This Was a Big Day for Reforming Cops
2
Reasons Why This Was a Big Day for Reforming Cops and Courts
Both say they want
"common-sense" solutions.
—By AJ Vicens
The national push to reform the
criminal justice system saw two significant moves Wednesday, one from the law
enforcement community and another from the activists who helped launch the
conversation in Ferguson, Missouri, when Michael Brown was gunned down in
August 2014.
On Wednesday, an organization
known as Law Enforcement Leaders to Reduce Crime & Incarceration—which
includes more than 160 police chiefs, sheriffs, district attorneys, federal
prosecutors and attorneys general—sent a letter signed by more than 70 of its
members to House and Senate leadership in support of legislation that would
address sentencing guidelines. The Sentencing Reform and Corrections Act of
2015, sponsored in the Senate by Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), would reduce
federal mandatory minimum sentences for some gun and drug crimes, and would
make it possible for federal prisoners to earn credits for completing
rehabilitative programs while incarcerated and reduce their time behind bars. A
similar measuresponsored in the House by Rep. Bob Goodlatte (R-Va.) also
addresses some of these problems.
"Common sense might suggest
that more punishment keeps down crime," the group wrote. "But
research has shown that arbitrarily increasing time served in prison does not
necessarily translate into increased public safety gains…In fact, excessive
incarceration can actually increase crime in some cases."
The group noted that half of all
federal prisoners are drug offenders (compared with just 7 percent who are
convicted of violent crimes), so current sentencing approaches and prosecution
efforts waste money and resources. The federal inmate population has grown more
than 400 percent over the past 30 years, they wrote, and the Federal Bureau of
Prisons is 39 percent over capacity and consumes a quarter of the Justice
Department's budget, in part because of tough-on-crime, mandatory minimum
sentencing programs.
"These taxpayer dollars
should instead target the country's most dangerous and serious offenders, those
who pose the most risk to public safety," they wrote. (See the full letter
below.)
While that effort focused on law
enforcement reforms at the federal level, DeRay McKesson, Johnetta Elzie,
Brittany Packnett, and Sam Sinyangwe—a group of activists who have been among
the most prominent voices in calling for police reform in America—launched the
Police Use of Force Project. This project ofCampaign Zero, an effort to end
police violence in America, published data outlining how policies governing
police use of force often lead to police violence.
The data reveals use of force
policies in several key areas for 17 major cities. (The data is downloadable,
as well.)
Policies "often fail to
include common-sense limits on police use of force," the group noted. For
example, in many police departments, life preservation is not the primary
objective, and many do not require officers to deescalate situations where
possible. Policies often permit officers to "choke or strangle
civilians," and many do not require officers to intervene and stop the use
of excessive force. Many of the police departments reviewed by the group lacked
transparency in their use of force policies, did not provide public data on
police shootings, did not keep tabs on incidents where force was used, and, in
some cases, provided access to the names of those shot by the police.
In the statement announcing the
use-of-force project, the group said police policies often don't match their
publicly stated values.
"Our analysis…shows that
while many police departments have adopted value statements claiming to
prioritize the preservation of life, their actual use of force policies do not
reflect this commitment," the group wrote.
The survey is an ongoing process,
and Campaign Zero asked community members to get to know police policies in
order to become more engaged in police reform efforts.
"In the coming weeks, we
will be forming a collective of legal scholars, academics, and activists to
continue analyzing police use of force policies in the nation's largest 100
cities, as we work to develop a model use of force policy that is fair and in
the interest of the public good," it wrote.
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