-
Consent decrees force cities to change abusive police tactics. But Cleveland still has work to do.
-
Mayor Justin Bibb says officials are working as "quickly" as possible to end the seven-year-old decree signed after a federal investigation found a pattern of excessive force by officers; Ohio's schools are struggling to fill teaching positions as more people are quitting the profession due to high college costs and being targeted by extremist politicians ... and more stories.
-
Cleveland City Council's Safety Committee held the proposal after raising several concerns about non-municipal police departments in the city.
-
White says it's a good time for him to leave the job as "fresh eyes" are needed.
-
The amendment shifts control of police discipline and policies into civilian hands.
-
As assistant monitor, he will help audit and assess consent decree compliance.
-
In the wake of the forced departure of Ayesha Bell Hardaway from the Cleveland Police Monitoring team—the outside agency that examines Cleveland’s progress under the federal consent decree—two prominent Black organizations are calling for the monitor himself to be replaced.
-
Here are your morning headlines for Monday, June 22:Funeral Set for Na’kia Crawford, 2 Suspects Still at LargeCourt-ordered team to review Cleveland…
-
The monitor overseeing Cleveland’s police reform agreement says the city is at a “critical turning point,” and now must put new policies into practice. The city, the monitoring team and the Justice Department provided an update on the consent decree to U.S. District Judge Solomon Oliver on Tuesday afternoon. “This is the point at which paper must be transformed into sustained, ongoing practice,” Monitor Matthew Barge wrote in his team’s latest semiannual report. He added that the city “still has a distance to travel” until it fully complies with the consent decree.
-
Cleveland police officers in neighborhood districts will spend 20 percent of their time engaging with the community under a new plan submitted for a federal judge’s approval this week. That requirement is just one element of the city’s new community policing plan. The monitor of the city’s consent decree asked Judge Solomon Oliver on Thursday to sign off on the proposal, along with plans for recruitment and neighborhood policing committees.