This issue needs federal attention...essentially ,we're allowing the dumbest people on our payrolls to drive at any speed they like while chasing someone who may or may not be worth a high speed chase
PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY,
Md. - On Tuesday, Prince George’s County Councilwoman Krystal
Oriadha is introducing a bill that would restrict a police officer’s ability to
initiate a car chase.
Zoey’s Law — named after
the 3-year-old girl who was killed last March in a deadly District Heights
police pursuit — would create an internal pursuit review board and require the
Prince George’s County police chief to deliver an annual report on all police-involved
vehicle chases.
Zoey’s family stood
alongside Oriadha today in support of the bill.
"This tragedy was
preventable," said Gina Pryor, Zoey’s grandmother. "Had the officers
made a different decision — one rooted in sound judgment and concern for public
safety — Zoey would still be here today. I miss her every single day."
The backstory:
The deadly crash
happened in March, when a District Heights police officer and a Capitol Heights
police officer chased 39-year-old Timothy Naylor, who was fleeing a traffic
stop in an Infiniti.
According to police,
Naylor collided with four vehicles on the 1200 block of Addison Road South —
one of them carrying 3-year-old Zoey and her mother, Tanishia. Zoey was killed
in the crash. Her mother survived.
Maryland’s Independent
Investigations Division is reviewing the incident as a police-involved death.
What they're saying:
Councilmember Krystal
Oriadha says she’s introducing Zoey’s Law in hopes of preventing future
tragedies.
"Sadly, when this
happened, a lot of you in this room know there were multiple cases within a
month’s timespan where we saw a tragic incident where a police chase led to the
death of an individual who had no involvement with what was going on,"
Oriadha said.
Right now, the
legislation would only apply to the Prince George’s County Police Department —
so it would not directly address the pursuit that killed Zoey, which involved
municipal officers.
But Oriadha says her
goal is to get buy-in from municipalities through memorandums of understanding
— or by passing similar laws at the city level.