Bakersfield police face new rules after federal investigation
Saturday, April 9, 2005 at 02:25PM
TheSpook
A year after a U.S. Justice Department
investigation into alleged racial profiling and excessive force, the
Bakersfield Police Department is instituting sweeping policy changes
that limit, among other things, the circumstances in which an officer
can shoot at a moving vehicle. Though the investigation found no proof
of the allegations, the report has spurred a move in the police
department to better train its officers, said Bakersfield Police Chief
Bill Rector. Written guidelines on policies including shooting at
vehicles, deploying dogs and using pepper spray have recently been
given to all officers, according to a list of changes recently released
by the department. Supervisors are now required to report all uses of
force on separate forms, as well on standard police reports, Rector
said. The information is put into a database that allows police to
track patterns. The department would eventually like to make portions
of the information available to the public. The policy changes also
strengthen the guidelines regarding when officers can fire their guns
at moving vehicles. Such shootings can cause bullet ricochets that can
injure officers or bystanders, according to the Justice Department
report. Rector said officers must now be in an immediate threat
situation to fire at a moving vehicle. Officers also must not place
themselves in the path of a moving vehicle. [more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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