Group seeks feedback for SAFE policing
By Chris Mays Brattleboro Reformer Oct 18, 2020
Reprinted from an article in Brattleboro Reformer
https://www.reformer.com/local-news/group-seeks-feedback-for-safe-policing/article_3de561c6-1157-11eb-840e-0fd4d1bc5f0b.html
BRATTLEBORO — A local group proposing ways police can disarm is looking for feedback from the community on what “safe policing” means to them.
The phrase is one Brattleboro Common Sense uses when promoting its initiative. The Sensible Alternatives to Fatal Escalation (SAFE) Policing Plan “seeks to eliminate firearms from routine police patrols and most classes (codes) of police activity in order to increase public safety by preventing accidental and hasty use of firearms by police, and in order to increase the safety of police officers, who become pre-emptive targets by carrying lethal weapons,” the group said in a proposal to the town.
“It’s our biggest push at the moment,” said Adam Marchesseault, a research consultant from Waterbury who was hired by the group.
BCS talked with local residents downtown Friday. Kurt Daims, one the group’s directors, said they “discussed their comfort levels while dealing with police.”
The idea is to publish a brief report about community concerns and potential reforms in Brattleboro, Marchesseault said. He’s one of five researchers involved in the project.
By his estimate, BCS is talking at least weekly about the project. In recent years, the group has brought forward initiatives to lower the age for voting on local matters and address climate change.
The policing project started several years ago and involved looking at international examples for inspiration. The hope is to engage with the newly established Community Safety Review Committee in Brattleboro, which is tasked with coming up with recommendations for reform in time for the next municipal budget, but also introduce the idea to other communities in Vermont.
“I think the Select Board’s really stepping up in creating the committee in the first place,” Marchesseault said. “We stand ready to talk to the committee as soon as possible.”
Marchesseault noted the United Kingdom is one of the only countries where the popularity of policing without firearms is higher among police officers than the general public. He said the most recent public polls show 80 percent of officers in the line of duty are supportive compared to about 50 percent of the general public.
His group has heard from officers experienced with the types of policing being proposed. Marchesseault said most of them feel less threatened by the public when unarmed because they’re perceived as less threatening, and that leads to “more wholesome interactions.”
Armed specialized officers working in rural areas of the U.K. shared a different perspective. Marchesseault said they were worried about their guns being “snagged” by citizens.
“It’s a consistent concern of theirs that carrying a firearm could be used against them,” he said. “So therefore, it doesn’t make it safer.”
His group spoke with a retired officer in Scotland who described what it’s like to police without a firearm. Marchesseault said the officer is “very much willing” to set up conversations with the Brattleboro Police Department.
Another model the group points to is found in New Zealand, where firearms are locked in squad cars and supervisors need to approve access. That system works better in rural areas, Marchessault said.
Chris Mays
General Assignment Reporter
*** NOTICE ***
After talking with selectpersons Ian Goodnow, Brandie Starr and
others in town government I am convinced we will be able to cooperate
fruitfully. We will not submit any petitions. More on this later.
Brattleboro Common Sense, the group that makes global issues local, is threatening to block the town budget in demand for police reform.
With the backdrop of frequent and horrible police violence and a passionate outcry from local citizens Brattleboro selectperson Brandie Starr finds the approval of the budget unconscionable.
DEADLINE FRIDAY, June 26, 2020
Selectboard vote is not final.
Approval of the Brattleboro budget is usually the job of Representative Town Meeting (RTM). But this year, because of the difficulties of convening RTM with social distancing, [read]the state legislature has given that fajob to the selectboard. And since the budget includes funding for the police department (BPD), it was contested in a groundswell of demands for police reform and defunding. On Tuesday, June 16, the selectboard conservative majority voted to approve the budget. But the chief is listening. BCS has negotiated about police reform with him since 2018. He sees the national value of progress here in Brattleboro.
The selectboard’s vote is not final. There is a legal process for putting the budget to a vote of the people. (See Brattleboro Charter Article III.) First there must be a petition signed by around 450 voters (by Friday) or by 50 (1/3) of RTM members. Since the selectboard has temporarily taken the job of RTM, that might also mean that 1/3 of the selectboard — two selectpersons– can force the budget to a vote of the people. Rejecting the budget could cause some problems, but as it happens, selectpersons Ian Goodnow and Brandie Starr already voted to reject the budget. Ms. Starr in particular said “I CAN’T VOTE FOR THIS (BUDGET) IN GOOD CONSCIENCE!”.
BCS has organized budget referendums before. The organization hopes to get the signatures and demand a simple and clear compromise, for instance BPD begins patrols without holstered pistols, and then let the budget pass. They encourage the people “Let’s not get stuck in protest mode. Change comes from elections, litigation, legislation. There will be backlash. We the people have talked the talk. Now let’s walk the walk !”
View/download petition: Petition referendum budget police reform (rev 3)
Call us. There may be an additional petition Friday. Contact us so we
can collect signed petitions or bring them to BCS at 16 Washington Street.
BCS makes global issues local
CONTACT
Kurt Daims, director [email protected], 490 9363
Adam Marchesseault, economist [email protected], 802 274 3000
BrattleboroCommonSense.org
Petitioners halt their effort to overturn municipal budget
Town Attorney says filing petition is dependent on actions by a Representative Town Meeting that has not yet taken place
Originally published in The Commons issue #568 (Wednesday, July 1, 2020). This story appeared on page B1. Read the article…
UPDATE: On November 21, BCS interviewed BPD Captain Carignan and the department’s “Use of Force” instructors to hear their thoughts and concerns. BCS is now arranging conversations between Brattleboro’s officers and officers in countries with reduced-weapon practices.
Brattleboro Common Sense believes that a progressive attitude towards police reform is essential to promoting the safety of officers and the public, as well as positive relations and a sense of trust between the two. BCS is now arranging conversations within the Brattleboro community and with other towns in Vermont.
More specifically, we are looking at how the Weapons Effect, a well-documented psychological phenomenon where the sight of a weapon can cause an aggressive response in the viewer, fits into the dynamic of police-public interactions. [read]Our research has suggested that mitigating the Weapons Effect as a factor in this dynamic could lead to reduced escalation, more emphasis on nonlethal force, and a more cooperative and trusting relationship between law enforcement and civilians. This mitigation can be accomplished through means such as firearm concealment, the confinement of firearms to police vehicles when not in use, or the removal of firearms as standard equipment for certain categories of law enforcement, all of which are being considered.
This is an idea with a considerable amount to commend it in terms of global practices. A number of countries have chosen to reduce the Weapons Effect through these tactics, with largely positive results. We have looked closely at the examples of the UK and New Zealand, which respectively use the removal and vehicle confinement options to great effect.
At the end of the day, regardless of profession, ideology, or personal feelings, we all want the same things: for the way the police serve our community to reflect the needs and desires of the community, and for the largest possible number of people to go home at the end of each day safe and sound.
Suggested Reading on This Topic:
- Allen, Johnie & Anderson, Craig & Bushman, Brad. (2017). The General Aggression Model. Current Opinion in Psychology. 19. 10.1016/j.copsyc.2017.03.034.
- Ariel, Barak & Lawes, David & Weinborn, Cristobal & Henry, Ron & Chen, Kevin & Brants, Hagit. (2018). The “Less-Than-Lethal Weapons Effect”—Introducing TASERs to Routine Police Operations in England and Wales: A Randomized Controlled Trial. Criminal Justice and Behavior. 1-21. 10.1177/0093854818812918.
- Benjamin Jr, Arlin & Kepes, Sven & Bushman, Brad. (2018). Effects of Weapons on Aggressive Thoughts, Angry Feelings, Hostile Appraisals, and Aggressive Behavior: A Meta-Analytic Review of the Weapons Effect Literature. Personality and Social Psychology Review. 22. 347-377. 10.1177/1088868317725419.
- Berkowitz, L., & Lepage, A. (1967). Weapons as aggression-eliciting stimuli. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 7(2, Pt.1), 202–207.
- Demir, Mustafa & Apel, Robert & A. Braga, Anthony & K. Brunson, Rod & Ariel, Barak. (2018). Body Worn Cameras, Procedural Justice, and Police Legitimacy: A Controlled Experimental Evaluation of Traffic Stops. Justice Quarterly. 1-32. 10.1080/07418825.2018.1495751.
- President’s Task Force on 21st Century Policing. (2015). Final Report of the President’s Task Force on 21st Century Policing. Washington, DC: Office of Community Oriented Policing Services.
- Smith, Tom W. & Son, Jaesok. (2015). Trends in Gun Ownership in the United States, 1972-2014. General Social Survey Final Report. University of Chicago.
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How to fix American policing
The following is reprinted from an article on police violence in The Economist —
https://www.economist.com/united-states/2020/06/04/how-to-fix-american-policing
America is engulfed in its most widespread, sustained unrest since the late 1960s. It was sparked by an act of police brutality caught on camera. George Floyd, an African-American, allegedly used a counterfeit $20 at a convenience store on May 25th. Derek Chauvin, who has since been fired by the Minneapolis police force and charged with murder, handcuffed Mr Floyd, who, citing claustrophobia, refused to get into a police car. Mr Chauvin, who is white, shoved him to the ground and pressed his knee into Mr Floyd’s neck for almost nine minutes—nearly three of them after Mr Chauvin’s fellow officers failed to detect Mr Floyd’s pulse.
In the days since, Americans have seen their police forces look and act less like public servants sworn to protect their fellow citizens than like an invading army. A policeman in Brooklyn yanked off a protester’s mask to pepper-spray him in the face. One day earlier, also in New York, a police officer reportedly called a young protesting woman a “stupid fucking bitch”, before hurling her onto the pavement hard enough to leave her concussed, with a seizure. [read]A phalanx of police storming down a residential street in Minneapolis paused to shoot paint canisters at a woman on her own front porch. Police across America have tear-gassed peaceful protesters and, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists, there have been around 250 incidents of reporters being punched, attacked with tear-gas canisters and shot with pepper balls.
Such actions have helped fuel and further legitimise the unrest, in which at least 11 people have been killed, hundreds injured and nearly 10,000 arrested across America. In a widely read article published on June 1st, Barack Obama argued that the protests “represent a genuine and legitimate frustration over a decades-long failure to reform police practices”. He is right. But recognising that frustration is much easier than reforming the fiendishly complex institution of American policing.
One reason for that complexity is that, unlike policing in most European countries, American policing is mostly local. There are almost 18,000 law-enforcement agencies, most of them small, only 65 of them federal. All told, they employ around 800,000 officers. Chiefs appointed by mayors head most big-city departments. Elected sheriffs head most county forces.
Also unlike most police forces elsewhere, American police patrol a heavily armed country. That can make their job dangerous—between 2000 and 2014, 2,445 died on duty, compared with just 25 in Britain. But police also return fire, killing around 1,000 people each year. African-Americans are nearly three times likelier than whites to be killed by police. In fact, being killed by police is now the sixth-leading cause of death for young black men. African-Americans are likelier to be convicted, and serve longer sentences than whites convicted of the same crime; they comprise 13% of the adult population, but 33% of the imprisoned population.
Many have cited these disparities as evidence of systemic racism in American policing—and indeed, calls for reform often start with recognising and working to root out such bias. Not everyone is convinced. Robert O’Brien, President Donald Trump’s national security adviser, told cnn on May 31st that though “there are some bad cops that are racist” he did not think there was “systemic racism”. But systemic racism does not mean that all officers are racists or bad people; it means that the system operates in a racially biased manner regardless of individual motivations. Mr O’Brien is doubtless correct that not all officers are racists, but given the vast racial disparities across the criminal-justice system—for which police are the intake valve—his scepticism is difficult to justify.
Some argue that education can help root out officers’ implicit biases. But evidence that this works is mixed, not least because many react as Mr O’Brien did, by treating discussion of implicit bias as an attack on individual officers’ character. Phillip Atiba Goff, who heads the Centre for Policing Equity, a think-tank, puts his faith in data and in training.
Unfortunately, reliable data about policing and racial bias are hard to come by, as Mr Goff noted in a paper in 2012, co-written with Kimberly Barsamian Kahn, entitled “Racial Bias in Policing: Why We Know Less than We Should”. The problem is not just that data-collection practices vary widely among law-enforcement agencies. It is also that the data collected are rarely dispositive. As Mr Goff asked in that paper, “If Latinos are arrested at twice their representation in a given population, does that mean that there are too many or too few officers in their neighbourhoods? Similarly, if blacks are stopped at twice their representation in a given population, is that because they are committing more crimes (as those who face discrimination in employment, housing, health care, wealth accruement, and education might), or because the police are biased against them?”
In April the Audacious Project, which funds ambitious ideas, announced it would give Mr Goff’s institute $30m to expand its Compstat for Justice project (Compstat is a statistics-driven management programme used by many police departments), which will track police data, when and where police stopped people or used force, and overlay them with census and geospatial data. Mr Goff hopes to determine when and where changing police policies could improve outcomes.
As an example, he recalls working in Minneapolis, where he found that a disproportionate number of incidents in which police used force involved addicts or the mentally ill. “This doesn’t mean that police policies are targeting folks with serious mental illness,” he explains. Nor does it evince police animus. “To some degree,” Mr Goff says, “we know that it was 911 calls that targeted them, and [when those calls come in], law enforcement can’t say, ‘I think you’re racist; we’re not coming’.” Without better social services, police have to respond, and improving their training for dealing with the mentally ill should lead to fewer uses of force, resulting in fewer injuries and better relations between police and the communities they serve.
Another Camden afternoon
Some police forces have taken it upon themselves to improve community relations. Many police chiefs—and even more unusually, police unions, which tend not to criticise rank-and-file officers—condemned Mr Chauvin’s actions. In Flint, Michigan, and Camden, New Jersey, senior officers even joined the marchers. “Before Saturday,” when Camden’s march took place, said Joseph Wysocki, the city’s police chief, “I had never done the peace sign ever.” Now, he says, officers and residents flash the sign to each other.
Camden, a city of around 74,000 people just across the Delaware river from Pennsylvania, took an unusual approach to police reform. For years it was among America’s most violent cities, with the country’s fifth-highest murder rate in 2012, when 67 people were killed. The next year it disbanded its 141-year-old police department and reconstituted it as a county-wide force, hiring back most of the officers it had laid off, at lower salaries and with fewer benefits. But the new force expanded—it has over 400 officers, compared with 175 in 2011—and stressed community relations and training, particularly in how to calm a volatile situation without using force.
In some places de-escalation training, like implicit-bias training, has become a box to tick: take a one-day course, and suddenly an officer knows how to de-escalate, or overcome all implicit biases. But, Mr Wysocki stresses, “You constantly have to reinforce training.” His force has a detailed use-of-force policy to which officers are held. When an officer uses force, the watch commander reviews bodycam footage of the incident, as does the internal-affairs department, which briefs Mr Wysocki. The officer and a senior officer then review the footage together.
“When you hit play,” says Mr Wysocki, “their perspective changes. They see it. We slow down and critique what they’re doing.” That seems to work: in 2014 citizens lodged 65 excessive-force complaints. Last year they lodged three. As relations between the police and the community have improved, Camden has grown safer: in 2018 it had fewer than one-third of the murders it did in 2012. As a lawyer who helped a major-city force with its reforms explained, “A community that trusts police more, that’s a community more inclined to give information to police about crime, partner with police about quality-of-life problems, and help the police do what they need to do to keep things safe. Communities that don’t trust the police have lower homicide-clearance rates.”
Camden’s use-of-force policy notes that officers who violate it can face “disciplinary action, up to and including termination”. In much of America, however, police unions make firing or disciplining officers difficult. In Chicago, for instance, officers do not have to provide a statement to investigators until 24 hours after a shooting. Janee Harteau, a former police chief in Minneapolis, complained that the union and union-mandated arbitrators reinstated officers whom she wanted to fire.
Minneapolis’s union skirted a ban that Jacob Frey, the city’s mayor, imposed on “warrior-style training” for police officers. Many blame such training—along with the steady flow of military-style weapons from the Pentagon’s surplus-weapons giveaways—for fostering police militarisation. Among other goodies, the Pentagon’s programme gave the police department that serves Los Angeles’s public schools three grenade-launchers in 2014 (the district returned them, though it kept 61 rifles and a mine-resistant armoured vehicle). A paper by Jonathan Mummolo, a political scientist at Princeton, found that police militarisation fails to enhance public safety while also eroding public trust in the police.
That makes sense: military forces are designed to win wars, not trust. The army’s goals and those of the police differ. The army kills its enemies. Police are supposed to serve and protect Americans without violating their civil rights—and to face consequences for violating those rights.
Yet when it comes to killing, few officers face consequences. Prosecutors are reluctant to bring charges against police. To advance in their careers, they need to win convictions; to convict people, they need police to testify. Police will not help prosecutors who go after cops. A paper by Nicole Gonzalez Van Cleve, a sociologist at Brown University who studies prosecutor-police relations, and Somil Trivedi, a lawyer with the American Civil Liberties Union, describes “an elaborate culture where police created cases for prosecutors who in turn were expected to defer to officers as a professional courtesy.”
Ms Van Cleve noticed that as Mr Chauvin choked Mr Floyd, he “stared straight at the camera. He didn’t look anxious or nervous. He knows he’s being filmed and watched. You don’t do that unless you know that prosecutors aren’t going to charge you.” Under pressure, prosecutors did charge Mr Chauvin. But police officers are rarely convicted for killing someone.
Police also have functional immunity from civil actions, thanks to a doctrine known as “qualified immunity”. This lets public officials have lawsuits dismissed, provided their contact did not violate, as the Supreme Court explained, “clearly established statutory or constitutional rights.” Courts interpret “clearly established” with baffling vigour: an appellate court dismissed a suit against officers accused of stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash and rare coins while enforcing a search warrant, because “there was no clearly established law holding that officers violate the Fourth or 14th Amendment when they steal property seized pursuant to a warrant.”
Fielding firecrackers
With courts a narrow avenue for reform, some have started to advocate hitting law-enforcement agencies where it hurts: right in the budget. Advocates in at least 15 cities are waging campaigns to defund the police and use the money on other social services. Alex Vitale, a Brooklyn College professor and defunding advocate, says that people assume “the problem is that individual officers aren’t doing their jobs properly, when the problem really is that they have been asked to do too big a job.” Police have been asked to provide security in schools, respond to people’s mental-health crises and drug overdoses. “Policing is about use of force,” Mr Vitale explains. “It should be a last resort…We don’t want another community meeting with police. We want them out of our lives.”
Law and orders
Barry Friedman, who runs New York University’s Policing Project, has a simpler suggestion: clear legislation. Fewer than a third of states have passed use-of-force legislation. “Everywhere else in government, we legislate. We set out rules and policies. We don’t just leave it up to the regulated entity to set up their own rules.” In his view, state and city legislators, with public input, should pass laws to regulate police, not the police themselves. That will be a heavy lift: prosecutors and police unions will make life (meaning re-election) difficult for unfriendly politicians, while those who stand to benefit most—lower-income people who interact most often with police—are often politically disengaged.
Because most police agencies are local, regulating them is a local responsibility. But the federal government still has a role in police reform—or at least it did, in previous administrations. The Department of Justice (doj) can offer guidance and recommendations. Mr Obama’s administration invested heavily in police reform. In response to the killing of Michael Brown, an unarmed young black man, in Ferguson, Missouri, in 2014, Mr Obama created the President’s Task Force on 21st Century Policing, which produced an extensive set of recommendations on modernising police practices. He also boosted funding for Community Oriented Policing Services (cops), a doj programme to help improve police-community relations which Mr Trump has repeatedly tried to cut.
The federal government can investigate and prosecute departments for violating people’s constitutional rights. Such investigations can lead to consent decrees, which are agreements between the department and the doj intended to avoid protracted litigation. Both sides agree on reforms to police practices, which an independent federal monitor oversees. Mr Obama’s administration investigated 25 departments and enforced 14 consent decrees. Mr Trump’s administration has markedly curtailed such investigations.
Mr Trump and his attorney-general, William Barr, have made pro-forma acknowledgments of the legitimacy of the protests, but have been far more enthusiastic about, in Mr Barr’s words, “apprehending and charging the violent radical agitators.” Mr Trump has encouraged mayors and governors to use their police forces to “dominate” protesters. That may work in the short-term. But Times Square is not Tiananmen Square, and America cannot repress its way out of this problem. Legitimate grievances left unaddressed will fester. Americans took to the streets six years ago, after Michael Brown was killed. They should not have to return in another six.
This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition of The Economist under the headline “Order above the law”
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Safe Policing Commentary
BCS AND THE LONG VIEW ON POLICE REFORM
Brattleboro Common Sense is proposing a very simple, cost-free solution for police reform. But it is not a sudden new idea.
Last month Brattleboro Common Sense (BCS) petitioned for a public vote on the budget, in order to expand the debate on police defunding, but we were blocked by legal maneuvers of town government. It wasn’t the first time. [read]Brattleboro Common Sense began fighting to defund the police in 2012, by leading the opposition to an over-the-top expensive police station (the Police-Fire Project). The proponents of the new building received unlimited time for the expression of their views at representative town meeting. After the people voted to reject the budget in 2014, one town official actually proposed that the same budget be returned to the people without changes. At a budget review meeting the selectboard actually gained a ruling to censor any discussion of the expensive project, which was included in that budget. Such resistance is systemic. Nonetheless, we persisted. Our own mistakes allowed the police to move from downtown to their isolated bunker-like headquarters on Black Mountain Road, but three petition drives and a budget controversy finally saved the town $2.7 million.
Besides the defunding efforts BCS began the Safe Policing project in 2017 upon hearing of the killing of Michael Bell. Mr. Bell had been shot and killed, allegedly because an officer panicked when he thought that Bell had grabbed his pistol, while the pistol was only snagged on the mirror of the patrol car. The gun is an obvious part of the problem, protruding from the officer’s hip into peoples’lives. We thought it should be the focus of a solution.
Brattleboro Common Sense will offer to the selectboard and the new review committee the most simple, obvious and costless solution to prevent hasty and accidental shootings by police: a research-based proposal for weaponless policing. (We will use the term “weaponless” to mean “without fire-arms”.) We propose a new practice, based on foreign models where police do not regularly carry side-arms. We believe this model will fundamentally improve relations between officers and the public. Removing the gun is more than just a solution to the numerous and tragically-stupid horrors like Mr. Bell’s death. To disarm police will be transformative in policing and in our whole society. It will make possible new equality and trust with the people and prevent killings by other means. You may ask, how would this have helped George Floyd ? Mr. Floyd wasn’t killed with a gun. He was killed by a racist officer’s sense of impunity. This is the arrogant mental force that makes any weapon lethal, the mindset of the gun. Removing the gun forces the officer to look beyond that mindset, beyond his ability to take life in the process of protecting it, and see a world full of more than just threats. That mindset is a danger to black men and is impeding police reform here in Brattleboro and elsewhere.
When BCS workers Shela Linton and Kurt Daims met with Brattleboro Police Department (BPD) Chief Fitzgerald in October 2017, Linton pressured the chief to explain the need for fire-arms, and he insisted, “Everyone is a threat”. At an informal question-and-answer session on the Commons, the chief was invited to remove his pistol, but refused to do so. When asked why, he said, “It is part of my profession.” Apparently, without a gun, you’re not a real cop. This will be news to 120,000 police officers in England, and tens of thousands more in New Zealand and other countries who do not normally carry guns on patrol. The fact is, guns are part of policy; they are not essential to the profession. And another fact is, according to BPD, there are not enough violent line-of-duty injuries for the department to keep track of. Brattleboro is not a dangerous place for police. Seeing threats around him, the chief embodies a bunker mindset. He is eager to listen but unable to hear. Having engaged with the chief pleasantly since 2017, we regret that the time has come to rely on a different process. A new police review board is in order.
The gun also affects the way civilians see policemen. Research shows that the visual stimulus of the weapon raises the heart rate of the viewer; the implied threat of lethal force creates a subconscious response. To analyze violent interactions like official shootings psychologists use a theory called the General Aggression Model. This theory posits that aggression happens from real or perceived threats on each side amplifying each other until the situation escalates to physical aggression. This starts with the “Weapons Effect”: the visual stimulus of the weapon. It triggers anxiety that can be perceived by an officer as aggression. Without the weapon, this subliminal stimulus to escalate is removed.
BCS has studied examples of police who do not routinely carry firearms. The most instructive are in the England and New Zealand. In the case of England, a country which has never equipped its officers with firearms for routine patrols, we see policing in a place that is developed, densely-populated, culturally similar to the US, and has considerable gun ownership rates. The result is a country with low rates of officers killed on duty and of officer-involved shootings, high public trust, and a system of policing that is supported by its officers. Meanwhile, New Zealand has changed from arming all officers, to arming no officers, to arming some and keeping weapons in the patrol car for emergencies. This last model may be the best from our perspective, respecting the safety of officers and civilians in a place that is somewhat similar to Vermont, with a rural population and high rates of gun ownership, education, and public trust. Of course, the United States is different from these countries. However, Brattleboro is also different from Chicago. Must we police with the same practices they employ in Chicago? Frankly, we have more in common with New Zealand.
We propose a test program that fits easily with procedures that BPD already has in place: weaponless policing will be practiced during each officer’s usual one-hour weekly downtown patrol. As part of the review of the trial patrols our officers will consult with officers who have done weaponless patrols. BCS worker Heather Urquhart in Scotland has arranged for officers there to talk with us here. These officers are experienced with weaponless policing and eager to help. We have even been contacted directly by a UK constable who heard about the Safe Policing project from a friend. The response has been so favorable that we are considering arranging conversations for police elsewhere in the US, besides ours in Brattleboro.
We all get angrier with each black man dead at the hands of unaccountable police and more cynical at politicians calling for a national conversation. Brattleboro’s conversations have people treating police as enemies. But let’s be real here: they’re NOT ALLIES either: they’re a separate team, and they need help to come out of their bunkers and see things in a new light. Brattleboro is safe for them, and BCS has worked out a simple scientific plan for saving lives, and conversations between our police and other police who want to help. This plan will be easy to start while the selectboard works out the new police review procedures.
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