again what is sad is this piece was written in august of last year. it documents the abandonment of reforms embraced and instituted by the DOJ under the previous presidency. i think the quote at the end of the following article sums up the frustrations of many concerning meaningful policing and judicial reforms that have not come about since Ferguson.
“I can’t say things have gotten better,” Blake Strode, executive director of ArchCity Defenders, a legal advocacy organization that has fought ticketing practices,
told the
Times. “I understand the status quo to be one of structural racism, poverty, overinvestment in the carceral system, and policing and prosecution. That is as real today in 2019 as it was five years ago in 2014.”
https://eji.org/news/five-years-after-ferguson-policing-reform-abandoned/
A Federal Retreat from Reform
After police in Ferguson met protestors with tanks and other military-grade equipment, the Obama administration convened the
President’s Task Force on 21st Century Policing and, unveiling its recommendations in March 2015, President Obama called on the nation to seize the opportunity “to really transform how we think about community-law-enforcement relations so that everybody feels safer and our law enforcement officers feel, rather than being embattled, feel fully supported.”
The Justice Department’s civil rights division embarked on an unprecedented police reform campaign using investigations and consent decrees with police departments in Baltimore, Chicago, and Ferguson alongside a voluntary Collaborative Reform program that enrolled 16 police departments across the country.
The Trump administration has abandoned those efforts,
halting new investigations and fighting to block or limit existing consent decrees. In September 2017, hours after a white police officer was
acquitted in the shooting death of a black man in St. Louis, the Justice Department announced that then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions had
eliminated the Collaborative Reform program.
And
just before he left office, Sessions issued a
memorandum to make it more difficult for DOJ to enter into consent decrees with state and city governments, mandating closer control by the department’s most senior political appointees, requiring expiration dates for consent decrees, and limiting what the department can require of state and local agencies.
About a third of the staff assigned to investigate police practices at the Civil Rights Division’s Special Litigation Section (which numbered 29 people at its peak) have departed since Trump’s election,
HuffPost reports. The Trump administration has shrunk the unit and there are no plans to replace employees who have left.