One Political Plaza - Home of politics
Home Active Topics Newest Pictures Search Login Register
Main
When Police K**l, Should They Investigate Themselves? Not In Wisconsin
Apr 25, 2014 21:46:09   #
bmac32 Loc: West Florida
 
Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker signed into law a bill this week that requires independent investigations into any cases where a suspect dies in police custody. The law appears to be the first of its kind in the Nation.

The new law disallows police departments to internally investigate fatalities of suspects in their custody, requiring a team of at least two investigators from outside agencies to lead investigations into such deaths.

One of the bill’s sponsors, State Representative Garey Bies (R- Sister Bay), is a former sheriff’s deputy who said he was troubled by a string of in-custody fatalities.

“I just saw a strong need to have some openness and some credibility, to assure the public that police are there to protect and serve and be upfront and honest with them,” Bies told the Milwaukie Journal Sentinel. “I believe the majority of police are, but when these things come up, it leaves a real question in your mind of what took place.”

The bill enjoyed bipartisan support from Wisconsin State lawmakers.

Chris Taylor, a Democratic State Representative from Madison, cosponsored the bill in hopes that States throughout the Nation will enact similar reforms.

“I think this hopefully will embolden other states that it can be done on a bipartisan basis with support from law enforcement and from the community,” Taylor said. “I’m proud that Wisconsin is the first state in the nation to have this outside investigatory process. It’s kind of unbelievable.”

As the law is set to take effect in the next two weeks detractors, namely police unions, remain.

“Police departments are uniquely suited to investigate incidents,” Jim Pasco, executive director of the National Fraternal Order of Police told The Wall Street Journal. He suggested thatinternal investigations, along with Federal oversight and the threat of civil lawsuits, provide ample t***sparency in the Nation’s police departments.

http://personalliberty.com/police-k**l-investigate-wisconsin/

Reply
Apr 26, 2014 20:34:07   #
vernon
 
bmac32 wrote:
Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker signed into law a bill this week that requires independent investigations into any cases where a suspect dies in police custody. The law appears to be the first of its kind in the Nation.

The new law disallows police departments to internally investigate fatalities of suspects in their custody, requiring a team of at least two investigators from outside agencies to lead investigations into such deaths.

One of the bill’s sponsors, State Representative Garey Bies (R- Sister Bay), is a former sheriff’s deputy who said he was troubled by a string of in-custody fatalities.

“I just saw a strong need to have some openness and some credibility, to assure the public that police are there to protect and serve and be upfront and honest with them,” Bies told the Milwaukie Journal Sentinel. “I believe the majority of police are, but when these things come up, it leaves a real question in your mind of what took place.”

The bill enjoyed bipartisan support from Wisconsin State lawmakers.

Chris Taylor, a Democratic State Representative from Madison, cosponsored the bill in hopes that States throughout the Nation will enact similar reforms.

“I think this hopefully will embolden other states that it can be done on a bipartisan basis with support from law enforcement and from the community,” Taylor said. “I’m proud that Wisconsin is the first state in the nation to have this outside investigatory process. It’s kind of unbelievable.”

As the law is set to take effect in the next two weeks detractors, namely police unions, remain.

“Police departments are uniquely suited to investigate incidents,” Jim Pasco, executive director of the National Fraternal Order of Police told The Wall Street Journal. He suggested thatinternal investigations, along with Federal oversight and the threat of civil lawsuits, provide ample t***sparency in the Nation’s police departments.

http://personalliberty.com/police-k**l-investigate-wisconsin/
Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker signed into law a ... (show quote)



i believe that this law is long overdue

Reply
Apr 26, 2014 20:36:18   #
ron vrooman Loc: Now OR, born NV
 
The police in Portland,OR do not investigate themselves


vernon wrote:
i believe that this law is long overdue

Reply
 
 
Apr 26, 2014 20:43:29   #
rumitoid
 
bmac32 wrote:
Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker signed into law a bill this week that requires independent investigations into any cases where a suspect dies in police custody. The law appears to be the first of its kind in the Nation.

The new law disallows police departments to internally investigate fatalities of suspects in their custody, requiring a team of at least two investigators from outside agencies to lead investigations into such deaths.

One of the bill’s sponsors, State Representative Garey Bies (R- Sister Bay), is a former sheriff’s deputy who said he was troubled by a string of in-custody fatalities.

“I just saw a strong need to have some openness and some credibility, to assure the public that police are there to protect and serve and be upfront and honest with them,” Bies told the Milwaukie Journal Sentinel. “I believe the majority of police are, but when these things come up, it leaves a real question in your mind of what took place.”

The bill enjoyed bipartisan support from Wisconsin State lawmakers.

Chris Taylor, a Democratic State Representative from Madison, cosponsored the bill in hopes that States throughout the Nation will enact similar reforms.

“I think this hopefully will embolden other states that it can be done on a bipartisan basis with support from law enforcement and from the community,” Taylor said. “I’m proud that Wisconsin is the first state in the nation to have this outside investigatory process. It’s kind of unbelievable.”

As the law is set to take effect in the next two weeks detractors, namely police unions, remain.

“Police departments are uniquely suited to investigate incidents,” Jim Pasco, executive director of the National Fraternal Order of Police told The Wall Street Journal. He suggested that internal investigations, along with Federal oversight and the threat of civil lawsuits, provide ample t***sparency in the Nation’s police departments.

http://personalliberty.com/police-k**l-investigate-wisconsin/
Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker signed into law a ... (show quote)


When a senator commits a crime, should his staff investigate? Or his party? Just like the outrage in the Armed Services with so many rapes being buried by Commanding Officers and retribution taken against victims to keep them quiet. Which is not to say that such review boards will be necessarily impartial or that if the police are allowed to investigate they will cover it up out of self-interest, but independent oversight is, in an imperfect world, preferred to letting those with the most to lose the authority to judge.

Reply
Apr 27, 2014 00:14:03   #
bmac32 Loc: West Florida
 
The rape being buried bothers me but in 7 years, 9 months 10 days of in service I never heard of one so I keep asking myself, why? Are the standards lowered or are men that aggressive today?



rumitoid wrote:
When a senator commits a crime, should his staff investigate? Or his party? Just like the outrage in the Armed Services with so many rapes being buried by Commanding Officers and retribution taken against victims to keep them quiet. Which is not to say that such review boards will be necessarily impartial or that if the police are allowed to investigate they will cover it up out of self-interest, but independent oversight is, in an imperfect world, preferred to letting those with the most to lose the authority to judge.
When a senator commits a crime, should his staff i... (show quote)

Reply
Apr 27, 2014 00:59:32   #
rumitoid
 
bmac32 wrote:
The rape being buried bothers me but in 7 years, 9 months 10 days of in service I never heard of one so I keep asking myself, why? Are the standards lowered or are men that aggressive today?


Simplypout, yes!

Reply
Apr 27, 2014 09:50:38   #
bmac32 Loc: West Florida
 
Which, lowered standards or aggressive?



rumitoid wrote:
Simplypout, yes!

Reply
If you want to reply, then register here. Registration is free and your account is created instantly, so you can post right away.
Main
OnePoliticalPlaza.com - Forum
Copyright 2012-2024 IDF International Technologies, Inc.