Four years after George Floyd killing, police reform slow to follow
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[May 25, 2024]
By Bianca Flowers and Stephanie Kelly
(Reuters) - Stevante Clark felt a glimmer of hope when racial justice
protests swept the globe in 2020 after the police killing of George
Floyd.
His own brother, Stephon Clark, was killed by Sacramento police in March
2018 after they fired 20 shots at the young Black man in the backyard of
his grandparents' home. Police said they feared he had a gun. But he was
found to have been holding only a cellphone.
The 22-year-old’s death sparked protests and calls for reform. It also
led to a new more stringent use-of-force law in California. Yet, no
comprehensive change emerged on a national level.
So, Clark thought Floyd’s killing and those of several other Black
Americans by police in 2020 would finally deliver the substantive
criminal justice reform that he and others have sought for years.
But while Floyd’s death became a rally cry for racial equity and
justice, four years later the journey toward comprehensive policing
reform has been fraught with challenges. Momentum has waned and
legislative efforts have stalled, leaving communities, advocates, and
families who have lost loved ones frustrated by what they see as a shift
away from police accountability.
“You can't honor the life and legacy of George Floyd without passing
comprehensive policy and legislative change to prevent George Floyds
from happening,” Clark told Reuters. "I don't think the Biden
administration has been aggressive enough when it comes to this crisis
-- and this is not just a Black fight -- this is for everybody. People
have become desensitized by police murder.”
Despite the initial surge of calls for change, federal attempts at
wide-ranging reform have been mostly unsuccessful.
On Friday, President Joe Biden said, "I will continue to urge Congress
to send the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, which ensures law
enforcement accountability, to my desk."
A spokesperson for Republican Donald Trump's campaign told Reuters that
Trump would take a hardline approach to immigration and violent crime,
adding if he is reelected "he will restore law and order.”
GEORGE FLOYD ACT STALLED
The George Floyd Justice in Policing Act – which was initially
introduced in 2021 to stop aggressive law enforcement tactics,
misconduct and racial bias – has faced repeated roadblocks in Congress
and has yet to move forward.
Efforts to reach a bipartisan police reform deal failed in 2021, with
Biden blaming Republicans for the failure. Among the issues lawmakers
discussed were changes to "qualified immunity" laws that protects police
officers from some excessive force lawsuits. Democratic Rep. Sheila
Jackson Lee reintroduced the bill Thursday.
Experts say while criminal justice reform efforts in part fueled the
2020 election cycle, policing is unlikely to be a top issue in the 2024
presidential election.
“Other issues have come to the fore, especially with conflict in Israel
and Palestine, with conflict in Ukraine, and the economy,” said Jorge
Camacho, policy director of the Justice Collaboratory at Yale Law
School.
But it still might be one reason Biden has weaker support among Black
voters, Camacho said, adding that Black communities want to see action
on policing.
Recent polling data by a non-profit polling firm, African American
Research Collaborative, shows that Black communities are now focusing
more on economic issues, like the cost of living crisis and jobs.
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Minneapolis, Minnesota, June 1, 2020. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson
After Congress failed to pass the George Floyd legislation, Biden
signed an executive order in May 2022 that in part created a new
national police misconduct database, required federal law
enforcement agencies to investigate the use of deadly force or
deaths in custody and restricted federal agencies from using
chokeholds and "no knock" entries.
Still a day before the anniversary of Floyd's death, veteran civil
rights advocate Rev. Al Sharpton, called on Congress to pass the
bill.
“The George Floyd Justice in Policing Act fulfills a promise we made
four years ago to his and every family of a Black man or woman
killed by law enforcement," he said, adding it would fulfill what
"we have spent decades marching, protesting, and advocating for."
'NOT ENOUGH'
One of the largest changes that the Biden administration has done in
terms of police reform, said Rashawn Ray, senior fellow at the
Brookings Institution, was to rescind a Trump-era policy that
curtailed the use of consent decrees to address police violence.
Nina Patel, Senior Policy Council at the American Civil Liberties
Union, said "there have been accomplishments on policing
accountability, but they have been far less influential than what we
would have liked."
She added that policies in states like Louisiana, Arizona and
Georgia are making it harder to film police, even though bystander
footage often brings cases of brutality to light.
"Our position is that reform is not enough," said Cicley Gay, Board
Chairwoman of Black Lives Matter, adding that incremental reform is
insufficient. “We hear firsthand from many families about not only
what they experienced, but the lack of progress and in making policy
change."
The Movement for Black Lives, a national network of more than 150
leaders and organizations, is now pushing The People’s Response Act,
which was introduced by Congresswoman Cori Bush last year.
The bill focuses on state and local funding for "inclusive,
holistic, and health-centered approach" to public safety and would
create alternatives to police intervention through the Department of
Health and Human Services.
The bill is likely to receive significant resistance from
Republicans and centrist Democrats, experts say. However, advocates
said they will continue to press forward.
The “uprisings around the world were sparked by such a tragic
incident that was part of a pattern of instances of police killings,
police violence, that our communities have been calling attention to
and trying to fight against for such a long time,” said Amara Enyia,
Director for Policy and Research at the Movement for Black Lives.
"The arc of our work is not just for us, this is part of a bigger
work of justice to which there isn't an end date.”
(Reporting by Bianca Flowers and Stephanie Kelly; Additional
reporting by Gram Slattery; Editing by Aurora Ellis and Kat
Stafford)
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