Senators Introduce Legislation Calling For Mandatory Data Collection On Police-Involved Shootings

from the because-'if-you-feel-like-it'-just-isn't-working dept

If you're looking for the number of citizens killed by police officers, don't ask the government. It just doesn't know. The DOJ is nominally in charge of compiling this information, but it has not made anything resembling an honest effort to do so.

To begin with, it has mostly ignored the federal law ordering the compilation of stats on excessive force by law enforcement officers. And it has ignored this for the last 20 years. To make things worse, it has turned over the duty of collecting data on police-involved shootings to the FBI, which has even less interest in ensuring the comprehensiveness of its "collection."

"Collection" has smart quotes nailed to it because the FBI made this a purely voluntary collection. Law enforcement agencies are invited to send in in-custody death data -- which is then verified by no one. The only thing agencies have to gain from self-reporting deaths at the hands of its officers are transparency, accountability and potentially better relationships with the people they serve. Those "gains" rarely align with law enforcement interests.

Available data is limited even further by only including citizens who were shot during the commission of a felony. Slimming it down even more is its limitation to "justifiable homicides." Everything else is simply ignored.

So, it's left to the public sector to compile this data. One of the most comprehensive databases of police-involved killings is being compiled by The Guardian with the assistance of forerunners in the (unofficial) field like Fatal Encounters and Killed By Police. Other databases are being crowd-sourced or compiled by hand by truly devoted individuals. But the government has shown no interest in compiling this information as a public service.

To that end, two senators (Cory Booker and Barbara Boxer) have introduced legislation calling for the creation and maintenance of a mandatory police-related killings database.

Senators Barbara Boxer of California and Cory Booker of New Jersey proposed legislation that would demand all states submit reports to the US Department of Justice that they said would bring “transparency and accountability to law enforcement agencies nationwide”.

“Too many members of the public and police officers are being killed, and we don’t have reliable statistics to track these tragic incidents,” Boxer said in a statement. “This bill will ensure that we know the full extent of the problem so we can save lives on all sides.”
Note the bone being thrown to law enforcement agencies, who are only too happy to compile statistics that show how "dangerous" their work is. Yes, a bill prompted by a Washington Post article on police-involved killings is preemptively calming the nerves of those who may potentially be forced to hand over information on deaths at the hands of their officers.

All well and good, but we've already put two agencies in charge of collecting this data and neither have made more than a minimal effort to do so. Making it mandatory is a huge leap forward, but pushing resistant agencies into coughing up unflattering data will take more than a well-intentioned piece of legislation. It needs to stop obliging those who have withheld this data over the years and instead provide for serious consequences if law enforcement agencies fail to meet the requirements of the law.

If previous efforts along these same lines are any indication, simply demanding agencies comply doesn't seem to have resulted in increased compliance.
In December, Congress reauthorized an act requiring that states report to the Justice Department instances where civilians are killed by police.

“Non-fatal shooting or use of force data is not captured” under the existing legislation, the release said.
So, six months after that "reauthorization" and there's been no appreciable change in reporting. At this point, anyone but the government is doing a better job capturing this data. Leading the charge from within may eventually force needed change, but a couple of decades of minimal reporting says otherwise.

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Filed Under: barbara boxer, cory booker, data, doj, fbi, police shootings


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  • icon
    cypherspace (profile), 8 Jun 2015 @ 3:53am

    "Mandatory Data Collection"

    We all know how much our government likes to collect data on the population, so this shouldn't be too hard right?

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 8 Jun 2015 @ 4:47am

      Re: "Mandatory Data Collection"

      Well, I guess this is one way to defeat bulk data collection long-term...

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    me, 8 Jun 2015 @ 4:20am

    when you factor in corruption and police unions...?

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    That One Guy (profile), 8 Jun 2015 @ 4:51am

    "It wasn't a request"

    If they want the police to actually care about the law, then there needs to be real penalties in place for failing to do so. First thing that comes to mind is to cut off, completely, any police agency who doesn't comply from federal funding or federal programs like the 'A tank for every precinct' ones.

    Hit 'em were it hurts, the wallet, and watch how fast they start caring(or more likely start whining about how unfairly they're being treated).

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      Ninja (profile), 8 Jun 2015 @ 5:20am

      Re: "It wasn't a request"

      That's what I was thinking. You need to impose real, crippling penalties to the agencies, public servants and politicians that don't follow the laws or the corruption and the crimes committed by those in position of power will keep happening.

      I'm still waiting for the imprisonment of Clapper for lying to the Congress under oath (among other violations like Panetta and torturers).

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • identicon
        Anonymous Coward, 8 Jun 2015 @ 7:56am

        Re: Re: "It wasn't a request"

        "I'm still waiting for the imprisonment of Clapper for lying to the Congress"

        HAHAHAHAHAHA!!! ROFLOL!!! You want our government to be accountable for their misdeeds? I'm still waiting for Obama to be punished for engaging in secretive 'trade agreements' with industry interests that are intended to serve the private interests of a few corporations at the expense of the public (not to say Bush and others aren't just as guilty of jailable offenses). What about the MPAA's ties to the attorney general, that should deserve jail time if there really are ties. Will the government closely examine that case for misconduct and potentially impose real punishments? Dream on!!!! What planet did you come from.

        It's all about the high court vs low court treatments. It's perfectly OK for government and industry interests to scam millions of Americans out of a democracy so long as those industry interests pay for those politicians and regulators but for an ordinary citizen to question a police officer? How dare you!!!

        link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 8 Jun 2015 @ 5:00am

    So if a non-police officer shoots someone the government is all over tracking it, even to the point of wanting the CDC to investigate gun violence as a social disease yet when law enforcement officers shoot someone... Eh, no biggie?

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    avideogameplayer, 8 Jun 2015 @ 5:18am

    It really doesn't matter, it's not like the public is gonna see any of this data...

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Jim, 8 Jun 2015 @ 5:34am

    ?

    To the one commenter above. What does the union have to do with it, more like historically, union busting. By not doing the right thing. If the moderator will forgive this, "you kochsuckers" always dumbing the history, killed families of miners looking for safety in mines, killed families of autoworkers, looking for safety in manufacturing, and have gotten away with murders of others, just for grins. Look up some things like the Pullman strike, the Colorado miners strike, and tell me how is it right and christian to kill? Just so you don't have to make something safer? Just for a dollar, or it makes a product that now is available for the masses. Or freed the masses. Guilds and unions don't endanger profits, slavish greed does.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 8 Jun 2015 @ 9:49am

      Re: ?

      I am not the original commenter, but I do not believe OC was against all Unions. You are correct that historically unions were a much needed improvement in the US because working conditions before them were deplorable, but I don't think that fact is in question. That topic is a red herring at best in this conversation.

      When the OC mentions the 'police unions', they probably are talking about just those unions who have over the last couple of years stood as obstructions to any meaningful oversight, penalties, or reform being sought against LEOs.

      Body cameras? They objected unless they were used ONLY for proving the cop was right (and even then just objected in general... too technical, invasion of privacy, yada yada..).

      Harsher penalties for corruption, abuse of power, or negligence? Sorry guys, the police unions won't allow any rules that will make their members have to change their behavior get through.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    That Anonymous Coward (profile), 8 Jun 2015 @ 5:36am

    While they were working on setting up the database they could have asked where the money earmarked for the earlier blown off reporting was. Perhaps it is time for them to actually clean house, rather than waste more money on setting up "lone-wolf terrorists" to take down and justify their budgets.

    The system is broken, and while a database sounds nice - given the total lack of care previously - it won't make a difference. It will become a boondoggle blackhole for cash & "fixes" and maybe in 15 years someone might raise a question about why officer deaths are so low for such a "dangerous" job and citizen deaths keep growing as the paramilitary keeps executing people who they didn't have time to deal with.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Anonymous Coward, 8 Jun 2015 @ 5:55am

    Make Investigation of All Use of Force Mandatory

    If they want a bill that makes sense, as least for the people, then the FBI should be investigating each and every use of force indecent in each and every police force (including military) and prison (privately owned or not) and maybe for security guards as well.

    They should use the 'terrorism task force' as there appears to be plenty of them and they really have little else to do.

    The report should done monthly with FBI funding dropping each and every month there is no report, or the report is a day late, automatic, no decisions or excuses necessary or allowed. The report should include notice of incidents, progress on investigations, and statistics on prosecutions and for which crime prosecuted.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 8 Jun 2015 @ 7:12am

      Re: Make Investigation of All Use of Force Mandatory

      If they want a bill that makes sense, as least for the people, then the FBI should be investigating each and every use of force

      Two issues
      1) The local FBI often work closely with the local police forces.
      2) Who investigates when an FBI agent kills someone.

      A general solution is for a police force from a different state to investigate to investigate all police and federal law enforcement caused deaths in a state.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • identicon
        Anonymous Anonymous Coward, 8 Jun 2015 @ 7:21am

        Re: Re: Make Investigation of All Use of Force Mandatory

        Five things.

        1. If they use the terrorism task force they would probably not be local FBI agents.

        2. The DOJ could investigate FBI uses of force.

        3. Cops from a different state have the same incentive to cover up as local cops do.

        4. I recommended investigating all uses of force, not just deaths.

        5. Those private databases mentioned in the article could be used as a cross-reference to insure completeness, along with all the Cell-Phone videos showing up all over the place.

        link to this | view in chronology ]

      • identicon
        Anonymous Coward, 8 Jun 2015 @ 8:02am

        Re: Re: Make Investigation of All Use of Force Mandatory

        The thing is if police forces from different states were auditing each other what might end up happening is one police force may easily give another police agency a pass in exchange for the other police agency giving them a pass when they get audited. What you have is a 'web of trust' where police agencies simply give other police agencies a pass in exchange for receiving a pass and the police agency that doesn't give passes is less likely to receive them. In a sense that's why you need 'independent' auditors.

        link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 8 Jun 2015 @ 6:35am

    It's not just shootings

    Freddie Gray was brutally beaten to death by six pigs in Baltimore and at no point was a gun involved. Other people have been tortured, threatened, beaten, gassed (using weaponry that's forbidden by international law) and almost none of this documented. Last week, Baltimore police charged a police protestor with "assaulting a police officer" after (a month ago) they maced him, grabbed his hair, body-slammed him to the ground, dragged him across the pavement, etc.

    Police LIE.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 8 Jun 2015 @ 7:34am

    There will always be a place for non-governmental organizations tracking use of force, as police organizations have a strong incentive to report as little as possible to avoid looking bad and/or having their tactics dictated by people on the other side of the thin blue line. A cool thing about the Internet is that it allows such a database via crowdsourcing that, while incomplete, provides an important counterpoint to the "official" numbers.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 8 Jun 2015 @ 7:40am

    Typo -> "Public sector"

    So, it's left to the public sector to compile this data.


    The FBI, DOJ, and police departments are part of public sector. The public sector is defined as any enterprise paid for by public funds (e.g. taxes). If the public sector were compiling the data, it would mean that people were doing their jobs.

    I'm not sure if you meant the "private sector" (like the Guardian), or just "the public" (though from context, I'm leaning towards the latter). Either of those would be more accurate than "public sector."

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 8 Jun 2015 @ 7:58am

    Can't wait to hear about how the police all of the sudden wants "privacy" and "strong encryption".

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Uriel-238 (profile), 8 Jun 2015 @ 9:51am

    It was my belief that reporting of homicides by law enforcement was already mandated

    And that they've only been reporting justified homicides, leaving out unjustified ones with impunity.

    So, unless they're implementing some kind of punitive measure, I expect that our law enforcement agencies are going to continue to report only what they want to report.

    Considering the treatment of the Michael Brown homicide, in which it wasn't even filled out until over a day later as an afterthought, it's a systemic problem. We'd have to reform the entire US police system down to the retraining every officer.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 8 Jun 2015 @ 11:16am

    and this bill will get 'arrested' in double quick time!

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Justme, 8 Jun 2015 @ 11:33am

    Honestly. . .

    1. Any time an officer fires their weapon reporting should be required and all evidence related to any investigation submitted for a mandatory federal review process.

    2. Federal funding should be withheld for any agency not in compliance.

    3. Federal funding should be withheld from all agencies in any state that has 5% or more non-compliance.

    4 Withholding or submitting false information in a report should be a federal felony, resulting in charges against the reporting agencies senior officer, the people responsible for compiling the report, and any person shown to be involved in that falsification.


    Law Enforcement should be held to a high standard and considering their assertion that they can collect all your data, to the point they know anytime you so much as take a piss, It's in no way unreasonable to require reporting any time they deploy potential fatal force!

    They have thrown out the constitution, reason, and compliance with the law in the name of protecting us from terrorists. Now let's put a little effort in closer to home!

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      RealityBites, 9 Jun 2015 @ 9:03am

      Since they feel entitled to all data they also should be held accountable!

      Since they have all the data any un-solved crime is their fault 100%. If a crime is unsolved for more than 10 days they should be charged with dereliction of duty and have their pension cut, then their wages cut, then put them in jail.

      Time for some responsibility and accountability.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 8 Jun 2015 @ 12:51pm

    Let's see, the US has around 1,000 police related shooting deaths every year. In comparison most other first world countries average less than 1 police shooting a year.

    This is a pretty big disconnect going on here and I hate to say it but US police have proven beyond a shadow of a doubt that they cannot handle being armed with a deadly weapon.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 8 Jun 2015 @ 2:11pm

    Police to begin freaking out about this and how it "makes them less safe" in 3...2...1.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    RealityBites, 9 Jun 2015 @ 8:59am

    Psycho's Protect Fellow Psycho's

    Can't expect feral animals to keep an eye on each other, its not in their nature. Oversight is only effective if it is enforced with a iron spiked mace, the penalties for a cop or public agency should be 10 times that which a civilian faces.

    Can't keep feral animals under control without a big whip.

    link to this | view in chronology ]


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