This seems like a good thread to start.
Here's a starter.
Forced reforms, Mixed results
Federal interventions at troubled police departments across the country drag on for years and cost hundreds of millions of dollars. (Washington Post)
Excerpt:
Justice Department found police had committed civil rights violations with subsequent Consent Decrees instituted in the following cities' Police Departments in the last few years:
Cleveland (agreement)
Ferguson (findings) - lawsuit filed
Albuquerque (findings)
Seattle (findings)
New Orleans (findings) - Special Monitor appointed
Portland (agreement)
Pittsburgh (findings)
Newark (agreement)
Oakland
New York
Washington, D.C.
Miami (agreement)
Cincinnati
Detroit (ended)
Los Angeles (ended)
I believe nineteen city police departments are - or have been - under Consent Decrees for human and civil rights violations. (I'll update the list with more research). Add any you know of or any cities whose Consent Decrees have ended.
Under the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act, passed by Congress in 1994, after the Rodney King beating in Los Angeles, authorized the Justice Department Civil Rights division the ability to pursue police agencies if they demonstrate a “pattern and practice” of violating the Constitutional rights of the people they are sworn to serve and protect—including the use of excessive force, racial profiling, and policing-for-profit schemes.
Justice Department/Civil Rights Division/Special Litigation Section - Conduct of Law Enforcement Agencies (see "Description of the Laws We Enforce")
The Justice Department's process starts with a complaint.
Since 1994,
-- A Preliminary Investigation is triggered by a complaint (325 police departments), then
-- a Formal Investigation may be initiated (38 police departments),
-- Consent Decrees have been instituted in 19 of those 38 police departments, and finally,
- an Independent Monitor was appointed in 9 of those 19 cases.
For example, after nine years of resistance by the Oakland P.D., a federal judge temporarily ordered the department placed under a receiver who had total control over the department. Oakland has paid a total of $57 million during the 2001-2011 timeframe to alleged victims of police abuse.
A 'Pattern or Practice' of Violence in America (Bloomberg)
Here's a starter.
Forced reforms, Mixed results
Federal interventions at troubled police departments across the country drag on for years and cost hundreds of millions of dollars. (Washington Post)
Excerpt:
Over the past two decades, the Justice Department has undertaken its deepest interventions at 16 police departments that had patterns of excessive or deadly force, implementing reforms under the watch of independent monitors. More than its predecessors, the Obama administration has aggressively pursued police departments over the *abuses, recently launching probes after individuals died as a result of encounters with police in Baltimore and Ferguson, Mo.
The question is whether such interventions work. The Justice Department has not studied the long-term outcomes at the law enforcement agencies it has targeted.
To examine the impact, reporters surveyed the departments, visiting four cities. They interviewed officials, federal monitors and civil rights advocates. They also reviewed use-of-force data, monitoring reports and local budgets.
The reforms have led to modernized policies, new equipment and better training, police chiefs, city leaders, activists and Justice officials agree.
But measured by incidents of use of force, one of Justice’s primary metrics, the outcomes are mixed. In five of the 10 police departments for which sufficient data was provided, use of force by officers increased during and after the agreements. In five others, it stayed the same or declined.
Justice Department found police had committed civil rights violations with subsequent Consent Decrees instituted in the following cities' Police Departments in the last few years:
Cleveland (agreement)
Ferguson (findings) - lawsuit filed
Albuquerque (findings)
Seattle (findings)
New Orleans (findings) - Special Monitor appointed
Portland (agreement)
Pittsburgh (findings)
Newark (agreement)
Oakland
New York
Washington, D.C.
Miami (agreement)
Cincinnati
Detroit (ended)
Los Angeles (ended)
I believe nineteen city police departments are - or have been - under Consent Decrees for human and civil rights violations. (I'll update the list with more research). Add any you know of or any cities whose Consent Decrees have ended.
Under the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act, passed by Congress in 1994, after the Rodney King beating in Los Angeles, authorized the Justice Department Civil Rights division the ability to pursue police agencies if they demonstrate a “pattern and practice” of violating the Constitutional rights of the people they are sworn to serve and protect—including the use of excessive force, racial profiling, and policing-for-profit schemes.
Justice Department/Civil Rights Division/Special Litigation Section - Conduct of Law Enforcement Agencies (see "Description of the Laws We Enforce")
The Justice Department's process starts with a complaint.
Since 1994,
-- A Preliminary Investigation is triggered by a complaint (325 police departments), then
-- a Formal Investigation may be initiated (38 police departments),
-- Consent Decrees have been instituted in 19 of those 38 police departments, and finally,
- an Independent Monitor was appointed in 9 of those 19 cases.
For example, after nine years of resistance by the Oakland P.D., a federal judge temporarily ordered the department placed under a receiver who had total control over the department. Oakland has paid a total of $57 million during the 2001-2011 timeframe to alleged victims of police abuse.
A 'Pattern or Practice' of Violence in America (Bloomberg)
Last edited: