Police Militarization



Download 10.57 Kb.
Date11.10.2016
Size10.57 Kb.
#80
Police Militarization

Your members of Congress need to hear that weapons of war shouldn't be used on Main Street. Urge your representative to cosponsor Rep. Johnson's Stop Militarizing Law Enforcement Act



Militarism Hits Home

The Stop Militarizing Law Enforcement Act is an important step to demilitarizing our streets. It would stop local police departments from getting weapons designed for war from the Pentagon.

The Ferguson Police Department received military-grade equipment -- free of charge -- from the Pentagon as part of the 1033 program. And they used the weapons and gear against protestors following the police shooting of Mike Brown, and unarmed 18-year-old.

Police officers are supposed to serve and protect their communities. But military equipment makes it too easy to think of their communities as enemies. In a criminal justice system where young black men are too often presumed guilty (see: stop and frisk, the War on Drugs, mass incarceration), that's just one more step towards a tragedy like this one.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Get the Military Off of Main Street

By ELIZABETH R. BEAVERS and MICHAEL SHANKAUG. 14, 2014

WASHINGTON — FERGUSON, Mo., has become a virtual war zone. In the wake of the shooting of an unarmed black teenager, Michael Brown, outsize armored vehicles have lined streets and tear gas has filled the air. Officers dressed in camouflage uniforms from Ferguson’s 53-person police force have pointed M-16s at the very citizens they are sworn to protect and serve.

The police response has shocked America. The escalating tension in this town of 21,200 people between a largely white police department and a majority African-American community is a central part of the crisis, but the militarization of the police is a dimension of the story that has national implications.

Ferguson’s police force got equipped this way thanks to the Pentagon, and it’s happening all over the country. The Department of Defense provides military-grade weapons and equipment to local law enforcement agencies through the 1033 program, enacted by Congress in 1997 to expand the practice of dispensing extra military gear. Due to the defense industry’s bloated contracts, there is a huge surplus. To date, the Pentagon has donated military equipment worth more than $4 billion to local law enforcement agencies. And the giving goes on, to police forces in all 50 states in the union.

Ferguson’s police department is just one recipient; small towns all over America are now the proud owners of “MRAP” armored vehicles. The largess has gotten so out of hand that a congressman, Hank C. Johnson, is introducing a bill to block the 1033 handouts.

Whereas the Department of Defense hands over weapons directly, the Department of Homeland Security provides funding for arms. It has distributed more than $34 billion through “terrorism grants,” enabling local police departments to acquire such absurd items as a surveillance drone and an Army tank.

For a police department like Ferguson’s, the path to becoming a paramilitary force is a short one. After loading up with free military gear, it is no surprise that law enforcement agents want to use it. In fact, the 1033 program’s regulations require that the police use what they receive within one year.

In the absence of extreme violence or actual terrorist threat, what happens — as the American Civil Liberties Union has documented — is that the equipment and weapons are used by SWAT teams in routine situations, such as low-level drug raids or the execution of search warrants. As Ferguson shows, this militarizing of routine police work exacerbates tensions and increases the likelihood of disorder. This, in turn, appears to justify a militarized police response, and so the cycle continues.

The federal government can stop this increased militarization at its source. The Pentagon must end its transfer of military-grade weapons through the 1033 program. And the Department of Homeland Security should stop handing out the terrorism grants. The ease with which police departments can avail themselves of Homeland Security funding for enormous caches of weapons and ammunition in the name of counterterrorism is deeply disconcerting.

Veteran police chiefs who have served on the front lines of America’s biggest police forces are voicing their concern. Norman H. Stamper, the former police chief of Seattle, has written with regret about the military-style tactics employed during the protests against the 1999 World Trade Organization conference in Seattle; he now advocates “an authentic partnership in policing the city,” involving rank-and-file officers, civilian employees and community representatives.

Militarizing our police officers does not have to be the first response to violence. Alternatives are available. Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr.’s statement Thursday highlighting resources like the Department of Justice’s Community Oriented Policing Services office is welcome. This is where the government should be investing — instead of grants for guns.

Police militarization is a growing national threat. If the federal government doesn’t act to stop it, the future of law enforcement everywhere will look a lot like Ferguson.

Send to:


Senators Ed Markey and Elizabeth Warren

Reps. Jim McGovern or Richard Neal
Directory: wp-content -> uploads -> 2015
2015 -> 2015 ihbb championships: hs history Bowl Round 4 – Prelims First Quarter
2015 -> Wrtp/big step · 3841 W. Wisconsin Ave., Milwaukee, wi 53208
2015 -> Rao bulletin 1 December 2015 html edition this bulletin contains the following articles
2015 -> Darton College
2015 -> Training Workshop on Planning and Implementation of Multi-Sectoral Development Programme (MsDP) in Bihar Date : 6th
2015 -> Rao bulletin 15 June 2015 html edition this bulletin contains the following articles
2015 -> Rao bulletin 1 September 2015 html edition this bulletin contains the following articles
2015 -> Rao bulletin 1 August 2015 html edition this bulletin contains the following articles
2015 -> Science, and transportation united states senate
2015 -> 2State of the Double Bayou Watershed

Download 10.57 Kb.

Share with your friends:




The database is protected by copyright ©ininet.org 2024
send message

    Main page