Wicomico NAACP leader calls for creation of police oversight board


Vanessa Junkin

SALISBURY — The way things are now in Wicomico County, law enforcement agencies are policing law enforcement officers.
The Maryland State Police Homicide Unit regularly investigates police-involved shootings, and for those incidents, the Wicomico County State’s Attorney’s Office makes decisions on whether to prosecute.
Mary Ashanti, president of the Wicomico County branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, would like to see citizens become more involved in the process.
At a Wicomico County Council meeting Tuesday, Ashanti brought up the suggestion for a police oversight board with subpoena power during the public comment session.
“The complaints we have is police are investigating themselves,” Ashanti said.
Ashanti said in a phone interview that ideally, the board would be made up of citizens, businesspeople, clergy and maybe also people with a law enforcement background who are not current law enforcement officers. The board would look at deadly force situations or other incidents involving police misconduct, she said.
The suggestion comes after three police-involved shootings, two of which were fatal, that happened within two months earlier this year in Wicomico County.
“It’s time for a movement,” Ashanti said at the meeting.
Police oversight boards
There are civilian police oversight boards in cities across the country and beyond.
Brian Buchner, president of the National Association for Civilian Oversight of Law Enforcement, said the biggest benefit of having citizens provide oversight is building a bridge between the community and its police department, which creates more trust.
This trust leads to decreased crime, Buchner said. Oversight agencies also help ensure that people’s civil rights are protected, he said.
Buchner said civilian oversight boards are normally part of local governments. That’s the case for the City of Philadelphia’s Police Advisory Commission, where Kelvyn Anderson is executive director.
Anderson said Philadelphia’s first police advisory board was formed in 1958, and the current agency was formed in 1994.
The initial board did not have subpoena power, Anderson said, which is something the agency now has.
Because officers are not just disciplined based on the findings or view of the advisory board, and the board doesn’t have control over the police commissioner’s decision, Anderson said the commission has more influence when it comes to overall policy issues.
Philadelphia police have done more training for dealing with mental health issues, for example, because of the oversight board, Anderson said.
“We’ve found that, again, those larger policy issues are areas where if we’ve done our homework, if we’re listening well to the community, we have useful things to say to the police department,” Anderson said.
Local ideas
Wicomico County has seen three police-involved shootings between February and March — two which resulted in the death of two suspects.
Ashanti noted that locally, when those police-involved shootings take place, they are investigated by other police –– even if the shooting does not involve the Maryland State Police, for example, that agency works with the other local departments.
She’d prefer that an objective board look at the case, and she’d rather have the FBI or U.S. Department of Justice investigate incidents rather than, for example, the state police.
Ashanti said she’s currently in the researching stages of this initiative and is interested in seeing what other areas do.
Tuesday was the first time that County Council President Matt Holloway had heard about this idea, but he said if the public and law enforcement are on board with the initiative, he would support something like this.
He wasn’t sure whether the council or county executive would take the lead on such an initiative; he said he’d need to learn more and get further input.
This may be a good time to get started on something like this, Holloway said, and it could help be more proactive than reactionary.
“This could be a step towards accomplishing that,” Holloway said.
Wicomico County State’s Attorney Matt Maciarello did not have information about the specifics of this plan, so he did not talk about it in particular. He did say he supports strengthening relationships between police and the community. Law enforcement officials regularly meet with community leaders and organizers and hear concerns, he said.
He noted how important these police-community relationships are, and that in the majority of cases, citizens are crucial.
“The police are there to serve the citizenry, and the citizenry are there to assist the law enforcement,” Maciarello said.