Fairfax faces prospective ‘tailspin’ as
exodus of police intensifies
Understaffed and anticipating a new chief,
the Fairfax County Police Department – like many in the nation – is facing
pressure to be more accountable and hire more diverse officers.
Panelists at the McLean Citizens
Association’s virtual public-safety forum on April 21 brought a wide variety of
perspectives and laments.
Fairfax County police are in a “tailspin,
pure and simple,” said Sean Corcoran, president of Fairfax County
Coalition of Police, Local 5000.
The department was down 188 officers as of
April 11 and likely will see 25 more depart by July 1, Corcoran said. Dozens of
recruits have been leaving each academy session and some new officers
contemplate leaving before serving the five-year minimum to be vested in their
pensions, he said.
Fairfax County has frozen police pay for the
past two years (excluding pandemic-related hazard-pay bonuses), but the
department has found millions for the body-worn-camera program and police
auditor’s office, he said.
Violence is way up in Fairfax County lately,
with more firearms seized already this year than in the last decade combined,
said retired officer Brad Carruthers, president of the Fairfax County Fraternal
Order of Police.
Officers’ day-to-day calls are being met
with increased violence, he said.
“People don’t want to go into law
enforcement,” Carruthers said. “You’re going to see that number [of officers
leaving] jump exponentially in the future.”
As a result of this and nationwide
anti-police sentiment, public safety will suffer and officers will be less
proactive, said Carruthers, adding that efforts to eliminate “qualified
immunity” for police will make things worse.
Qualified immunity, which offers
governmental employees exercising discretion some protection from civil
lawsuits, has come under national scrutiny in recent months.
“I’m not here to say qualified immunity is
the worst thing in the world, in every possible way, because there are times
when officials have to have discretion,” said James Bierman, an attorney who is
vice chairman and current acting chairman of the Fairfax County Police Civilian
Review Panel.
“But it is used too often to excuse behavior
that goes well beyond necessary force.”
The NAACP is asking Gov. Northam to convene
a special session of the General Assembly to reintroduce a bill that failed
earlier this year, which would have ended qualified immunity, said Karen
Campblin, president of the group’s Fairfax County chapter.
“The criminal-justice system is heavily
impacted by racial and cultural biases,” she said. “It also includes some
outdated judicial precedents, laws and policies, which together culminates into
racial disparities over policing, over incarceration and disenfranchisement,
particularly for the black people of our community.”
According to the national NAACP, black
people are five times more likely than whites to be stopped by police without
just cause, Campblin said. Laws that impose restrictions on people with arrests
and convictions hurt those people’s future prospects for jobs, housing and
education, she said.
Campblin also opposes cash bail, saying it
disproportionately affects low-income families and minorities.
Two years after county police fatally shot
Kingstowne resident John Geer in August 2013, the Board of Supervisors formed
an Ad Hoc Police Practices Review Commission.
The commission recommended civilian
oversight through an independent police auditor, creation of the Police
Civilian Review Panel, more supervisory oversight of vehicle-stopping
techniques and recruitment of high-quality officers who reflect the county’s
diversity, said former commission member Adrian Steel.
The Washington region’s law-enforcement
market is highly competitive, with local police departments and federal
agencies vying for talent, Corcoran said. This scarcity has hampered efforts to
hire from the limited pool of minority applicants, other panelists said.
The ad hoc commission also recommended
implementing Diversion First, a program that gives low-level offenders
alternatives besides incarceration, and undertaking efforts to de-escalate
crises.
Steel, who served as inaugural chairman of
the Police Civilian Review Panel, said he is looking forward to the
department’s full rollout of its body-worn camera program this July, which will
include the agency’s tactical teams.
Despite recommended changes to the
department’s pursuit policies, the number of pursuits for traffic infractions
has not changed, although command staff tend to abort low-level chases quickly,
Steel said.
Departmental transparency also lags. “The
disposition for disclosure has not fully taken hold,” he said.
(A police spokesman recently told the Sun
Gazette to file a Freedom of Information Act request to obtain the number of
sworn officers on the force, what constitutes a full complement and how many
officers the department currently is short.)
The county’s Civilian Review Panel seeks to
enhance police legitimacy and trust, but lacks independent investigative
authority, Bierman said. Its scrutiny of police investigations resembles
reviews of officials’ calls at sporting events, with decisions to overturn
needing to meet a higher standard, he said.
The panel does not handle use-of-force
investigations; these go to the county’s first independent police auditor
Richard Schott, hired in 2017. A study by two universities, commissioned by
Schott’s office, will identify reasons for racial disparity in use-of-force
cases and recommend methods for improved data collection and analysis. Schott
will present the team’s report to supervisors in June.
County police already have adopted
forward-thinking policies, Schott said. “From an oversight and police-reform
standpoint, I think Fairfax County is somewhat ahead of the national curve,” he
said. “That doesn’t mean that we have everything in place perfectly.”
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