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This afternoon, just before the close of the 2007 session, state representatives and senators managed to usher through Senate Bill 111-C, which requires local governments to set up ways to plan for instances in which police officers use deadly force.
It sets up requirements for planning boards, and certain procedures following deadly use of force. But its most tangible—and therefore most controversial—requirement bit the dust in a last-minute compromise to get the bill through both houses.
SB 111 would have made public all transcripts from grand jury trials in officer-involved deaths; since grand juries are run by district attorneys, and since there hasn’t been a successful case against an officer in pretty much forever, there is widespread belief that the testimony and evidence given to grand juries is weighted in the officer’s favor. This is only the latest effort—and latest failure—to get those transcripts made public, in order for the community to gauge the fairness and accuracy of the trials.
In the case of James Chasse, or Fouad Kaady, or any other case in recent history in which someone’s encounter with law enforcement officers ends in that person’s death, police agencies are able to determine how much, if any, of the grand jury transcripts to release. Frequently, it’s zero—in the Chasse case, police chief Rosie Sizer allowed some of the documents to come out.
The effort to unveil the grand juries in cop cases has been going on for years, but is now dead in the water until at least 2009.
SB 111 was carried by Portlanders—Rep. Chip Shields, and Sens. Avel Gordly and Margaret Carter.
Yes, but I was allowing our astute readers to come to that obvious conclusion on their own.
Ah, you mean, "bludgeoning people with the truth" isn't always the best way to get it across?
It's still a positive step. The establishment of county-based review should IMO stop the on-again, off-again weak sister version in Portland, that never knew where it's funding was coming from or what its mandate truly was. This bill should codify and unify those things across the state.
I've certainly not been afraid to criticize the half-loaf bills that have come out this session, but in this case I think it's better than doing nothing. And they can try again next term when there could be 3-4 more Dem seats.
And if nothing else, it forces local governments to actually take in-custody deaths seriously. And, yes, this was a case where if they didn't compromise, they'd get nothing--except the ability to get "No" votes on record.
They're winners then. Blah.
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"In a last-minute compromise to get the bill through both houses."
So what you're saying is, the two houses passed the bill, but agreed to make it completely ineffective before doing so. What a bunch of fucking losers. LOSERS!
I feel bad for those who proposed the bill and have had to see it massacred by cowards.