Seattle, feds ask for end to court-ordered supervision of city's police
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[March 29, 2023]
By Tyler Clifford
(Reuters) - The U.S. Justice Department and Seattle asked a federal
judge on Tuesday to lift parts of a decade-long order mandating court
oversight of the city's police department, saying the city has taken
steps to address a prior pattern of police misconduct.
The Seattle Police Department should be relieved of some requirements of
a federal consent decree after multiple years of compliance, Assistant
Attorney General Kristen Clarke told a news conference where she
highlighted "significant progress" in the department's efforts to reduce
its use of force.
The department must continue work to implement police accountability and
crowd management policies under a new decree proposed in a joint filing
by federal attorneys and the city in the U.S. District Court for the
Western District of Washington.
"Policing in Seattle looks dramatically different today than it did 10
years ago," Clarke said. "The progress that we've accomplished in
Seattle truly provides a model for what we can accomplish in other
communities as we vigorously pursue such reforms."
The request comes as federal attorneys investigate police practices in
several major cities including Minneapolis, Phoenix and New York,
according to Clarke. The probes focus in part on police response to
large protests, particularly the wave of demonstrations against police
brutality that followed the murder of George Floyd in 2020.
In 2012, the Seattle Police Department was placed under an independent,
court-appointed monitor and ordered to reform after a 2011 review by the
Justice Department found it regularly violated residents' civil rights
and that officers were too quick to use their batons and other weapons.
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Police officers stand on the back of a
vehicle as a response to a protest march that took place on Election
Day in Seattle, Washington, U.S. November 3, 2020. REUTERS/Lindsey
Wasson
The 2011 review found that in encounters that required force, police
used excessive force 20% of the time. When officers used their
batons, more than half the time it was unnecessary or excessive.
Among the changes made by Seattle were the creation of a Community
Police Commission, which is charged with police oversight. The city
also established a team to investigate all incidents involving
"serious uses of force," Clarke said.
Since new policies and training were implemented, the force has
reduced the use of serious force by 60%.
While the department has lost more than 500 officers in the past
three years, Police Chief Adrian Diaz said the force has made more
arrests and generated fewer complaints.
"We still have a little bit of road ahead" Diaz said. "This is not a
ceiling, this is a floor for us to really continuously improve and
innovate."
The department employs about 1,200 officers, according to its
website.
(Reporting by Tyler Clifford in New York; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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