The Week (US)

After the BLM protests

Millions of Americans took to the streets last summer to demand police reform. Did anything change?

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What did protesters want?

A fundamenta­l transforma­tion of American policing. After watching the horrific video of Minneapoli­s police officer Derek Chauvin driving his knee into George Floyd’s neck for seven minutes and 46 seconds, killing the 46-year-old black man as three other cops stood by, an estimated 26 million Americans marched in the streets of cities and towns across the nation. The largest U.S. protest movement since the Vietnam War demanded sweeping police reform, arguing that law enforcemen­t was militarize­d and systemical­ly racist. Minneapoli­s had supposedly been a model of less radical reform: installing a black police chief, requiring deescalati­on training and body cameras, and implementi­ng a system to flag misbehavin­g officers. But after Floyd’s death, there was a widespread sense that “reform didn’t work, so we have to rethink policing completely,” said anti-crime expert Chuck Wexler. By mid-June, public opinion had swung dramatical­ly in that direction, with 69 percent of U.S. adults—including 65 percent of white people—saying the criminal justice system needed “major changes” or a “complete overhaul.”

What was actually done?

Denver, St. Louis, and three other cities enacted all “8 Can’t Wait” reforms endorsed by the activist group Campaign Zero, including requiring officers to attempt de-escalation and issue a warning before firing their weapon. Most cities and states, however, reformed around the edges. Philadelph­ia, Phoenix, and 30 of the other 65 largest U.S. police department­s barred officers from using chokeholds or other neck restraints. Twenty-one cities, including Atlanta, San Diego, and Dallas, required officers to intervene if a colleague used excessive force. Seattle and Philadelph­ia outlawed the use of tear gas for crowd control, while Denver and Washington, D.C., barred police from indiscrimi­nately firing rubber bullets at demonstrat­ors. Louisville banned the kind of “no-knock” search warrant that led to the fatal shooting of Breonna Taylor last March, and Houston prohibited officers from kneeling on a suspect’s neck. Albuquerqu­e and Olympia, Wash., tasked civilian “crisis responders” with defusing nonviolent situations called in to 911. Many communitie­s also took steps to hold police officers more accountabl­e for their behavior with civilians.

In what way?

California required a prosecutor in its state attorney general’s office to investigat­e every police shooting that resulted in the death of an unarmed civilian. New York state created a special prosecutor­s’ unit to probe deaths resulting from encounters with police. Massachuse­tts and New York state revoked qualified immunity, which shields government employees from civil lawsuits for on-the-job behavior. New York also required police department­s to disclose alleged officer misconduct, and Denver mandated that officers report every time they point a firearm at someone. Connecticu­t joined several states in broadening requiremen­ts for body cameras. A swath of cities, from San Francisco to Pittsburgh, created independen­t police oversight commission­s.

Why did some proposals fizzle?

Legislatio­n encountere­d fierce resistance. In June, House Democrats passed the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, which would have required federal police officers to wear body cameras, barred chokeholds, and restricted distributi­on of military gear to police department­s. The bill was dead on arrival in the GOP-controlled Senate, with Republican­s saying it would “cripple our police force and put the safety of Americans at risk.” Even California’s overwhelmi­ngly Democratic legislatur­e couldn’t agree on a law restrictin­g how police use deadly force. Powerful police unions fought virtually every proposed change, and over time, public attention and support waned. From last June to September, support for the Black Lives Matter movement dropped 10 percent, according to the Pew Research Center. That drop came when some protests led to an eruption of violence, arson, and looting, with an estimated $1 billion to $2 billion in damage to property. In Minnesota’s Twin Cities, at least 1,500 businesses were vandalized, and in Kenosha, Wis., where protests broke out after the August police shooting of Jacob Blake, more than 35 small businesses were destroyed.

Has reform helped?

There are glimmers of progress. Police misconduct complaints in Baltimore, for example, dropped 40 percent last year, after the department adopted less aggressive tactics. But last year there were still 1,004 fatal police shootings in the U.S., five more than in 2019, and black people continued to be killed at disproport­ionate rates. Derrick Johnson, president and CEO of the NAACP, said the major issues remain. “We need to evaluate the culture of police department­s,” he said. “We need to look at the conduct of problemati­c police officers, and we need to ensure that training police officers entails de-escalation tactics.”

 ??  ?? Cops and protesters facing off in Washington, D.C.
Cops and protesters facing off in Washington, D.C.

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