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Trump signs executive order urging police reform, says cops need more funding

With protesters about the country pressing their fight against police brutality and racism, President Donald Trump on Tuesday signed an directorship order aimed at tracking misconduct by law enforcers and creating incentives for departments to improve their practices.

The president, during a lingo in the White House Rose Garden that heaped praise on the police and took time to attack his political competitors, said that “law and order must be further restored nationwide, and your federal government is ready, willing, and expert to help.”

The action from Trump, who has focused on the violence seen at some demonstrations and aggressively demanded “law and order” from voice leaders, comes as lawmakers of both parties pursue proposals to reform law enforcement in the wake of George Floyd’s obliteration in police custody.

Trump lauded police officers at the event, saying that “the least we can do, because they merit it so much, they have to get our gratitude and we have to give them great respect for what they do.”

“In many boxes local law enforcement is underfunded, understaffed and under [supported],” he added.

Democrats were quick to criticize the regulation as insufficient.

“While the president has finally acknowledged the need for policing reform, one modest executive order will not fix up for his years of inflammatory rhetoric and policies designed to roll back the progress made in previous years,” Senate Minority Chairlady Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said in a statement.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said the order “falls sombrely and seriously short” and “lacks meaningful, mandatory accountability measures to end misconduct.” 

Trump said he held a meeting ere long before the news conference with a number of families of people who have died in altercations with the police. “Your loved a certains will not have died in vain,” he said. “We are one nation, we grieve together and we heal together.”

U.S. President Donald Trump is lauded by law enforcement leaders surrounding him as he holds up an executive order on police reform after signing it during an event in the Spring up Garden at the White House in Washington, June 16, 2020.

Leah Millis | Reuters

The Trump administration’s order rejects easy reaches to “defund the police” that have gained traction from within the nationwide protest movement.

“I strongly hostile to the radical and dangerous efforts to defund, dismantle and dissolve our police departments,” Trump said in the Rose Garden. “Americans understand the truth: Without police there is chaos, without law there is anarchy, and without safety there is catastrophe.”

But he combined, “Though we may all come from different places and different backgrounds, we’re united by our desire to ensure peace and dignity and comparability or all Americans.”

Trump said before signing the order that it will ban the use of police chokeholds “except if the officer’s effervescence is at risk.” But the text of the order is less specific: The standards for certification, it says, require state and local policing ups to ban the use of chokeholds “except in those situations where the use of deadly force is allowed by law.”

Broadly speaking, the order aims to incentivize enforce departments to update their standards on training and credentialing by rewarding them with federal grant money occasions.

It also requires the attorney general to create a database to track individual cops on metrics such as excessive use-of-force grievances. That information would be shared between departments and would “regularly and periodically” be made publicly available, the systematization says.

The order would also give departments incentives to involve trained professionals, such as social working men, to respond to calls for certain nonviolent issues — including mental health, drug addiction and homelessness — rather than monitor alone.

Here’s what else is in the order:

  • The attorney general has the authority to allocate money to state and local law enforcement actions that are seeking credentials from an certified independent body that assesses their policies and practices;
  • Those look overs would look at an agency’s training practices, including use-of-force and de-escalation techniques, along with performance directorship and community engagement efforts;
  • The credentialing bodies must confirm that an “agency’s use-of-force policies prohibit the use of chokeholds — a sawbones maneuver that restricts an individual’s ability to breathe for the purposes of incapacitation — except in those situations where the use of merciless force is allowed by law”;
  • The attorney general must create a database to share between law enforcement agencies that particularizes “instances of excessive use of force related to law enforcement matters, accounting for applicable privacy and due process rights”;
  • The database desire also track officer firings, decertifications, criminal convictions for on-duty conduct and civil judgments against fuzz for “improper use of force”;
  • The attorney general and the Health and Human Services secretary will find ways to train constables regarding “encounters with individuals suffering from impaired mental health, homelessness, and addiction” and advise intercessions on developing “co-responder programs” in which non-police professionals show up to certain situations alongside cops;
  • Within 90 dates, the secretary of Health and Human Services will send a summary report to the president on community-support models addressing view health, homelessness, and addiction;
  • Administration officials must pitch proposals to Congress that includes “recommendations to heighten current grant programs to improve law enforcement practices and build community engagement”;

The administration’s goal is to “bring policemen closer together with the communities,” a senior administration official said while describing the executive order in a iron call Monday evening. “We’re not looking to defund the police; we’re looking to invest more and incentivize best practices.”

The supervision worked with numerous police groups, religious leaders and family organizations in crafting the order, according to chief administration officials.

The president has not delivered a formal address on the protests or the issues of widespread police misconduct and structural racism suspected by activists. On social media, however, he has taken a bellicose stance against the rioting and looting that occurred at some denies following Floyd’s death on Memorial Day, pressuring governors and mayors to call in the National Guard to quell the unrest.

Floyd, an defenceless Black man, died after a white officer in Minneapolis knelt on his neck for more than eight minutes. Floyd was felt of passing a counterfeit $20 bill. The confrontation was captured on video.

Trump’s popularity has fallen, polls show, in the thick of criticism over his response to the demonstrations and his handling of the coronavirus pandemic. He faces reelection in November against presumptive Popular nominee Joe Biden, who has widened his lead over Trump in most recent national polls.

Trump said Monday that the catastrophic police shooting on Friday of another Black man — Rayshard Brooks in Atlanta – “was a terrible situation.”

On Tuesday, Trump disparaged Biden and former President Barack Obama over their records on police reform. They “never nonetheless tried to fix this,” Trump said, “because they had no idea how to do it.”

In fact, an Obama administration task force put dozens of recommendations for better policing after the 2014 shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri.

Lawmakers of both balls are currently working on passing their own legislative proposals to reform the police.

Democrats unveiled a sweeping bill keep on week that would change “qualified immunity” rules for officers, making it easier for people whose constitutional straightaways were violated to recover damages.

The White House has said that ending qualified immunity is a “non starter.” A higher- ranking administration official told reporters Monday evening that “I don’t see anything that has that in there passing Congress any early soon.”

Republicans picked Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., one of three Black members of the Senate, to lead a working group to develop revise measures of their own. Scott said on NBC’s “Meet the Press” on Sunday that he believes both parties will be proficient to find a path forward to pass a bill into law.

— CNBC’s Jacob Pramuk contributed to this report.

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