Cleveland, US Justice Department announce police settlement

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CLEVELAND (AP) — Cleveland agreed to overhaul its police department under the supervision of a federal
monitor in a settlement announced Tuesday with the U.S. Department of Justice over a pattern of
excessive force and other abuses by officers.

The announcement comes three days after a white patrolman was acquitted of voluntary manslaughter charges
in the shooting deaths of two unarmed black suspects in a 137-shot barrage of police gunfire following a
high-speed chase. The case helped prompt an 18-month investigation by the Justice Department.
In a report released in December, the department required the city to work with community leaders and
other officials to devise a plan to reform the police department. A judge must approve the plan, and an
independent monitor will oversee it.
The settlement calls for new use-of-force guidelines, a focus on community engagement, accountability
reforms, training on bias-free policing and a mental health advisory committee.
"As we move forward, it is my strong belief that as other cities across this country address and
look at their police issues in their communities, they will be able to say, ‘Let’s look at Cleveland
because Cleveland has done it right,’" Mayor Frank Jackson said Tuesday.
The worst examples of excessive force in the Justice Department report involved patrol officers who
endangered lives by shooting at suspects and cars, hit people over the head with guns and used stun guns
on handcuffed suspects.
The agency said supervisors encouraged some of the bad behavior and often did little to investigate it.
Some told the Justice Department that they often wrote their reports to make an officer look as good as
possible, the federal agency said. The department found that only six officers had been suspended for
improper use of force over a three-year period.
Two other high-profile police-involved deaths still hang over the city: that of Tamir Rice, a 12-year-old
black boy who was carrying a pellet gun at a playground when he was fatally shot by a white rookie
patrolman Nov. 22, 2014, and that of 37-year-old Tanisha Anderson, a mentally ill woman who died of
positional asphyxiation after officers took her to the ground and handcuffed her Nov. 12, 2014.
The investigation was the second time in recent years the Justice Department has taken the Cleveland
police to task over the use of force. But unlike in 2004, when the agency left it up to local police to
clean up their act, federal authorities intervened this time by way of a consent decree. Several other
police departments in the country now operate under federal consent decrees that involve independent
oversight.
The Justice Department has launched broad investigations into the practices of more than 20 police forces
in the last five years, including agencies in Ferguson, Missouri, and, most recently, in Baltimore.
Then-U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said in December that the Justice Department has intervened in 15
police departments in the country, including eight that are working under court-ordered consent
agreements, including Seattle and New Orleans.
Community members sent petitions and recommendations for police reforms to city leaders after the Justice
Department’s report. Requests included reopening police mini-stations at community centers, establishing
a citizen-police panel on crisis interventions and creating an online system to make police data and
procedures available to the public.
Saturday’s bench verdict on the manslaughter charge against Patrolman Michael Brelo led to a day of
mostly peaceful protests but also more than 70 arrests. Dozens of church parishioners also protested the
acquittal in a march through downtown Tuesday afternoon as officials announced the settlement between
the Justice Department and the city.
Cleveland has paid a total of $3 million to the families of the victims in the 2012 shooting, Timothy
Russell and Malissa Williams, to settle a federal civil rights lawsuit.
A less-publicized incident that caught the DOJ’s attention involved an allegation that police officers
beat a mentally ill man Jan. 1, 2011. Edward Henderson received numerous injuries after a chase in
Cleveland, and blurry footage from a helicopter appeared to show officers kicking Henderson as he lay on
the ground.
Despite an FBI investigation and a grand jury probe, no charges were brought against the four officers
because all the officers on the scene that night refused to say how Henderson received his injuries.
Henderson was sentenced to three years in prison for assaulting a police officer. The city of Cleveland
paid Henderson $600,000 in a lawsuit settlement.

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