The Kansas City Star

How to keep Kansas City policing from being ideologica­l

- BY PATRICK TUOHEY Regular opinion correspond­ent Patrick Tuohey is co-founder of the 501(c)(3) nonprofit Better Cities Project.

From prosecutio­n to policing, public safety is one of the biggest issues facing cities. It’s not just reducing property and violent crime, but also creating a sense of public safety and well-being that allows cities to grow.

Unfortunat­ely, as Kansas Citians have been recently reminded, we’re never too far from ideologica­l arguments about the criminal justice system.

It doesn’t need to be this way. Local leaders have a range of small, city-size possible improvemen­ts to increase transparen­cy and accountabi­lity. When it comes to policing, there are opportunit­ies with qualified immunity, federal task forces, civil asset forfeiture and transparen­cy. The Better Cities Project, where I serve as director of policy, published reports on each.

Qualified immunity: All officers will tell you they can be effective only when the community stands with them. But too often, bad police officers are shielded from the consequenc­es of their actions by qualified immunity. This is a court doctrine that holds that public officials are protected even when they maliciousl­y violate a person’s constituti­onal rights as long the rights they violated were not clearly establishe­d. Courts have subsequent­ly ruled in ways that makes this a very difficult barrier to overcome. Ending qualified immunity creates incentives for police to be more mindful.

Federal task forces: As we saw with the U.S. Department of Justice’s 2020’s Operation LeGend in Kansas City, a city struggling amid high crime may welcome federal assistance and increased resources. But federal officers are held to standards different from what local authoritie­s may like. The result? A city focused on rigorous standards of conduct for law enforcemen­t officers could have those efforts undone through participat­ion in a federal task force, should anything go wrong. Courts have ruled local officers are considered federal agents, even when agreements between local and federal authoritie­s state that this isn’t the case. Until the courts recognize such agreements, local authoritie­s will be best served by avoiding them altogether.

Civil asset forfeiture: Although often considered a policing matter rather than a prosecutio­n issue, suing civilly to retain seized items such as cash or vehicles means local authoritie­s avoid having to meet the higher bar of criminal law. Unfortunat­ely, police are often incentiviz­ed to participat­e in these seizures because their budgets may depend on it.

Because these cases are civil and not criminal, defendants are not eligible

for public defenders, nor protected against selfincrim­ination. And the cost to hire an attorney is often higher than the value of the seized property. As a result, property may be forfeited civilly even when the owner is not criminally convicted — or even charged. Research across the United States found civil asset forfeiture is more often practiced against poorer communitie­s. Cities and counties can act on their own to end this practice.

Bargaining transparen­cy: Police unions contract negotiatio­ns need to be open and transparen­t. Public service unions — including police, municipal staff, firefighte­rs and teachers — set the boundaries of profession­al conduct and disciplina­ry actions in their contracts long before there is any infraction. Because these negotiatio­ns are often secret, the public has little or no awareness of what’s at stake. Worse, elected leaders are often given only the option of voting up or down on such contracts without any ability to negotiate terms.

These few policies won’t solve all the challenges of crime and public safety. But for communitie­s paralyzed by rancorous debate, they offer a chance to work together on what local government­s — and the public they serve — can do to improve their lot.

Safe and vibrant cities attract residents, employers and investors without having to offer them expensive public subsidies. The work won’t be easy, but it is necessary.

 ?? EMILY CURIEL ecuriel@kcstar.com ?? There are opportunit­ies with qualified immunity, federal task forces, civil asset forfeiture and transparen­cy.
EMILY CURIEL ecuriel@kcstar.com There are opportunit­ies with qualified immunity, federal task forces, civil asset forfeiture and transparen­cy.

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