Acosta, Batista introduce police reform legislation
Bill mandates body cameras statewide, creates duty to report and intervene, bans chokeholds

 

STATE HOUSE – Sen. Jonathon Acosta and Rep. José F. Batista have introduced legislation to significantly reform current police practices and prevent misconduct.

The bill, the Rishod K. Gore Justice in Policing Act of 2021 (2021-S 0597, 2021-H 5993), would pave the way for critical reforms such instituting a statewide mandate for police body cameras, requiring that police intervene in and report severe misconduct by fellow officers, and opening the door to personal liability for police officers who engage in willful misconduct.

The bill is named for the young man at the center of a recent incident in Providence resulting in the March 18 assault conviction of a Providence police officer. 

“The case involving Mr. Rishod Gore is a perfect case study for everything that is wrong with our criminal justice system in 2021. This bill aims to usher in once-in-a-generation reform to our policing practices, while providing to Mr. Gore the opportunity to reclaim the narrative and turn this horrific event into a positive for the community,” said Representative Batista (D-Dist. 12, Providence).

Senator Acosta and Representative Batista note that the Rishod Gore case, the death of George Floyd at the hands of police in Minneapolis last year, and the countless other well-documented cases of violent police misconduct in America clearly illustrate the urgency of the need for reform and more functional oversight of police.

“We need to put the ‘public’ back in ‘public oversight.’ Our tax dollars and the employees they fund should be transparent. Public dollars for public body cams should produce publicly accessible footage,” said Senator Acosta (D-Dist. 16, Central Falls, Pawtucket).

In addition to requiring police officers around the state to use body or dash cameras, the Rishod K. Gore Justice in Policing Act:

·         Allows for the public release of resulting video footage

·         Requires departments to discipline officers found to have used excessive force

·         Puts some limits of the types of force police can use against protests and demonstrations

·         Allows civil action against police who commit rights violations, or who fail to intervene when they witness other police doing so, and eliminates qualified immunity for such violations

·         Requires police to try nonviolent means before force, and places limits on the use of force, like forbidding lethal force to apprehend those suspected of nonviolent or minor offenses

·         Bans chokeholds and makes it a felony for officers to use chokeholds, kick suspects in the head, or drive a car as a weapon toward a suspect

·         Requires police to intervene and report when other officers commit violations

·         Allows the attorney general to file civil action if they suspect police or other public officials are engaging in practices to deprive persons of rights.

 

Senator Acosta and Representative Batista, who represent Central Falls/Pawtucket and South Providence, respectively, said punitive parole and drug laws, as well as harsh policing tactics, are among the systematic problems that prevent poor people and poor neighborhoods from escaping poverty.

“Arrest and joblessness are cyclical, locking families and whole neighborhoods into generational poverty. We have to stop accepting this as something we can’t fix. We can fix this, but it requires the difficult work of acknowledging how and why our systems produce the results they do and reforming those systems from the bottom up,” said Representative Batista.

 

 

-30-

For an electronic version of this and all press releases published by the Legislative Press and Public Information Bureau, please visit our website at www.rilegislature.gov/pressrelease. 

 

 Follow us on social media! 

 

Seven U.S. soldiers were reportedly hurt in the recent attack on Venezuela. A Pentagon official told "MS Now" this morning that seven soldiers were injured in the operation to capture Nicolás Maduro and his wife, and that five of the seven have already recovered from their injuries. Venezuelan officials claim that over 70 people were killed in the raid.        The White House is not ruling out military force in its desire to control Greenland. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said Tuesday that gaining control of the Danish territory is a national security priority for the U.S., and that the administration is discussing several options for acquiring it, including the military.        The Pentagon says it will execute a review of women in ground combat roles. The review announced Tuesday is meant to determine their effectiveness 10 years after the Defense Department lifted restrictions against women from serving in combat. Thousands of women serve in the U.S. military.        A Tennessee college professor is being reinstated after he was fired for a social media post he made following the death of Charlie Kirk. After Kirk's death last September, the associate professor posted a headline quoting Charlie Kirk saying gun deaths in the U.S. were worth it to keep the 2nd Amendment. The teacher was fired for posting the headline.        The head of the world's largest chipmaker is calling robots "A.I. immigrants" who could solve a worldwide labor shortage. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang spoke Tuesday in Las Vegas, and said robots will create jobs by doing work on the manufacturing floor that humans don't want to do anymore, because "when the economy grows, we hire more people."        Pope Leo closed out the Catholic Church's Holy Year Tuesday with a call for Christians to treat foreigners with kindness. The Holy Year, or Jubilee, usually happens every 25 years and is looked on as a time of peace and forgiveness.