Public Review
of the Worcester Police
The
rebellions in Ferguson MO regarding the killing of Michael Brown by the police
have been the cause of some talk about a civilian review board for the police
in Worcester. A civilian review board is good public policy as all public agencies
need an effective periodic review of its work. Police misconduct is an indication of the
effectiveness of Worcester policing and law enforcement. There is today no real
review of the Worcester Police Department’s work, whether that work is useful,
ineffectual, or bad failure. There are no meaningful statistics collected or
kept and what information is kept is not available to the public. Who can say if there is racial profiling or
other type of bad policing?
The City
Manager in theory reviews the work of the police department, but as we know
from the past such reviews by the Manager are just rubber stamping of what the
police Chief provides to the Manager. The Manager is supposed to be the “civilian
review” of the police. He objectively is not.
We in the
public are not able to have an objective opinion of the work or failings of the
Worcester Police, as we just don’t have enough information or transparency. I
went to a Worcester Human Rights Commission meeting recently and the good
people there were reviewing a quarterly report of complaints brought against
the Worcester Police. The report was cryptic, part of it being in code. The
code was for the type of complaint. The Commissioners had a hard time with the
report. Even if they could have figured it out; the Worcester Human Rights
Commission could not release their findings without the permission of the
Manager. To be effective a review of the police should be independent and free of
conflicts of interests; the City Manager is certainly conflicted about anything
negative about his administration.
Before going
further I need to make full disclosures: I have been arrested four times, I
have worked on the Justice for Cristino Hernandez Committee, I have relatives
who are police officers, and I know that many cops are good people. I have an
open mind on the issues.
In Worcester
public review of the police will take a form that might be different from anything
else. Certainly it would be different than the Civilian Review Board found in
Cambridge MA. Worcester once had that type of review board which was a part of
the Worcester Human Rights Commission. It had the power to investigate
complaints against the City of Worcester. In 1980s the Police Department rammed
through a charter change that prevented the Worcester Human Rights Commission
from investigating any complaints against the City. It cannot even issue any
report of any type without the approval of the City Manager.
The review
of the police in Worcester will likely take the form of a nongovernmental
agency that takes complaints against the police, helps complainants with their
cases, and issues reports. To some extent these needs were performed by the
Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts, when Ron Madnick was executive director.
It still does work in this area, recently winning a case against the City in
Federal Court. Chris Robarge and the attorney Beverly Chorbajian were
significant protagonists for the plaintiffs, but that is a story for another
day.
Hopefully
the talk of a public review of the police precipitated by the rebellions in
Ferguson MO will result in the good public policy of civilian review of the
police in Worcester MA, a rational outcome of the repeating story of Ferguson
MO.
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