10 Police Misconduct - March 28, 2022 10 Police Misconduct - March 28, 2022
Allegations of police misconduct are referred to attorneys general most often because of a perceived conflict because the district attorneys work with closely local police officers who always witnesses on other pending cases. Attorneys general also have a broader perspective and are therefore able to develop develop expertise in handling police cases and create statewide uniform standards. Further, from the perspective of public confidence, it is often best to have the prosecutor be from outside any local district.
The issue of who will investigate allegations of police misconduct is not new. Indeed many attorneys general have handled these cases for many years, but for other states it is new. While there are disagreements on this policy, the national trend is to expand the role of attorneys general in dealing with allegations over the use of excessive force by police officers.
10.1. Role of the Ga. AG in the Arbery Prosecution, Heather Cox Richardson, "Letters from an American," November 26, 2021
This article tracks the role of Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr in the Arbery prosecution:
Heather Cox Richardson, "Letters from an American," November 26, 2021
See also:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8PQrf7dy8To
https://www.11alive.com/article/news/regional/ahmaud-arbery-district-attorneys-department-of-justice/85-b49303f7-8e0b-4ba3-be25-f1b52136f603
https://www.cnbc.com/2021/09/02/former-georgia-da-jackie-johnson-indicted-over-ahmaud-arbery-investigation.html
https://www.insider.com/georgia-ag-chris-carr-ahmaud-arbery-shooting-video-sickened-2020-5
10.2. What you need to know about the cost of police misconduct - The Washington Post - March 10, 2022
Police Misconduct is expensive!
10.3. Exec. Summary of the Ohio Supreme Court Report ("Police Lethal Use of Force," Report and Recommendations of the Task Force to Examine Improvements to the Ohio Grand Jury System, PP 5-9
A key recommendation of the Ohio Supreme Court in its 2016 report on reviewing the use of lethal force by police was to move the investigation and possible prosecution away from District Attorneys and to the Office of Ohio Attorney General. While there has been no action on this recommendation in Ohio, the Court states the case for removing such cases from local prosecutors.
July 2016
Links:
- Original:https://static1.squarespace.com/static/577e9d93b3db2b9290cd7005/t/5ed5c75284ccba3548207132/1591068502177/ohio-grandjury-taskforce-report-2016-excerpt-policeuseofforce.pdf
- Archival: https://perma.cc/Q25R-SLKX
The Ohio Supreme Court Report ("Police Lethal Use of Force," Report and Recommendations of the Task Force to Examine Improvements to the Ohio Grand Jury System, The Supreme Court of Ohio, July 2016
10.4. "Some want outside prosecution of police. Others say that’s a mistake," Dayton Daily News, Cornelius Frolick, Aug. 22, 2020
Links:
10.5. MN county attorneys: State AG office should handle police deadly force cases, MPR News, June 5, 2020
10.6. A Special Unit to Prosecute Police Killings Has No Convictions, Feb. 26, 2021, The New York Times
Links:
10.7. Illinois attorney general makes the case for licensing police officers; AG Kwame Raoul also complained that getting the Chicago Police Department to comply with the terms of a federal consent decree has been, at times, “like pulling teeth.” Chicago Sun-Times, June 24, 2020
Links:
10.8. NJ attorney general releases names of disciplined police officers, Aug 11, 2021
10.9. Pa. Attorney General Shapiro announces launch of police misconduct database, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, July 14, 2021
10.10. W.Va. Attorney General reacts to proposed police review board, WBOY.com, March 5, 2021
10.11. Letter of W. VA AG re: Proposed Community Police Review Advisory Board, March 4, 2021
Links:
10.12. Chicago Police Consent Decree - 2016 - Supplemental
Links:
- Original: http://chicagopoliceconsentdecree.org/faq/
- Archival: https://perma.cc/3G96-DT9C