Will Fairfax police be reformed?
Will
Fairfax police be reformed?
By
Editorial Board October 17, 2015
THE
UNWARRANTED death of John Geer, the unarmed man shot and killed by a Fairfax
County police officer in 2013 as he stood on the doorstep of his own house in
Springfield, seemed for the longest time akin to death-by-lightning-bolt. A
tragic event, to be sure, but one that imparted no lessons, triggered no
consequences and engendered no reforms. The official response: too bad, just
one of those things.
Owing
to public outrage in Fairfax, that has now changed. After two years of
prosecutorial paralysis, both at the federal and state levels, the police
officer who shot Mr. Geer, Adam Torres, was indicted on murder charges this
summer. And, this month, a county commission established to review police
department procedures emerged from six months of deliberations with an array of
tough recommendations that would establish a new regimen of accountability for
the cops.
The
commission’s recommendations, adopted unanimously, will now be put to the
county’s Board of Supervisors. They deserve robust support, especially the one
most likely to encounter pushback from department: the establishment of a
civilian panel to review allegations of police abuse and misconduct.
Fairfax’s
police department, with 1,400 sworn officers, is, after the state police, the
biggest law enforcement agency in Virginia. Before Mr. Geer’s death, and
several other similarly questionable police shootings in recent years, it
enjoyed a sterling reputation. But the aftermath of the Geer shooting —
witnessed in broad daylight by several other officers (who didn’t shoot) as
well as neighbors — was a textbook case of how not to cultivate the public’s
trust. Basic information, including the name of the officer who shot Mr. Geer,
was withheld. For months, the department offered no coherent (or true)
explanation of what had happened. Prosecutors punted the case to the feds, with
no apparent justification.
Police
and prosecutors finally awoke from their torpor and did their jobs — but not
until Mr. Geer’s family, justifiably angry and bewildered at the official
inertia, filed suit, a U.S. senator started asking questions and county
residents started protesting publicly.
Sound
policies and procedures would prevent another such farce, as the commission
empowered by the Board of Supervisors understood. In addition to its
recommendation that a seven-member citizens’ panel be established to review
alleged police misconduct, the commission urged that an independent auditor be
empowered to oversee internal police investigations in cases involving the use
of force, including when police kill civilians. The auditor would be named by
and report to the Board of Supervisors.
In
addition, the commission laid out an array of reforms whose effect would be to
tilt the police toward 21st-century policies of transparency and
information-sharing, and more restraint in the use of force by officers in
tense situations. Key to that is the deployment of more teams or individual
officers with specialized training in dealing with mentally ill people, who now
constitute big shares of those detained and jailed in the county.
Grumbling
has already begun, particularly about the civilian review panel. The county
police chief, Edwin Roessler, is withholding his consent, and the police union
has rejected it outright.
The
fact is, most of the nation’s largest police departments have such review
panels, and most of them include or are composed of civilians, and for good
reason; that’s whom the department serves. Whether the Board of Supervisors
stands up to the department or succumbs to it will be a test of elected
officials’ backbone and resolve to clean up the police.
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