Justice Department asks for 90 days to
review agreement with Baltimore
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[April 04, 2017]
(Reuters) - The U.S. Justice
Department on Monday asked a federal court for 90 days to review an
agreement reached with Baltimore for the city to enact a series of
police reforms in how officers use force and transport prisoners, court
documents showed.
The city and justice department reached the agreement, known as a
consent decree, in January, almost two years after the death of a black
man, Freddie Gray, of injuries sustained while in police custody sparked
a day of rioting and arson in the majority-black city. It also led to an
investigation that found the city's police routinely violated residents'
civil rights.
Gray, 25, died of injuries sustained in the back of a police van in
April 2015. His was one of a series of high-profile deaths in U.S.
cities from Ferguson, Missouri, to North Charleston, South Carolina,
that sparked an intense debate about race and justice and fueled the
rise of the Black Lives Matter movement.
The Justice Department needs the 90 days to review the agreement as it
develops strategies to support law enforcement agencies throughout the
U.S., lawyers for the department said in a motion filed in United States
District Court for the District of Maryland.
"The Department has determined that permitting it more time to examine
the consent decree proposed in this case in light of these initiatives
will help ensure that the best result is achieved for the people of the
City," they wrote, asking for a hearing set for Thursday to be postponed
until June.
Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh opposes the request for an extension, she
said in a statement.
"Much has been done to begin the process of building faith between the
police department and the community it seeks to serve. Any interruption
in moving forward may have the effect of eroding the trust that we are
working hard to establish," she said.
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A young boy greets police officers in riot gear during a march in
Baltimore, Maryland May 1, 2015. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson/Files
Attorney General Jeff Sessions said in a memo also filed to the
court that the Justice Department will review all consent decrees
and other police reform agreements that are in place with more than
a dozen cities.
The 227-page consent decree agreement in Baltimore was reached in
the final days of the Obama administration. It was the result of
months of negotiations after a federal report released in August
found that the city's 2,600-member police department routinely
violated black residents' civil rights with strip searches, by
excessively using force and other means.
(This version of the story was refiled to add word "with" in
headline)
(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee; Editing by Michael
Perry)
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