Under New Bill, States Would Report Police-Triggered Deaths To Attorney General
By Chuck Raasch, St. Louis Post-Dispatch (TNS)
WASHINGTON Spurred by the Ferguson shooting and other recent cases of deadly encounters involving police, Congress in its final hours of work for the year passed legislation requiring states to report deaths of people arrested or detained by police to the attorney general.
The measure requires states that receive federal aid for crime control, law enforcement assistance and other programs to report on a quarterly basis the death of anyone in police custody. It imposes penalties for states that dont comply. It also requires the Justice Department to use the information to come up with proposals to reduce the number of such deaths.
Sen. Richard Durbin (D-IL) referred to a Wall Street Journal story last week that concluded it was virtually impossible to come up with the number of people who died in police custody. The Journal report said it identified at least 550 deaths among 105 of the nations top police agencies from 2007-2012 that were not reported in the FBI database, and that there is wide disparity between several federal agencies that try to keep track of such deaths.
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The House passed the measure last year but the Senate did not take it up until late Wednesday, when it was passed through a unanimous consent agreement. It now heads to President Barack Obama for his signature.
http://www.nationalmemo.com/new-bill-states-report-police-triggered-deaths-attorney-general/