Yes, this is an inspiring model.

Chris 

 

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On 
Behalf Of Centroids
Sent: Tuesday, June 16, 2020 9:02 AM
To: Centroids Discussions <[email protected]>
Subject: [RC] Camden: The City That Remade Its Police Department

 

Thanks Lennart! Not a panacea, but still inspiring.

The City That Remade Its Police Department
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-06-04/how-camden-new-jersey-reformed-its-police-department
(via Instapaper <http://www.instapaper.com/> )

  _____  

  <https://assets.bwbx.io/images/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/i5JEEH6QwNWM/v2/100x-1.jpg> 

Capt. Zsakhiem James joining a group of Camden residents who came together to 
honor George Floyd and protest his death.

Courtesy: Camden County PD

Courtesy: Camden County PD

Across the U.S., protesters have taken to the streets to express rage after the 
killing of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer, Derek Chauvin. The 
demonstrations themselves have led to more police shows of force. In Brooklyn, 
two cops rammed their New York City Police Department SUVs into a crowd of 
protesters. In Philadelphia, officers sprayed tear gas at demonstrators who 
were penned in between a highway and a fence.

But across the Delaware River from Philadelphia in Camden, N.J. (population 
74,000), officers left the riot gear at home and brought an ice cream truck to 
a march on May 30. The police department’s chief, Joseph Wysocki, who is white, 
brandished a “Standing in Solidarity” poster alongside residents holding “Black 
Lives Matter” signs.

  <https://assets.bwbx.io/images/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/icFfyFShctmM/v1/60x-1.jpg> 

Chief Wysocki standing with Camden residents to remember and honor George Floyd 
on May 30.

Courtesy: Camden County PD

That Camden was able to demonstrate peacefully without escalation looked like a 
sign of progress in a city that’s one of the country’s poorest and was once 
considered its most dangerous. “What we’re experiencing today in Camden is the 
result of many years of deposits in the relationship bank account,” says Scott 
Thomson, Camden’s chief of police until 2019. He led the city’s high-profile 
pivot to community policing from 2013 until last year and oversaw what turned 
out to be a steep decline in crime. Homicides in Camden reached 67 in 2012; the 
figure for 2019 was 25. Over the past seven years, the department has 
undertaken some of the most far-reaching police reforms in the country, and its 
approach has been praised by former President Barack Obama.

The transformation began after the 2012 homicide spike. The department wanted 
to put more officers on patrol but couldn’t afford to hire more, partly because 
of generous union contracts. So in 2013, the mayor and city council dissolved 
the local PD and signed an agreement for the county to provide shared services. 
The new county force is double the size of the old one, and officers almost 
exclusively patrol the city. (They were initially nonunion but have since 
unionized.) Increasing the head count was a trust-building tactic, says 
Thomson, who served as chief throughout the transition: Daily, noncrisis 
interactions between residents and cops went up. Police also got de-escalation 
training and body cameras, and more cameras and devices to detect gunfire were 
installed around the city.

While many departments define “reasonable” force in the line of duty vaguely, 
Camden’s definition is much clearer. The department adopted an 18-page 
use-of-force policy 
<https://www.nj.com/camden/2019/08/camden-police-launch-strict-last-resort-use-of-force-policy-chief-wants-it-to-be-national-model.html>
  in 2019, developed with New York University’s Policing Project. The rules 
emphasize that de-escalation has to come first. Deadly force—such as a 
chokehold or firing a gun—can only be used in certain situations, once every 
other tactic has been exhausted. “It requires that force is not only reasonable 
and necessary, but that it’s proportionate,” says Farhang Heydari, executive 
director of the Policing Project. Most important, “they’re requirements. 
They’re not suggestions.”

An officer who sees a colleague violating the edict must intervene; the 
department can fire any officer it finds acted out of line. By the department’s 
account, reports of excessive force complaints in Camden have dropped 95% since 
2014.

Like most matters of policing, however, Camden’s success story isn’t that 
simple. Members of the police force are now more likely to live in the suburbs 
than in the city of Camden, according to the local NAACP chapter. “Ninety 
percent of Camden’s population is minority—we have a lot of young individuals 
who don’t look like us that are getting these jobs,” says Kevin Barfield, the 
chapter president.

The higher number of officers on the streets was uncomfortable at first, says 
Nyeema Watson, Rutgers University at Camden’s associate chancellor for civic 
engagement, who helped connect the new department to local youth in its early 
days. “You felt that this eye was on you. It took me some time to adjust to 
having [police] cars stationed on major thoroughfares,” she says. “That still 
raises the hair on my neck sometimes, but I know their approach is an attempt 
to say ‘We’re here, we’re visible.’ ”

In a 2015 report, the American Civil Liberties Union praised Camden for its 
reforms but noted a “significant increase in low-level arrests and summonses.” 
The department says it’s mindful of overpursuing petty offenses. “We know when 
we police a city that has 30% of the residents under the poverty line, a $400 
speeding ticket or ticket in general would be absolutely devastating 
financially,” says Dan Keashen, a spokesman for the Camden County Police 
Department.

Community organizer Ayinde Merrill and other activists are pushing to create a 
civilian review board for cases in which force is used. Merrill says the May 30 
march felt co-opted by police and city leaders: “We didn’t feel as though the 
police were truly standing with us. If you’re truly standing with us, come and 
march with us in plain clothes.”

As some activists call for cities to defund the police, Camden’s reforms are 
more incremental in nature. “I think the challenge is that you have 18,000 
police departments” in the U.S., says Thomson. “It’s an industry that generally 
is averse to any type of change. The only time change comes is when it’s 
compelled.”

  _____  

 

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