Baltimore City Council
File #: 16-0318R    Version: 0 Name: United States Department of Justice Consent Decree with the City of Baltimore Regarding the Baltimore Police Department
Type: City Council Resolution Status: Adopted
File created: 10/20/2016 In control: City Council
On agenda: Final action: 10/20/2016
Enactment #:
Title: United States Department of Justice Consent Decree with the City of Baltimore Regarding the Baltimore Police Department For the purpose of calling on the Department of Justice to include certain provisions in its Consent Decree with the City of Baltimore to ensure that the agreement includes the best thoughts and suggestions from all in Baltimore.
Sponsors: Brandon M. Scott, Sharon Green Middleton, Eric T. Costello, Robert Curran, James B. Kraft, Nick Mosby, President Young, Helen L. Holton, Bill Henry, Mary Pat Clarke
Indexes: Baltimore City Police Department, Consent Decree, Department of Justice, U.S.A
Attachments: 1. 16-0318R~1st Reader


Introduced by: Councilmember Scott


A Resolution Entitled

A Council Resolution concerning
title
United States Department of Justice Consent Decree with the City of Baltimore Regarding the Baltimore Police Department
For the purpose of calling on the Department of Justice to include certain provisions in its Consent Decree with the City of Baltimore to ensure that the agreement includes the best thoughts and suggestions from all in Baltimore.
body

Recitals

Baltimore City’s Police Department has been criticized for decades about extreme deficiencies in how it operates in Baltimore. While thoroughly discussed, this was never truly documented until the release of the recent Department of Justice Pattern and Practice report on the Baltimore Police Department. Racial bias, civil rights violations, gender bias, policy deficiencies, and lack of community policing are just a few areas highlighted in the report.

In order to have a Consent Decree that will represent the needs of the entire City of Baltimore, and truly set a frame for rebuilding the relationship between the Baltimore Police Department and the community, the following must be included:

(1) increased civilian oversight;

(2) a release of the names of officers mentioned in report;

(3) increased Police Department transparency;

(4) community policing;

(5) training and policy reform;

(6) officer support investments; and

(7) technology investments.

These 7 items represent many of the most critical areas in need of repair. A failure to address each of these needed reforms will hinder any progress in repairing the relationship between the Baltimore Police Department and Baltimore’s c...

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