illegally selling cigarettes on Staten Island. On amateur video, Garner can be heard saying “I can’t breathe.”

While the city had previously banned chokeholds, no statewide legislatio­n followed Garner’s death. It wasn’t until the Floyd killing that the New York Legislatur­e passed a bill to effectivel­y ban police use of chokeholds and make it a felony.

The lawmaker who pushed the ban said a similar bill introduced in 2014, shortly after Garner died, failed to gain traction.

“When I came to the Senate, I came looking for this bill,” state Sen. Brian Benjamin said of the legislatio­n he introduced in 2019. “But it wasn’t until George Floyd’s murder occurred that the nationwide, global energy around ‘We’ve got to do something,’ really changed the dynamics in New York.”

When asked to speculate why the Legislatur­e didn’t act after the Garner death, Benjamin said there was room for detractors to give the officer the benefit of the doubt. He said what happened in Minneapoli­s was different.

“With the Floyd video, there’s absolutely no wiggle room of any kind around the evilness of what was happening there,” he said.

The legislatio­n related to chokeholds and neck restraints is part of a broader effort in many states to address police procedures, training and discipline since Floyd’s death.

Since May 2020, at least 67 police reforms have been signed into law in 25 states related to specific topics the National Conference of State Legislatur­es analyzed at the AP’s request. In addition to neck restraints and chokeholds, the laws address police-worn body cameras; disciplina­ry and personnel records; independen­t investigat­ions of officer conduct; use of force restrictio­ns; qualified immunity; and no-knock warrants.

At least 13 states enacted restrictio­ns on officer use-of-force and at least eight have implemente­d laws beefing up officer reviews and investigat­ions, according to the NCSL data.

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