Police Chief Talks New Policing
Model, Body-Worn Cameras During Town Hall
Madeline Taylor
Last night’s town hall with
Fairfax County’s police chief covered a variety of issues related to police
reform, from progress on the demands made by Fairfax County NAACP to body-worn
cameras.
Hunter Mill District Supervisor
Walter Alcorn hosted the meeting last night to give locals a chance to provide
input and ask questions. The conflict-free town hall mainly focused on Police
Chief Edwin Roessler Jr. answering questions from audience members and
explaining FCPD’s policies in detail.
Roessler highlighted the reforms
made by FCPD since the shooting of John Geer, an unarmed Springfield man, in
2013. They have shifted towards a “co-production” method of policing, which
emphasizes the importance of community engagement by bringing in advocates to
review issues and discuss police report narratives.
A big goal of the police
department is to increase diversion of tasks, including sending mental health
or substance abuse cases away from the police. Lee District Supervisor Rodney
Lusk, who is the chair of the county’s Public Safety Committee, also emphasized
that the current range of issues diverted to the police is “too much to ask of
them” and is in support of the Diversion First model.
The chief addressed terminology
that the public wanted to be defined, including the FCPD’s definition of the
use of force as “anything beyond a guide or escort, or above putting handcuffs
on.” Roessler said that anything beyond that is subject to investigation.
Additionally, he clarified that chokeholds are prohibited in Fairfax County.
Roessler also touched on the
development of body-worn cameras. He said that the idea has been in the works
since June 2015, and he wants to adopt the co-production model of community
engagement in this development.
He says they are making “great progress”
on this project and that the policies regarding the cameras are addressed
online in an American University pilot program testing the same model of body
camera policies. They plan to evaluate the body cameras again in-person in
September to ensure the policies are exceeding community expectations.
Roessler discussed the evaluation
and promotion process of officers, saying that evaluation begins upon
application. He described a thorough path of training that officers go through
before assignments. Additionally, they value community engagement when
evaluating candidates for senior staff positions to ensure officers “embody the
spirit of what the community needs for the future.”
“We want our officers to engage
with the community members in a positive fashion, not just calls for service,”
Roessler said in describing what they look for upon officer evaluation.
Other issues covered included the
presence of the MS-13 gang, to which Roessler said they “will be relentless on
gang activity in Fairfax County.”
When asked how the police
department addresses domestic and sexual violence, Roessler said they use the
Lethality Assessment Program — Maryland Model to assess the situation and
connect victims with immediate help, such as counselors, attorneys or volunteers
from the community.
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