Justice Reform Legislation
Today, Councilmember Charles Allen, Chair of the Committee on Judiciary and Public Safety introduced the Comprehensive Policing and Justice Reform Emergency Amendment Act of 2020, which includes several measures intended to improve police accountability and transparency. I, along with all other members of the Council, signed on to co-introduce and the bill passed unanimously.
The legislation includes the following: bans chokeholds, releases body-worn camera video within 72 hours after officer-involved fatality and forbids officers from viewing the footage before writing their report, strengthens the Office of Police Complaints’ independence and allows them to pursue investigations that officers witness but do not report, requires additional training for officers on racism and white supremacy, requires MPD to identify themselves as local police during First Amendment demonstrations, and more.
Chairman Mendelson and Councilmember Grosso moved several amendments that were incorporated into the legislation. The amendments prohibit the hiring of police officers who have a history of misconduct in other jurisdictions; prohibit matters concerning discipline from being negotiable by police union; prohibit the use of chemical irritants, such as pepper spray and tear gas, as well as the use of “less-lethal” weapons, such as rubber bullets, against First Amendment protestors. Councilmembers Gray and Bonds also moved an amendment that would create a Police Reform Commission to provide deliberate, evidence-based recommendation on police reform measures.
The Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) testified on their budget before the Committee on Judiciary and Public Safety this afternoon. If you want to share your thoughts on MPD's budget for the next fiscal year, the committee is convening a hearing on June 15th for public witnesses to testify. The deadline to sign up is June 11th. Click here for sign-up information.
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