The Church of Scientology opposes President Trump on the issue of police reform

ISNOINews

Independent Scientology and Nation of Islam news
The Church of Scientology opposes President Trump on the issue of police reform.

On June 21, 2020, President Trump tweeted:



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The Democrat House wants to pass a Bill this week that will destroy our police. Republican Congressmen & Congresswomen will hopefully fight hard to defeat it. We must protect and cherish our police, they keep us safe!

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President Trump is referring to H.R. 7120, The George Floyd Justice in Policing Act of 2020.

The Church of Scientology not only supports The George Floyd Justice in Policing Act of 2020, but on June 18, 2020 the Church of Scientology National Affairs Office joined a letter urging Congress to strengthen the Act. (The full text of the letter is both set forth at the end of this story and attached thereto.)

Significantly, and contrary to the wishes of President Trump, the Church of Scientology urges Congress to strengthen the Act by:

(1l) abolishing qualified immunity;

(2) creating a federal cause of action against federal law enforcement officials to recover damages, also without qualifief immunity;

(3) making the changes in (1) and (2) above retroactive;

(4) making it clear that the existing pattern or practice statute (34 U.S.C. Section 12601) covers the actions of prosecutors and juvenile courts;

(5) adding a new section of the criminal statute, Section 242(A), which would specifically criminalize the reckless use of excessive force and all intentional use of excessive force;

(6) eliminating the1033 program, which currently provides for the transfer of military equipment through the Department of Defense to police departments, sheriff departments and other local law enforcement agencies; and

(7) banning not only no-knock warrants in all drug cases, but also all no-knock and quick-knock raids.

In short, the position taken by the Church of Scientology is diametrically opposed to the position of President Trump on all of these issues.


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FULL TEXT OF LETTER

Church of Scientology National Affairs Office joins letter urging Congress to strengthen The George Floyd Justice in Policing Act of 2020 (JPA), H.R. 7120.

Coalition Letter on H.R. 7120 “George Floyd Justice in Policing Act” - The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights

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Coalition Letter on H.R. 7120 “George Floyd Justice in Policing Act”

JUSTICE REFORM RESOURCES 06.18,20

View this letter as a PDF here.

June 18, 2020

Coalition Letter on H.R. 7120 “George Floyd Justice in Policing Act”

Dear Representatives,

On behalf of The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights (The Leadership Conference), a coalition charged by its diverse membership of more than 220 national organizations to promote and protect civil and human rights in the United States, and the 81 undersigned organizations, we write to urge you to strengthen The George Floyd Justice in Policing Act of 2020 (JPA). The JPA takes important steps forward in achieving meaningful police accountability, however, we believe we can, and must, rise to this moment and put forth the strongest bill possible by improving upon key areas within the bill.

On June 1, 2020, The Leadership Conference sent Congress a letter outlining accountability principles that must be adopted to address rampant, systemic, white supremacy in policing across America.[1] In less than 12 hours, more than 450 of this country’s most diverse civil rights, civil liberties and racial justice organizations signed on to that letter because what was asked of Congress aligned with what advocates, policing experts, and other stakeholders agree is needed. The priorities are not only reasonable but reflect a bare minimum of what must be in the JPA for systemic police reform to occur.

These priorities are: (1) the creation of a use of force standard that allows force when necessary and as a last resort; (2) a ban on chokeholds; (3) a ban on racial profiling; (4) the establishment of a police misconduct registry; (5) the inclusion of a “reckless” standard in 18 U.S.C. Section 242 that enables federal prosecutors to hold law enforcement accountable for criminal civil rights violations; (6) a prohibition on no-knock warrants, especially in drug cases; (7) the elimination of the judge-made doctrine of qualified immunity, which allows officers and other government actors to evade accountability when they violate individuals’ civil rights; and (8) the demilitarization of law enforcement agencies.[2]

Upon introduction of the JPA, The Leadership Conference and many partner organizations applauded the bill’s important provisions, particularly those sections that allow the use of deadly force only as a last resort, ban chokeholds, prohibit racial and religious profiling, and make it easier to hold police accountable for misconduct.[3] And while many of the provisions in the JPA are vital and responsive to the priorities called for by our coalition, they must be perfected to ensure that the intent behind the reforms is fully realized. There are a number of critical adjustments that should be made to the JPA in order to strengthen it and ensure the comprehensive police transparency and accountability that it intends.

Accountability: Qualified Immunity, Bivens, Pattern or Practice & Color of Law Prosecutions

Qualified immunity is a judge-made doctrine that provides police officers and other government actors with a defense when they have committed constitutional violations, including brutal acts of violence. This doctrine renders it nearly impossible to hold government officials accountable, leaving those who have experienced violence and misconduct by state actors with no recourse or prospect for recovering damages. The current JPA language would codify this doctrine by adopting flawed Supreme Court precedent and limiting it to a subset of state actors. No government actor should be able to deny a person of their civil rights and civil liberties with impunity, which is why qualified immunity must be abolished.

Additionally, the language in the JPA does not go far enough to address federal level accountability. While the Supreme Court has recognized that there are circumstances in which the U.S. Constitution authorizes victims of federal law enforcement officials to recover damages, federal courts have significantly curtailed the availability of these so-called “Bivens” claims in recent years.[4] The JPA does not create a federal cause of action, but merely removes qualified immunity for federal law enforcement in the Bivens context the Supreme Court currently recognizes. Congress must enact Bivens causes of action while completely eliminating the qualified immunity defense.

These changes must also apply retroactively, given the various cases before courts across this nation dealing with qualified immunity, Bivens, and accountability for federal law enforcement officials. Moreover, this week, the Supreme Court chose not to take up several qualified immunity cases, suggesting that the Court might not be likely to change the doctrine any time soon.[5] Therefore, it is all the more imperative for Congress to act, as the Court will not. that the JPA needs to abolish qualified immunity for all government actors so that individuals have access to a neutral judge who may vindicate their civil and constitutional rights.

Further, we ask that the JPA make clear that the existing pattern or practice statute (34 U.S. C. Section 12601) covers the actions of prosecutors and juvenile courts. In addition, in the authority given to states attorneys general, we would appreciate an explicit authorization of the use of grants for the creation of a special pattern and practice office that independently investigates potential abuses.

Finally, with respect to holding law enforcement officers criminally accountable for violating a person’s civil rights, we recommend adding a new section of the statute, Section 242(A), which specifically criminalizes the reckless use of excessive force and the intentional use of excessive force. These changes would address many of the current barriers to securing a conviction under 18 U.S.C. Section 242 that have prevented accountability and securing justice for victims, while preserving existing authority under Section 242.

Transparency: Police Misconduct Registry and Robust Data Collection

Police transparency and data accessibility are vital for progress to occur in our society. We welcome sections of the JPA that are responsive to our coalition’s call for increased data collection and reporting, ending racial profiling, and the establishment of a national registry of all federal, state, and local law enforcement officials.[6] We welcome the mandatory reporting provisions that would require law enforcement agencies to submit data to the U.S. Attorney General, including information about officer certifications, to remain eligible for Byrne grant funds.

However, to ensure public transparency, we also request that the JPA bill not obstruct public access to relevant records in the registry. The JPA bill currently contains a privacy provision, Section 201(e)(2) that may restrict public disclosure of important information in the police registry. For years, people of this nation have faced tremendous obstacles in accessing police records, which are critical for public oversight. The public interest in ensuring police transparency and accountability far outweighs the privacy concerns of police officers in their role as public servants. The public has a right to know when and which law enforcement officers have engaged in practices that are harmful to communities.

Furthermore, while we are pleased with the inclusion of misconduct records related to use of force and racial profiling, the bill does not include the collection of other pertinent information related to sexual assault, domestic violence, harassment, violence toward a minor, perjury, tampering with or destroying evidence, bias or other civil rights violations and other misconduct. These omissions limit the ability of the public and law enforcement executives to measure the extent of the officer misconduct.

Finally, the bill needs strong enforcement mechanisms to end racial profiling and must also strengthen data collection and publication on all police enforcement activities, including demographic information. Law enforcement should be required to report the legal justifications for investigatory activities; reporting requirements must mandate quarterly reporting cycles; all data should be publicly reported and subjected to the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA); and the data collection demonstration project section 333 of the bill is duplicative and thus should be eliminated.

Demilitarization: 1033 Program and No-Knock & Quick-Knock Warrants

The militarization of policing in America, and the rise of the warrior cop mentality against Black and other marginalized communities, is made possible in part through the federal government’s transfer of weapons and vehicles of war to state and local police.[7] Data has shown that the increased transfer of equipment through the Department of Defense 1033 program increases the number of police killings in communities,[8] particularly in the context of SWAT drug raids.[9]

While the JPA takes a good first step in limiting the transfer of military equipment, the bill keeps intact the 1033 program, which has been notoriously mismanaged through the years.[10] Our coalition calls for complete elimination of all surplus, military grade weapons and equipment to federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies.[11] As for non-military equipment, such as desks and other office equipment, we call on Congress to transfer those items through a new agency and program that makes this equipment available to community organizations and state and local institutions beyond law enforcement.

Moreover, while a complete end to all no-knock warrants in all drug cases is also a welcome first step, Congress can and should go further to ban quick-knock raids, which carry the same risks involved in the execution of no-knock warrants.[12] Militarized police responses to drug investigations, where either a no-knock warrant or quick-knock raid is executed, are disproportionately used against people of color and lead to loss of life.[13] The JPA must disallow these practices from continuing.

Funding: Additional Federal Dollars

As it currently stands, the JPA provides hundreds of millions of additional federal dollars to state and local law enforcement agencies, including prosecutors’ offices, without significant guardrails in place to ensure those resources are used in the manner in which they are intended. Providing more dollars to the criminal-legal system expressly contradicts what our coalition has reasonably requested – to condition existing federal dollars received by states on the adoption of the critical policies outlined in the bill.[14] The bill also allocates new resources to the Department of Justice to study and implement best practices in training and accreditation, among other things. These resources could be better spent supporting community-led solutions to reimagining public safety. The nearly $1 billion allocated in the JPA continues to pour federal money into systems that may not reflect community demands, when millions of people in the United States are calling for direct investments into communities during this critical moment. All funding amounts outlined in the bill should be removed and recaptured in a new general appropriations authorization provision, allowing stakeholders to work with Congress to determine through the appropriations process where money is most needed to increase accountability and transparency in policing.

Additionally, provisions in the bill allowing for grant funds to develop uniform standards on school safety — including with respect to use of lethal and nonlethal force — raise concerns about reinforcing the role of law enforcement in schools through the use of school resource officers. The coalition has previously taken the position in its Civil Rights Principles for Safe, Healthy, and Inclusive School Climates that school-based law enforcement should be eliminated and instead resources should be used to support students through evidence-based programs that are proven to create positive and safe school climates.[15] We urge Congress to ensure that relevant provisions of JPA are consistent with these principles.

Finally, the bill allocates grant dollars for body worn cameras, without restrictions to prevent them from contributing to our already bloated surveillance infrastructure. Specifically, the bill does not fully prohibit use of biometric and facial surveillance on footage obtained from these cameras. This omission is particularly striking, given that many jurisdictions already prohibit such actions and that a multitude of private companies, including Amazon, IBM, Microsoft, and Google, halted sales of face recognition to the police due to concerns that it can exacerbate existing police abuses.[16]

Conclusion

A vast and diverse collection of people, from coast to coast, and from streets across our nation, are calling on lawmakers to prioritize Black communities. It is time to change our laws to make “Black Lives Matter” more than a slogan. Congress has begun the process of heeding those calls with the historic introduction of The George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, but we can, and should go, further. We urge Congress to include the policy changes our coalition offers in order to perfect this bill and rectify the systemic racism that has taken the lives of countless Black and Brown people.

Ultimately, however, we must note that while the JPA takes important steps to address police violence and accountability, these changes will only take us so far. Congress must also reexamine federal spending priorities and shrink the footprint of the police and criminal legal system in this country. This means shifting billions of federal, taxpayer dollars away from criminalization, including policing, toward rebuilding communities of color, especially Black communities, which have been historically underfunded, under resourced and decimated by systemic racism.[17]

Thank you for your leadership in advancing these important policy recommendations. We look forward to continuing to work with members of this body as the legislation moves through Congress. If you have any questions or concerns follow-up, please contact Sakira Cook of The Leadership Conference at [email protected] or Kanya Bennett of the ACLU at [email protected].

Sincerely,

The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights

American Civil Liberties Union

ActionAid USA

Agroecology Research-Action Collective

Alabama Rivers Alliance

Alabama State Association of Cooperatives

Alianza Nacional de Campesinas

American Atheists

Amnesty International USA

Asian Americans Advancing Justice | AAJC

Autistic Self Advocacy Network

Autistic Women and Nonbinary Network

Bend the Arc: Jewish Action

Beyond Rosies

Black Farmers & Ranchers New Mexico

Bread for the World

Center for Disability Rights

Center for the Study of Hate & Extremism, California State University, San Bernardino

Church of Scientology National Affairs Office

Coalition to Stop Gun Violence

Concerned Citizens of Tillery

Congregation of Our Lady of Charity of Good Shepherd, U.S. Provinces

Constitutional Accountability Center

Defending Rights & Dissent

Demand Progress

Drug Policy Alliance

Farmworker Association of Florida

Friends Committee on National Legislation

Government Information Watch

Health in Justice Action Lab, Northeastern University School of Law

Human Rights Campaign

Human Rights for Kids

Innocence Project

Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy

Interfaith Action for Human Rights

Iowa Citizens for Community Improvement

Jewish Council for Public Affairs

The Justice Roundtable

Justice for Women Covid-19 Task Force

Kansas Black Farmers Association

King Bishop’s Entertainment LLC

Lambda Legal

Land Stewardship Project

League of Women Voters of the United States

March For Our Lives

Muslim Advocates

NAACP

National Advocacy Center of the Sisters of the Good Shepherd

National Coalition Against Domestic Violence

National Council of Churches

National Employment Law Project

National Hmong American Farmers

National Immigrant Farming Initiative, Inc.

National Latino Farmers and Ranchers Trade Association

National Organization for Women

National Urban League

NETWORK Lobby for Catholic Social Justice

Newtown Action Alliance

North Carolina Association of Black Lawyers Land Loss Prevention Project

Oklahoma Black Historical Research Project, Inc.

Open Society Policy Center

Operation Spring Plant, Inc.

OVEC-Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition

Pennsylvania Council of Churches

Release Aging People in Prison/RAPP

Results for America

Rural Advancement Fund of the National Sharecroppers Fund

Rural Coalition

Sisters of Mercy of the Americas Justice Team

States United to Prevent Gun Violence

Texas Mexico Border Coalition CBO

The Daniel Initiative

The Diversity Center

The Sikh Coalition

TN State Conference NAACP

Town of Atrisco (NM) Land Grant

UnidosUS

United Methodist Women

Voices for Progress

WE ACT for Environmental Justice

Women’s Community Justice Association

YWCA USA



[1] Letter from The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, et al., to Congressional Leadership. (June 1, 2020). http://civilrightsdocs.info/pdf/policy/letters/2020/Coalition_Letter_to_House_and_Senate_Leadership_on_Federal_Policing_Priorites_Final_6.1.20.pdf

[2] Ibid.

[3] Civil Rights Leaders’ Statement on Justice in Policing Act. (June 6, 2020). The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights. Civil Rights Leaders’ Statement on Justice in Policing Act - The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights

[4] See, e.g., Hemenway, A. (Dec. 15, 2017). Civil Rights Litigation: The Supreme Court Further Restricts Bivens Actions. The Lawletter Blog. National Legal Research Group, Inc. Civil Rights Litigation: The Supreme Court Further Restricts Bivens Actions

[5] Supreme Court of the United States. Certiori – Summary Dispositions (June 15, 2020). https://www.supremecourt.gov/orders/courtorders/061520zor_f2bh.pdf

[6] Letter from The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, et al., to Congressional Leadership. (June 1, 2020). http://civilrightsdocs.info/pdf/policy/letters/2020/Coalition_Letter_to_House_and_Senate_Leadership_on_Federal_Policing_Priorites_Final_6.1.20.pdf

[7] American Civil Liberties Union. (June 2014). War Comes Home: The Excessive Militarization of American Policing. War Comes Home: The Excessive Militarization of American Police.

[8] Ibid.

[9] Sack, K. (Mar. 18, 2018). Door-Busting Drug Raids Leave a Trail of Blood, The New York Times. Door-Busting Drug Raids Leave a Trail of Blood.

[10] John, A. (Sept. 2, 2014). Police Departments Keep Losing Their Military Humvees and Assault Rifles. The Atlantic. Police Departments Keep Losing Their Military Humvees and Assault Rifles

[11] Letter from The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, et al., to Congressional Leadership. (June 1, 2020). http://civilrightsdocs.info/pdf/policy/letters/2020/Coalition_Letter_to_House_and_Senate_Leadership_on_Federal_Policing_Priorites_Final_6.1.20.pdf

[12] Ibid.

[13] DPA Urges Congress to Strengthen Police Reform. (June 9, 2020). Drug Policy Alliance. DPA Urges Congress to Strengthen Police Reform Bill

[14] Testimony of Vanita Gupta, President and CEO, The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, Policing Practices and Law Enforcement Accountablity: Hearing Before the United States House of Representatives Committee on the Judiciary, 116th Cong. (2020). http://civilrightsdocs.info/VG Policing Testimony 06-10-20_final.pdf

[15] The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, Civil Rights Principles for Safe, Healthy, and Inclusive School Climates. (Sept. 4, 2019). http://civilrightsdocs.info/pdf/education/School-Climate-Principles.pdf

[16] See, e.g., Hamilton, I. (June 13, 2020). Outrage over police brutality has finally convinced Amazon, Microsoft, and IBM to rule out selling facial recognition tech to law enforcement. Here’s what’s going on. Business Insider. Outrage over police brutality has finally convinced Amazon, Microsoft, and IBM to rule out selling facial recognition tech to law enforcement. Here's what's going on.

[17] Testimony of Vanita Gupta, President and CEO, The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, Policing Practices and Law Enforcement Accountablity: Hearing Before the United States House of Representatives Committee on the Judiciary, 116th Cong. (2020). http://civilrightsdocs.info/VG Policing Testimony 06-10-20_final.pdf

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EDITED TO ADD

Graphic for tweet:

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Attachments

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HelluvaHoax!

Well-known member
I didn't study all of it but I saw one part that would make the COS want to push it.

The NO KNOCK RAID.

The cult suffered a gargantuan "engram" with that when the FBI didn't give the Guardian's Office (OSA) time to destroy all the incriminating documents before crashing the doors down. That sent Mary Sue Hubbard and other leading Scn Execs to federal prison. They almost nailed Ron for that one too.

The other reason the COS might have jumped on the BLM bandwagon is to keep the NOI happy.

Strange that Scientology is now advocating political positions, policies and policing.

.
 

ISNOINews

Independent Scientology and Nation of Islam news
I didn't study all of it but I saw one part that would make the COS want to push it.

The NO KNOCK RAID.

The cult suffered a gargantuan "engram" with that when the FBI didn't give the Guardian's Office (OSA) time to destroy all the incriminating documents before crashing the doors down. That sent Mary Sue Hubbard and other leading Scn Execs to federal prison. They almost nailed Ron for that one too.

The other reason the COS might have jumped on the BLM bandwagon is to keep the NOI happy.

Strange that Scientology is now advocating political positions, policies and policing.

.
Yeah, for awhile I've been trying to highlight the tension between, as well as the hypocrisy inherent in, Scientology's support for President Trump and the MAGA Community, on the one one hand, and the Nation of Islam -- which, by the way, wants to dismember the United States by being given their own separate state or territory -- on the other hand.

I've been anticipating this coming to a specific head in the area of law enforcement. I wasn't disappointed.

To be fair and inaccurate, the Church of Scientology National Affairs Office probably would have done this even absent the COS alliance with the NOI. For quite some time, the COSNAO has been assiduously allying itself with civil rights and religious groups in order to safe point them and gain allies. They are all liberal in the area of civil rights and police reform, and it looks like pretty much all, if not all, of them support the proposed reforms; the signature list on the letter is impressive. The COSNAO probably couldn't refuse to sign the letter without blowing its credibility with these groups. It is too late for the COSNAO to be all "law and order" now.
 

ISNOINews

Independent Scientology and Nation of Islam news
I didn't study all of it but I saw one part that would make the COS want to push it.

The NO KNOCK RAID.

The cult suffered a gargantuan "engram" with that when the FBI didn't give the Guardian's Office (OSA) time to destroy all the incriminating documents before crashing the doors down. That sent Mary Sue Hubbard and other leading Scn Execs to federal prison. They almost nailed Ron for that one too.

The other reason the COS might have jumped on the BLM bandwagon is to keep the NOI happy.

Strange that Scientology is now advocating political positions, policies and policing.

.
Also, as memorialized in my separate thread on the Church of Scientology National Affairs Office, the COSNAO has been taking *many* political postions in order to establish its bona fides and establish alliances with civil rights and religious organizations.
 

Dark

Well-known member
I didn't study all of it but I saw one part that would make the COS want to push it.

The NO KNOCK RAID.

The cult suffered a gargantuan "engram" with that when the FBI didn't give the Guardian's Office (OSA) time to destroy all the incriminating documents before crashing the doors down. That sent Mary Sue Hubbard and other leading Scn Execs to federal prison. They almost nailed Ron for that one too.

The other reason the COS might have jumped on the BLM bandwagon is to keep the NOI happy.

Strange that Scientology is now advocating political positions, policies and policing.

.
I am wondering if Scientology is even a thing now.

The other reason David Miscavige might have jumped on the BLM bandwagon is to keep the NOI happy.

Strange that David Miscavige is now advocating political positions, policies and policing.
 

ISNOINews

Independent Scientology and Nation of Islam news
The Church of Scientology AGAIN opposes President Trump on the issue of police reform.

This time, the Church of Scientology National Affairs Office joined a letter urging the Senate to vote "NO" on the Motion to Proceed on the Republican backed S. 3985, the JUSTICE Act. (The full text of the letter is both set forth at the end of this story and attached thereto.)

The Church of Scientology urges the Senate to vote "NO" because, consistent with the wishes of President Trump, the Republican backed JUSTICE Act would:

(1) NOT creae a use of force standard that allows force only when necessary and as a last resort;

(2) NOT ban chokeholds;

(3) NOT ban racial profiling;

(4) NOT establish a police misconduct registry;

(5) NOT provide for the inclusion of a “reckless” standard in 18 U.S.C. Section 242 to enable federal prosecutors to hold law enforcement accountable for criminal civil rights violations;

(6) NOT include s prohibition on no-knock warrants, especially in drug cases;

(7) NOT eliminate the judge-made doctrine of qualified immunity; and

(8) instead provide more than $7 billion of additional federal dollars for law enforcement over the next five years, directly contradicting the coalition’s (including signatory Church of Scientology's) call and that of those marching in the streets to redefine public safety by reducing the footprint of our criminal legal system.

In a direct challenge to President Trump and Senate Republicans, the letter states, "The Leadership Conference will score this vote in our voting record for the 116th Congress."

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FULL TEXT OF LETTER

Vote NO on the Motion to Proceed - S. 3985 the JUSTICE Act - The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights

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Vote NO on the Motion to Proceed – S. 3985 the JUSTICE Act

JUSTICE REFORM RESOURCES 06.23,20

View this letter as a PDF here.

June 23, 2020

Vote NO on the Motion to Proceed – S. 3985 the JUSTICE Act

Dear Senators,

On behalf of The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights (The Leadership Conference), a coalition charged by its diverse membership of more than 220 national organizations to promote and protect civil and human rights in the United States, and the undersigned 138 organizations, we write to express our strong opposition to S. 3985, the Just and Unifying Solutions to Invigorate Communities Everywhere (JUSTICE) Act. The JUSTICE Act is an inadequate response to the decades of pain, hardship, and devastation that Black people have and continue to endure as a result of systemic racism and lax policies that fail to hold police accountable for misconduct. This bill falls woefully short of the comprehensive reform needed to address the current policing crisis and achieve meaningful law enforcement accountability. It is deeply problematic to meet this moment with a menial incremental approach that offers more funding to police, and few policies to effectively address the constant loss of Black lives at the hands of police. We therefore urge you to oppose the JUSTICE Act and vote no on the motion to proceed when this legislation is brought to the floor. The Leadership Conference will score this vote in our voting record for the 116th Congress.

Abusive policing practices, coupled with devastating state-sanctioned violence, have exacted systemic brutality and fatality upon Black people since our nation’s founding. Police have shot and killed more than 1,000 people in the United States over the past year,[1] and Black people are disproportionately more likely than white people to be killed by police.[2] The chronic structural issue of police killings and lawlessness against Black people have escalated to a boiling point in recent weeks following the deaths of individuals like Breonna Taylor, Dreasjon “Sean” Reed, George Floyd, Tony McDade, and others. The current protests in our cities are a response not only to the unjust policing of Black people, but also a call for action to public officials to enact bold, comprehensive, and structural change.

That is why, on June 1, 2020, The Leadership Conference sent Congress a letter outlining accountability principles that must be adopted as a baseline to address rampant, systemic, white supremacy in law enforcement across America. In less than 12 hours, more than 450 of this country’s most diverse civil rights, civil liberties, and racial justice organizations signed onto that letter because what was asked of Congress aligned with what advocates, policing experts, and other stakeholders agree is needed. The priorities highlighted are not only reasonable but reflect a bare minimum of what must be included in any policing legislation Congress adopts in order for systemic reform to occur.

These priorities are: (1) the creation of a use of force standard that allows force only when necessary and as a last resort; (2) a ban on chokeholds; (3) a ban on racial profiling; (4) the establishment of a police misconduct registry; (5) the inclusion of a “reckless” standard in 18 U.S.C. Section 242 that enables federal prosecutors to hold law enforcement accountable for criminal civil rights violations; (6) a prohibition on no-knock warrants, especially in drug cases[3]; (7) the elimination of the judge-made doctrine of qualified immunity, which allows officers and other government actors to evade accountability when they violate individuals’ rights[4]; and (8) the demilitarization of law enforcement agencies.[5] This accountability framework is reflected in S. 3912, the Justice in Policing Act of 2020.

Unfortunately, Senate majority leadership ignored these critical policies and introduced the JUSTICE Act, a bill that fails to align with our framework principles and will therefore not bring about the fundamental shift in policing our country needs. The bill does nothing to address current barriers to holding law enforcement accountable, such as abolishing qualified immunity or criminalizing the reckless use of force. It does not address, let alone prohibit, the perverse yet pervasive practice of racial profiling, nor does it include explicit bans on dangerous practices like chokeholds or no-knock warrants. It fails to address the militarization of police or the need for a national standard restricting the use of force, and lacks the national, robust, and publicly available misconduct registry required for true transparency.

Further, the JUSTICE Act provides more than $7 billion of additional federal dollars for law enforcement over the next five years, directly contradicting our coalition’s call and that of those marching in the streets to redefine public safety by reducing the footprint of our criminal legal system. Many of the crises that currently involve police responses, and which too often lead to mistreatment and increased mistrust, would be better handled through the addition of health providers, social workers, and others who can meet the needs of communities in a non-punitive manner. Pouring additional funding into a broken system is bad policy. Furthermore, considering the limited financial resources prompted by the COVID-19 pandemic, all policing reform models must reprioritize how limited dollars are spent. The programs authorized by the JUSTICE Act will necessarily mean fewer funds to tackle other issues critical to long-lasting safety, such as housing, education, and health care. Millions of people in the United States are calling for these kinds of direct investments into communities, and Congress should heed that call.

Now is the time for Congress to be bold and pass meaningful police accountability reform legislation. A vast and diverse collection of people from coast to coast are calling on lawmakers to prioritize Black communities and protect them from the systemic perils of over-policing, police brutality, misconduct, and harassment. It is your moral and ethical duty to ensure Black people and communities are free from the harm and threats from law enforcement and militarized police responses. It is also your responsibility to ensure that any legislation passed does not just provide lip service to these problems, but fully meets the critical needs of this moment and beyond. Passing watered-down legislation that fails to remedy the actual harms resulting in the loss of life is a moral statement that is inconsistent with a genuine belief that black lives matter. Anything less than full support for comprehensive legislation that holds police accountable is inexcusable. Further, any attempt to amend or salvage the JUSTICE Act will only serve to “check the box” and claim reform when, in actuality, no reform has occurred to combat police misconduct and to protect Black lives. For these reasons, we urge you to oppose the JUSTICE Act and vote no on the motion to proceed on this legislation.

Thank you for your leadership in advancing these important policy recommendations. If you have any questions about the issues raised in this letter, please contact Sakira Cook of The Leadership Conference at [email protected] or The Leadership Conference Justice Task Force co-chairs, Kanya Bennett of the ACLU, [email protected] and Hilary Shelton of the NAACP at [email protected].

Sincerely,

The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights

A Little Piece Of Light

ActionAid USA

AFGE Local 3354

African American Ministers In Action

Alabama State Association of Cooperatives

Alianza Americas

Alianza Nacional de Campesinas

American Association for Justice

American Atheists

American Civil Liberties Union

American Family Voices

American Federation of Teachers

American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO)

American Humanist Association

American Indian Mothers Inc.

American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC)

Americans for Democratic Action (ADA)

Amnesty International USA

Arkansas United

Asian Americans Advancing Justice | AAJC

Atrisco Community

Autistic Self Advocacy Network

Autistic Women and Nonbinary Network

Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law

Bend the Arc: Jewish Action

Black Farmers and Agriculturalists Association, Inc.

Bread for the World

Center for Disability Rights

Center for Law and Social Policy

Center for Responsible Lending

Center for the Study of Hate & Extremism-California State University, San Bernardino

Chi-Town GVP Summit

Church of Scientology National Affairs Office

Clearinghouse on Women’s Issues

Climate Reality Project

Coalition of Black Trade Unionists

Coalition on Human Needs

Coalition to Stop Gun Violence

Common Cause

CommonSpirit Health

Congregation of Our Lady of Charity of the Good Shepherd, U.S. Provinces

Constitutional Accountability Center

Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR)

CURE (Citizens United for Rehabilitation of Errants)

Daniet Initiative Set Project

Defending Rights & Dissent

Demand Progress

DemCast USA

Democracy 21

Drug Policy Alliance

Earthjustice

End Citizens United // Let America Vote Action Fund

Equal Rights Advocates

Equality California

Farmworker Association of Florida

Feminist Majority Foundation

Government Information Watch

Hindu American Foundation

Hispanic Federation

Human Rights Campaign

Human Rights First

Immigration Hub

IndivisAbility

Innocence Project

Japanese American Citizens League

Jewish Council for Public Affairs

Joint Action Committee

Justice in Aging

Justice Roundtable

Juvenile Law Center

Kansas Black Farmers Association Inc

Lambda Legal

Landowners Association of Texas

Leadership Conference on Civil & Human Rights

League of Women Voters of the United States

Mennonite Central Committee U.S. Washington Office

Mommieactivist and Sons

MomsRising

MoveOn

Muslim Advocates

NAACP

NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc.

National Action Network

National Advocacy Center of the Sisters of the Good Shepherd

National Association of Human Rights Workers

National Association of Social Workers

National Center for Transgender Equality

National Council of Churches

National Council on Independent Living

National Domestic Workers Alliance

National Down Syndrome Congress

National Education Association

National Employment Law Project

National Equality Action Team (NEAT)

National Housing Law Project

National Latino Farmers & Ranchers Trade Association

National LGBTQ Task Force Action Fund

National Organization for Women

National Partnership for Women & Families

Natural Resources Defense Council

NETWORK Lobby for Catholic Social Justice

New America’s Open Technology Institute

Oklahoma Black Historical Research Project, Inc.

Open Society Policy Center

Oxfam America

People For the American Way

People’s Action

Pesticide Action Network

PFLAG National

Prison Policy Initiative

Public Citizen

Public Justice

Rabbinical Assembly

RAICES

Restore The Fourth

Rural Advancement Fund of the National Sharecroppers Fund

Rural Coalition

Silver State Equality-Nevada

Southern Border Communities Coalition

SPLC Action Fund

Stand for Children

Stand Up America

Students for Sensible Drug Policy

T’ruah

Texas Progressive Action Network

Texas Watch

The Agenda Project

The Black Alliance for Just Immigration (BAJI)

The Daniel Initiative

The Sikh Coalition

The Workers Circle

Union for Reform Judaism

United Church of Christ, Justice and Witness Ministries

UNITED SIKHS

United We Dream Action

Voices for Progress

Win Without War

Woman’s National Democratic Club (WNDC)



[1] Database of Police Shooting since 2015. (May 29, 2020). Fatal Force, The Washington Post, https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/investigations/police-shootings-database/

[2] The Sentencing Project. (Apr. 19, 2018). UN Report on Racial Disparities in the Criminal Justice System Available at, Report to the United Nations on Racial Disparities in the U.S. Criminal Justice System | The Sentencing Project

[3] Justice in Policing would prohibit no-knock warrants only in drug cases.

[4] Justice in Policing would eliminate QI for police officers only.

[5] Justice in Policing limits the transfer of certain equipment, doesn’t eliminate the 1033 program.

* * * * * END EXCERPT * * * * *
 

Attachments

Last edited:

Riddick

I clap to no man
It's PR positioning by the COS. Haven't you guys read the Hubbard's Positioning in the marketing and public relations series in the OEC's.

Veda posts about it, many times in the past. Just got to connect dots.

The COS just wants to position itself with what is popular and make themselves sound for it, although that it is NOT the case with getting involved with scientology, you can only do as Ron says,
 

ISNOINews

Independent Scientology and Nation of Islam news
The Church of Scientology AGAIN opposes President Trump on the issue of police reform.

This time, the Church of Scientology National Affairs Office joined a letter urging the Senate to vote "NO" on the Motion to Proceed on the Republican backed S. 3985, the JUSTICE Act. (The full text of the letter is both set forth at the end of this story and attached thereto.)

The Church of Scientology urges the Senate to vote "NO" because, consistent with the wishes of President Trump, the Republican backed JUSTICE Act would:

(1) NOT creae a use of force standard that allows force only when necessary and as a last resort;

(2) NOT ban chokeholds;

(3) NOT ban racial profiling;

(4) NOT establish a police misconduct registry;

(5) NOT provide for the inclusion of a “reckless” standard in 18 U.S.C. Section 242 to enable federal prosecutors to hold law enforcement accountable for criminal civil rights violations;

(6) NOT include s prohibition on no-knock warrants, especially in drug cases;

(7) NOT eliminate the judge-made doctrine of qualified immunity; and

(8) instead provide more than $7 billion of additional federal dollars for law enforcement over the next five years, directly contradicting the coalition’s (including signatory Church of Scientology's) call and that of those marching in the streets to redefine public safety by reducing the footprint of our criminal legal system.

In a direct challenge to President Trump and Senate Republicans, the letter states, "The Leadership Conference will score this vote in our voting record for the 116th Congress."

*****************************************

FULL TEXT OF LETTER

Vote NO on the Motion to Proceed - S. 3985 the JUSTICE Act - The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights

* * * * * BEGIN EXCERPT * * * * *

Vote NO on the Motion to Proceed – S. 3985 the JUSTICE Act

JUSTICE REFORM RESOURCES 06.23,20

View this letter as a PDF here.

June 23, 2020

Vote NO on the Motion to Proceed – S. 3985 the JUSTICE Act

Dear Senators,

On behalf of The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights (The Leadership Conference), a coalition charged by its diverse membership of more than 220 national organizations to promote and protect civil and human rights in the United States, and the undersigned 138 organizations, we write to express our strong opposition to S. 3985, the Just and Unifying Solutions to Invigorate Communities Everywhere (JUSTICE) Act. The JUSTICE Act is an inadequate response to the decades of pain, hardship, and devastation that Black people have and continue to endure as a result of systemic racism and lax policies that fail to hold police accountable for misconduct. This bill falls woefully short of the comprehensive reform needed to address the current policing crisis and achieve meaningful law enforcement accountability. It is deeply problematic to meet this moment with a menial incremental approach that offers more funding to police, and few policies to effectively address the constant loss of Black lives at the hands of police. We therefore urge you to oppose the JUSTICE Act and vote no on the motion to proceed when this legislation is brought to the floor. The Leadership Conference will score this vote in our voting record for the 116th Congress.

Abusive policing practices, coupled with devastating state-sanctioned violence, have exacted systemic brutality and fatality upon Black people since our nation’s founding. Police have shot and killed more than 1,000 people in the United States over the past year,[1] and Black people are disproportionately more likely than white people to be killed by police.[2] The chronic structural issue of police killings and lawlessness against Black people have escalated to a boiling point in recent weeks following the deaths of individuals like Breonna Taylor, Dreasjon “Sean” Reed, George Floyd, Tony McDade, and others. The current protests in our cities are a response not only to the unjust policing of Black people, but also a call for action to public officials to enact bold, comprehensive, and structural change.

That is why, on June 1, 2020, The Leadership Conference sent Congress a letter outlining accountability principles that must be adopted as a baseline to address rampant, systemic, white supremacy in law enforcement across America. In less than 12 hours, more than 450 of this country’s most diverse civil rights, civil liberties, and racial justice organizations signed onto that letter because what was asked of Congress aligned with what advocates, policing experts, and other stakeholders agree is needed. The priorities highlighted are not only reasonable but reflect a bare minimum of what must be included in any policing legislation Congress adopts in order for systemic reform to occur.

These priorities are: (1) the creation of a use of force standard that allows force only when necessary and as a last resort; (2) a ban on chokeholds; (3) a ban on racial profiling; (4) the establishment of a police misconduct registry; (5) the inclusion of a “reckless” standard in 18 U.S.C. Section 242 that enables federal prosecutors to hold law enforcement accountable for criminal civil rights violations; (6) a prohibition on no-knock warrants, especially in drug cases[3]; (7) the elimination of the judge-made doctrine of qualified immunity, which allows officers and other government actors to evade accountability when they violate individuals’ rights[4]; and (8) the demilitarization of law enforcement agencies.[5] This accountability framework is reflected in S. 3912, the Justice in Policing Act of 2020.

Unfortunately, Senate majority leadership ignored these critical policies and introduced the JUSTICE Act, a bill that fails to align with our framework principles and will therefore not bring about the fundamental shift in policing our country needs. The bill does nothing to address current barriers to holding law enforcement accountable, such as abolishing qualified immunity or criminalizing the reckless use of force. It does not address, let alone prohibit, the perverse yet pervasive practice of racial profiling, nor does it include explicit bans on dangerous practices like chokeholds or no-knock warrants. It fails to address the militarization of police or the need for a national standard restricting the use of force, and lacks the national, robust, and publicly available misconduct registry required for true transparency.

Further, the JUSTICE Act provides more than $7 billion of additional federal dollars for law enforcement over the next five years, directly contradicting our coalition’s call and that of those marching in the streets to redefine public safety by reducing the footprint of our criminal legal system. Many of the crises that currently involve police responses, and which too often lead to mistreatment and increased mistrust, would be better handled through the addition of health providers, social workers, and others who can meet the needs of communities in a non-punitive manner. Pouring additional funding into a broken system is bad policy. Furthermore, considering the limited financial resources prompted by the COVID-19 pandemic, all policing reform models must reprioritize how limited dollars are spent. The programs authorized by the JUSTICE Act will necessarily mean fewer funds to tackle other issues critical to long-lasting safety, such as housing, education, and health care. Millions of people in the United States are calling for these kinds of direct investments into communities, and Congress should heed that call.

Now is the time for Congress to be bold and pass meaningful police accountability reform legislation. A vast and diverse collection of people from coast to coast are calling on lawmakers to prioritize Black communities and protect them from the systemic perils of over-policing, police brutality, misconduct, and harassment. It is your moral and ethical duty to ensure Black people and communities are free from the harm and threats from law enforcement and militarized police responses. It is also your responsibility to ensure that any legislation passed does not just provide lip service to these problems, but fully meets the critical needs of this moment and beyond. Passing watered-down legislation that fails to remedy the actual harms resulting in the loss of life is a moral statement that is inconsistent with a genuine belief that black lives matter. Anything less than full support for comprehensive legislation that holds police accountable is inexcusable. Further, any attempt to amend or salvage the JUSTICE Act will only serve to “check the box” and claim reform when, in actuality, no reform has occurred to combat police misconduct and to protect Black lives. For these reasons, we urge you to oppose the JUSTICE Act and vote no on the motion to proceed on this legislation.

Thank you for your leadership in advancing these important policy recommendations. If you have any questions about the issues raised in this letter, please contact Sakira Cook of The Leadership Conference at [email protected] or The Leadership Conference Justice Task Force co-chairs, Kanya Bennett of the ACLU, [email protected] and Hilary Shelton of the NAACP at [email protected].

Sincerely,

The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights

A Little Piece Of Light

ActionAid USA

AFGE Local 3354

African American Ministers In Action

Alabama State Association of Cooperatives

Alianza Americas

Alianza Nacional de Campesinas

American Association for Justice

American Atheists

American Civil Liberties Union

American Family Voices

American Federation of Teachers

American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO)

American Humanist Association

American Indian Mothers Inc.

American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC)

Americans for Democratic Action (ADA)

Amnesty International USA

Arkansas United

Asian Americans Advancing Justice | AAJC

Atrisco Community

Autistic Self Advocacy Network

Autistic Women and Nonbinary Network

Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law

Bend the Arc: Jewish Action

Black Farmers and Agriculturalists Association, Inc.

Bread for the World

Center for Disability Rights

Center for Law and Social Policy

Center for Responsible Lending

Center for the Study of Hate & Extremism-California State University, San Bernardino

Chi-Town GVP Summit

Church of Scientology National Affairs Office

Clearinghouse on Women’s Issues

Climate Reality Project

Coalition of Black Trade Unionists

Coalition on Human Needs

Coalition to Stop Gun Violence

Common Cause

CommonSpirit Health

Congregation of Our Lady of Charity of the Good Shepherd, U.S. Provinces

Constitutional Accountability Center

Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR)

CURE (Citizens United for Rehabilitation of Errants)

Daniet Initiative Set Project

Defending Rights & Dissent

Demand Progress

DemCast USA

Democracy 21

Drug Policy Alliance

Earthjustice

End Citizens United // Let America Vote Action Fund

Equal Rights Advocates

Equality California

Farmworker Association of Florida

Feminist Majority Foundation

Government Information Watch

Hindu American Foundation

Hispanic Federation

Human Rights Campaign

Human Rights First

Immigration Hub

IndivisAbility

Innocence Project

Japanese American Citizens League

Jewish Council for Public Affairs

Joint Action Committee

Justice in Aging

Justice Roundtable

Juvenile Law Center

Kansas Black Farmers Association Inc

Lambda Legal

Landowners Association of Texas

Leadership Conference on Civil & Human Rights

League of Women Voters of the United States

Mennonite Central Committee U.S. Washington Office

Mommieactivist and Sons

MomsRising

MoveOn

Muslim Advocates

NAACP

NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc.

National Action Network

National Advocacy Center of the Sisters of the Good Shepherd

National Association of Human Rights Workers

National Association of Social Workers

National Center for Transgender Equality

National Council of Churches

National Council on Independent Living

National Domestic Workers Alliance

National Down Syndrome Congress

National Education Association

National Employment Law Project

National Equality Action Team (NEAT)

National Housing Law Project

National Latino Farmers & Ranchers Trade Association

National LGBTQ Task Force Action Fund

National Organization for Women

National Partnership for Women & Families

Natural Resources Defense Council

NETWORK Lobby for Catholic Social Justice

New America’s Open Technology Institute

Oklahoma Black Historical Research Project, Inc.

Open Society Policy Center

Oxfam America

People For the American Way

People’s Action

Pesticide Action Network

PFLAG National

Prison Policy Initiative

Public Citizen

Public Justice

Rabbinical Assembly

RAICES

Restore The Fourth

Rural Advancement Fund of the National Sharecroppers Fund

Rural Coalition

Silver State Equality-Nevada

Southern Border Communities Coalition

SPLC Action Fund

Stand for Children

Stand Up America

Students for Sensible Drug Policy

T’ruah

Texas Progressive Action Network

Texas Watch

The Agenda Project

The Black Alliance for Just Immigration (BAJI)

The Daniel Initiative

The Sikh Coalition

The Workers Circle

Union for Reform Judaism

United Church of Christ, Justice and Witness Ministries

UNITED SIKHS

United We Dream Action

Voices for Progress

Win Without War

Woman’s National Democratic Club (WNDC)



[1] Database of Police Shooting since 2015. (May 29, 2020). Fatal Force, The Washington Post, https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/investigations/police-shootings-database/

[2] The Sentencing Project. (Apr. 19, 2018). UN Report on Racial Disparities in the Criminal Justice System Available at, Report to the United Nations on Racial Disparities in the U.S. Criminal Justice System | The Sentencing Project

[3] Justice in Policing would prohibit no-knock warrants only in drug cases.

[4] Justice in Policing would eliminate QI for police officers only.

[5] Justice in Policing limits the transfer of certain equipment, doesn’t eliminate the 1033 program.

* * * * * END EXCERPT * * * * *
Story tweeted:

 

Churchill

Well-known member
The Church of Scientology AGAIN opposes President Trump on the issue of police reform.

This time, the Church of Scientology National Affairs Office joined a letter urging the Senate to vote "NO" on the Motion to Proceed on the Republican backed S. 3985, the JUSTICE Act. (The full text of the letter is both set forth at the end of this story and attached thereto.)

The Church of Scientology urges the Senate to vote "NO" because, consistent with the wishes of President Trump, the Republican backed JUSTICE Act would:

(1) NOT creae a use of force standard that allows force only when necessary and as a last resort;

(2) NOT ban chokeholds;

(3) NOT ban racial profiling;

(4) NOT establish a police misconduct registry;

(5) NOT provide for the inclusion of a “reckless” standard in 18 U.S.C. Section 242 to enable federal prosecutors to hold law enforcement accountable for criminal civil rights violations;

(6) NOT include s prohibition on no-knock warrants, especially in drug cases;

(7) NOT eliminate the judge-made doctrine of qualified immunity; and

(8) instead provide more than $7 billion of additional federal dollars for law enforcement over the next five years, directly contradicting the coalition’s (including signatory Church of Scientology's) call and that of those marching in the streets to redefine public safety by reducing the footprint of our criminal legal system.

In a direct challenge to President Trump and Senate Republicans, the letter states, "The Leadership Conference will score this vote in our voting record for the 116th Congress."

*****************************************

FULL TEXT OF LETTER

Vote NO on the Motion to Proceed - S. 3985 the JUSTICE Act - The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights

* * * * * BEGIN EXCERPT * * * * *

Vote NO on the Motion to Proceed – S. 3985 the JUSTICE Act

JUSTICE REFORM RESOURCES 06.23,20

View this letter as a PDF here.

June 23, 2020

Vote NO on the Motion to Proceed – S. 3985 the JUSTICE Act

Dear Senators,

On behalf of The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights (The Leadership Conference), a coalition charged by its diverse membership of more than 220 national organizations to promote and protect civil and human rights in the United States, and the undersigned 138 organizations, we write to express our strong opposition to S. 3985, the Just and Unifying Solutions to Invigorate Communities Everywhere (JUSTICE) Act. The JUSTICE Act is an inadequate response to the decades of pain, hardship, and devastation that Black people have and continue to endure as a result of systemic racism and lax policies that fail to hold police accountable for misconduct. This bill falls woefully short of the comprehensive reform needed to address the current policing crisis and achieve meaningful law enforcement accountability. It is deeply problematic to meet this moment with a menial incremental approach that offers more funding to police, and few policies to effectively address the constant loss of Black lives at the hands of police. We therefore urge you to oppose the JUSTICE Act and vote no on the motion to proceed when this legislation is brought to the floor. The Leadership Conference will score this vote in our voting record for the 116th Congress.

Abusive policing practices, coupled with devastating state-sanctioned violence, have exacted systemic brutality and fatality upon Black people since our nation’s founding. Police have shot and killed more than 1,000 people in the United States over the past year,[1] and Black people are disproportionately more likely than white people to be killed by police.[2] The chronic structural issue of police killings and lawlessness against Black people have escalated to a boiling point in recent weeks following the deaths of individuals like Breonna Taylor, Dreasjon “Sean” Reed, George Floyd, Tony McDade, and others. The current protests in our cities are a response not only to the unjust policing of Black people, but also a call for action to public officials to enact bold, comprehensive, and structural change.

That is why, on June 1, 2020, The Leadership Conference sent Congress a letter outlining accountability principles that must be adopted as a baseline to address rampant, systemic, white supremacy in law enforcement across America. In less than 12 hours, more than 450 of this country’s most diverse civil rights, civil liberties, and racial justice organizations signed onto that letter because what was asked of Congress aligned with what advocates, policing experts, and other stakeholders agree is needed. The priorities highlighted are not only reasonable but reflect a bare minimum of what must be included in any policing legislation Congress adopts in order for systemic reform to occur.

These priorities are: (1) the creation of a use of force standard that allows force only when necessary and as a last resort; (2) a ban on chokeholds; (3) a ban on racial profiling; (4) the establishment of a police misconduct registry; (5) the inclusion of a “reckless” standard in 18 U.S.C. Section 242 that enables federal prosecutors to hold law enforcement accountable for criminal civil rights violations; (6) a prohibition on no-knock warrants, especially in drug cases[3]; (7) the elimination of the judge-made doctrine of qualified immunity, which allows officers and other government actors to evade accountability when they violate individuals’ rights[4]; and (8) the demilitarization of law enforcement agencies.[5] This accountability framework is reflected in S. 3912, the Justice in Policing Act of 2020.

Unfortunately, Senate majority leadership ignored these critical policies and introduced the JUSTICE Act, a bill that fails to align with our framework principles and will therefore not bring about the fundamental shift in policing our country needs. The bill does nothing to address current barriers to holding law enforcement accountable, such as abolishing qualified immunity or criminalizing the reckless use of force. It does not address, let alone prohibit, the perverse yet pervasive practice of racial profiling, nor does it include explicit bans on dangerous practices like chokeholds or no-knock warrants. It fails to address the militarization of police or the need for a national standard restricting the use of force, and lacks the national, robust, and publicly available misconduct registry required for true transparency.

Further, the JUSTICE Act provides more than $7 billion of additional federal dollars for law enforcement over the next five years, directly contradicting our coalition’s call and that of those marching in the streets to redefine public safety by reducing the footprint of our criminal legal system. Many of the crises that currently involve police responses, and which too often lead to mistreatment and increased mistrust, would be better handled through the addition of health providers, social workers, and others who can meet the needs of communities in a non-punitive manner. Pouring additional funding into a broken system is bad policy. Furthermore, considering the limited financial resources prompted by the COVID-19 pandemic, all policing reform models must reprioritize how limited dollars are spent. The programs authorized by the JUSTICE Act will necessarily mean fewer funds to tackle other issues critical to long-lasting safety, such as housing, education, and health care. Millions of people in the United States are calling for these kinds of direct investments into communities, and Congress should heed that call.

Now is the time for Congress to be bold and pass meaningful police accountability reform legislation. A vast and diverse collection of people from coast to coast are calling on lawmakers to prioritize Black communities and protect them from the systemic perils of over-policing, police brutality, misconduct, and harassment. It is your moral and ethical duty to ensure Black people and communities are free from the harm and threats from law enforcement and militarized police responses. It is also your responsibility to ensure that any legislation passed does not just provide lip service to these problems, but fully meets the critical needs of this moment and beyond. Passing watered-down legislation that fails to remedy the actual harms resulting in the loss of life is a moral statement that is inconsistent with a genuine belief that black lives matter. Anything less than full support for comprehensive legislation that holds police accountable is inexcusable. Further, any attempt to amend or salvage the JUSTICE Act will only serve to “check the box” and claim reform when, in actuality, no reform has occurred to combat police misconduct and to protect Black lives. For these reasons, we urge you to oppose the JUSTICE Act and vote no on the motion to proceed on this legislation.

Thank you for your leadership in advancing these important policy recommendations. If you have any questions about the issues raised in this letter, please contact Sakira Cook of The Leadership Conference at [email protected] or The Leadership Conference Justice Task Force co-chairs, Kanya Bennett of the ACLU, [email protected] and Hilary Shelton of the NAACP at [email protected].

Sincerely,

The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights

A Little Piece Of Light

ActionAid USA

AFGE Local 3354

African American Ministers In Action

Alabama State Association of Cooperatives

Alianza Americas

Alianza Nacional de Campesinas

American Association for Justice

American Atheists

American Civil Liberties Union

American Family Voices

American Federation of Teachers

American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO)

American Humanist Association

American Indian Mothers Inc.

American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC)

Americans for Democratic Action (ADA)

Amnesty International USA

Arkansas United

Asian Americans Advancing Justice | AAJC

Atrisco Community

Autistic Self Advocacy Network

Autistic Women and Nonbinary Network

Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law

Bend the Arc: Jewish Action

Black Farmers and Agriculturalists Association, Inc.

Bread for the World

Center for Disability Rights

Center for Law and Social Policy

Center for Responsible Lending

Center for the Study of Hate & Extremism-California State University, San Bernardino

Chi-Town GVP Summit

Church of Scientology National Affairs Office

Clearinghouse on Women’s Issues

Climate Reality Project

Coalition of Black Trade Unionists

Coalition on Human Needs

Coalition to Stop Gun Violence

Common Cause

CommonSpirit Health

Congregation of Our Lady of Charity of the Good Shepherd, U.S. Provinces

Constitutional Accountability Center

Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR)

CURE (Citizens United for Rehabilitation of Errants)

Daniet Initiative Set Project

Defending Rights & Dissent

Demand Progress

DemCast USA

Democracy 21

Drug Policy Alliance

Earthjustice

End Citizens United // Let America Vote Action Fund

Equal Rights Advocates

Equality California

Farmworker Association of Florida

Feminist Majority Foundation

Government Information Watch

Hindu American Foundation

Hispanic Federation

Human Rights Campaign

Human Rights First

Immigration Hub

IndivisAbility

Innocence Project

Japanese American Citizens League

Jewish Council for Public Affairs

Joint Action Committee

Justice in Aging

Justice Roundtable

Juvenile Law Center

Kansas Black Farmers Association Inc

Lambda Legal

Landowners Association of Texas

Leadership Conference on Civil & Human Rights

League of Women Voters of the United States

Mennonite Central Committee U.S. Washington Office

Mommieactivist and Sons

MomsRising

MoveOn

Muslim Advocates

NAACP

NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc.

National Action Network

National Advocacy Center of the Sisters of the Good Shepherd

National Association of Human Rights Workers

National Association of Social Workers

National Center for Transgender Equality

National Council of Churches

National Council on Independent Living

National Domestic Workers Alliance

National Down Syndrome Congress

National Education Association

National Employment Law Project

National Equality Action Team (NEAT)

National Housing Law Project

National Latino Farmers & Ranchers Trade Association

National LGBTQ Task Force Action Fund

National Organization for Women

National Partnership for Women & Families

Natural Resources Defense Council

NETWORK Lobby for Catholic Social Justice

New America’s Open Technology Institute

Oklahoma Black Historical Research Project, Inc.

Open Society Policy Center

Oxfam America

People For the American Way

People’s Action

Pesticide Action Network

PFLAG National

Prison Policy Initiative

Public Citizen

Public Justice

Rabbinical Assembly

RAICES

Restore The Fourth

Rural Advancement Fund of the National Sharecroppers Fund

Rural Coalition

Silver State Equality-Nevada

Southern Border Communities Coalition

SPLC Action Fund

Stand for Children

Stand Up America

Students for Sensible Drug Policy

T’ruah

Texas Progressive Action Network

Texas Watch

The Agenda Project

The Black Alliance for Just Immigration (BAJI)

The Daniel Initiative

The Sikh Coalition

The Workers Circle

Union for Reform Judaism

United Church of Christ, Justice and Witness Ministries

UNITED SIKHS

United We Dream Action

Voices for Progress

Win Without War

Woman’s National Democratic Club (WNDC)



[1] Database of Police Shooting since 2015. (May 29, 2020). Fatal Force, The Washington Post, https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/investigations/police-shootings-database/

[2] The Sentencing Project. (Apr. 19, 2018). UN Report on Racial Disparities in the Criminal Justice System Available at, Report to the United Nations on Racial Disparities in the U.S. Criminal Justice System | The Sentencing Project

[3] Justice in Policing would prohibit no-knock warrants only in drug cases.

[4] Justice in Policing would eliminate QI for police officers only.

[5] Justice in Policing limits the transfer of certain equipment, doesn’t eliminate the 1033 program.

* * * * * END EXCERPT * * * * *
Scientology partnering with a veritable Who’s Who list of leftist organizations on Criminal Justice “reform.”
How interesting!
 

ISNOINews

Independent Scientology and Nation of Islam news
It's PR positioning by the COS. Haven't you guys read the Hubbard's Positioning in the marketing and public relations series in the OEC's.

Veda posts about it, many times in the past. Just got to connect dots.

The COS just wants to position itself with what is popular and make themselves sound for it, although that it is NOT the case with getting involved with scientology, you can only do as Ron says,
Yes, I have read about Hubbard's "positioning" in the marketing and public relations series in the OECs.

Yes, I know that the COS just wants to position itself with what is popular.

Those things are besides the point.

The point is that after years of simultaneously trying to ingratiate itself with President Trump and the MAGA community (e.g., through Trish Duggan, Greg Mitchell and Joy Villa), and with the liberal religious and civil rights community (e.g., through the Church of Scientology National Affairs Office), the COS was faced with an issue where it had to choose between the two. The COS chose to side with the liberal religious and civil rights community and against President Trump and the MAGA community. That is significant.
 

Churchill

Well-known member
Positioning Scientology as “above the fray” in terms of the current left-right political divide is probably a smart defensive strategy particularly in light of what is anticipated to be a high profile criminal case in which Scientology will prominently be featured in a supporting role.
In left-leaning Los Angeles politics (red or blue) has become a kind of shorthand for distinguishing friend from foe.
It’s similar to the way Bloods and Crips identify one another by the colors worn.
Greg Mitchell could be the driving force behind this, or, more likely just doing Miscavige’s bidding.
It’s a working hypothesis that offers one possible explanation, is all.
 

ISNOINews

Independent Scientology and Nation of Islam news
Positioning Scientology as “above the fray” in terms of the current left-right political divide is probably a smart defensive strategy particularly in light of what is anticipated to be a high profile criminal case in which Scientology will prominently be featured in a supporting role.
In left-leaning Los Angeles politics (red or blue) has become a kind of shorthand for distinguishing friend from foe.
It’s similar to the way Bloods and Crips identify one another by the colors worn.
Greg Mitchell could be the driving force behind this, or, more likely just doing Miscavige’s bidding.
It’s a working hypothesis that offers one possible explanation, is all.
Except the COS did not remain “above the fray." It chose a side, and did so visibly by signing the letters at issue. It chose to side the liberal religious and civil rights groups against President Trump and the MAGA community.

Perhaps it had to choose one way or the other. After all, it either joined the letters when asked, or ot didn't. Still, the COS made its choice.
 

ISNOINews

Independent Scientology and Nation of Islam news
Letter signed by the Church of Scientology National Affairs Office opposing President Trump on the issue of police reform read by Senator Chuck Schumer and printed in the Congressional Record.



The letter:

Vote NO on the Motion to Proceed - S. 3985 the JUSTICE Act - The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights

* * * * * BEGIN EXCERPT * * * * *

Vote NO on the Motion to Proceed – S. 3985 the JUSTICE Act

JUSTICE REFORM RESOURCES 06.23,20

View this letter as a PDF here.

June 23, 2020

Vote NO on the Motion to Proceed – S. 3985 the JUSTICE Act

Dear Senators,

On behalf of The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights (The Leadership Conference), a coalition charged by its diverse membership of more than 220 national organizations to promote and protect civil and human rights in the United States, and the undersigned 138 organizations, we write to express our strong opposition to S. 3985, the Just and Unifying Solutions to Invigorate Communities Everywhere (JUSTICE) Act. The JUSTICE Act is an inadequate response to the decades of pain, hardship, and devastation that Black people have and continue to endure as a result of systemic racism and lax policies that fail to hold police accountable for misconduct. This bill falls woefully short of the comprehensive reform needed to address the current policing crisis and achieve meaningful law enforcement accountability. It is deeply problematic to meet this moment with a menial incremental approach that offers more funding to police, and few policies to effectively address the constant loss of Black lives at the hands of police. We therefore urge you to oppose the JUSTICE Act and vote no on the motion to proceed when this legislation is brought to the floor. The Leadership Conference will score this vote in our voting record for the 116th Congress.

Abusive policing practices, coupled with devastating state-sanctioned violence, have exacted systemic brutality and fatality upon Black people since our nation’s founding. Police have shot and killed more than 1,000 people in the United States over the past year,[1] and Black people are disproportionately more likely than white people to be killed by police.[2] The chronic structural issue of police killings and lawlessness against Black people have escalated to a boiling point in recent weeks following the deaths of individuals like Breonna Taylor, Dreasjon “Sean” Reed, George Floyd, Tony McDade, and others. The current protests in our cities are a response not only to the unjust policing of Black people, but also a call for action to public officials to enact bold, comprehensive, and structural change.

That is why, on June 1, 2020, The Leadership Conference sent Congress a letter outlining accountability principles that must be adopted as a baseline to address rampant, systemic, white supremacy in law enforcement across America. In less than 12 hours, more than 450 of this country’s most diverse civil rights, civil liberties, and racial justice organizations signed onto that letter because what was asked of Congress aligned with what advocates, policing experts, and other stakeholders agree is needed. The priorities highlighted are not only reasonable but reflect a bare minimum of what must be included in any policing legislation Congress adopts in order for systemic reform to occur.

These priorities are: (1) the creation of a use of force standard that allows force only when necessary and as a last resort; (2) a ban on chokeholds; (3) a ban on racial profiling; (4) the establishment of a police misconduct registry; (5) the inclusion of a “reckless” standard in 18 U.S.C. Section 242 that enables federal prosecutors to hold law enforcement accountable for criminal civil rights violations; (6) a prohibition on no-knock warrants, especially in drug cases[3]; (7) the elimination of the judge-made doctrine of qualified immunity, which allows officers and other government actors to evade accountability when they violate individuals’ rights[4]; and (8) the demilitarization of law enforcement agencies.[5] This accountability framework is reflected in S. 3912, the Justice in Policing Act of 2020.

Unfortunately, Senate majority leadership ignored these critical policies and introduced the JUSTICE Act, a bill that fails to align with our framework principles and will therefore not bring about the fundamental shift in policing our country needs. The bill does nothing to address current barriers to holding law enforcement accountable, such as abolishing qualified immunity or criminalizing the reckless use of force. It does not address, let alone prohibit, the perverse yet pervasive practice of racial profiling, nor does it include explicit bans on dangerous practices like chokeholds or no-knock warrants. It fails to address the militarization of police or the need for a national standard restricting the use of force, and lacks the national, robust, and publicly available misconduct registry required for true transparency.

Further, the JUSTICE Act provides more than $7 billion of additional federal dollars for law enforcement over the next five years, directly contradicting our coalition’s call and that of those marching in the streets to redefine public safety by reducing the footprint of our criminal legal system. Many of the crises that currently involve police responses, and which too often lead to mistreatment and increased mistrust, would be better handled through the addition of health providers, social workers, and others who can meet the needs of communities in a non-punitive manner. Pouring additional funding into a broken system is bad policy. Furthermore, considering the limited financial resources prompted by the COVID-19 pandemic, all policing reform models must reprioritize how limited dollars are spent. The programs authorized by the JUSTICE Act will necessarily mean fewer funds to tackle other issues critical to long-lasting safety, such as housing, education, and health care. Millions of people in the United States are calling for these kinds of direct investments into communities, and Congress should heed that call.

Now is the time for Congress to be bold and pass meaningful police accountability reform legislation. A vast and diverse collection of people from coast to coast are calling on lawmakers to prioritize Black communities and protect them from the systemic perils of over-policing, police brutality, misconduct, and harassment. It is your moral and ethical duty to ensure Black people and communities are free from the harm and threats from law enforcement and militarized police responses. It is also your responsibility to ensure that any legislation passed does not just provide lip service to these problems, but fully meets the critical needs of this moment and beyond. Passing watered-down legislation that fails to remedy the actual harms resulting in the loss of life is a moral statement that is inconsistent with a genuine belief that black lives matter. Anything less than full support for comprehensive legislation that holds police accountable is inexcusable. Further, any attempt to amend or salvage the JUSTICE Act will only serve to “check the box” and claim reform when, in actuality, no reform has occurred to combat police misconduct and to protect Black lives. For these reasons, we urge you to oppose the JUSTICE Act and vote no on the motion to proceed on this legislation.

Thank you for your leadership in advancing these important policy recommendations. If you have any questions about the issues raised in this letter, please contact Sakira Cook of The Leadership Conference at [email protected] or The Leadership Conference Justice Task Force co-chairs, Kanya Bennett of the ACLU, [email protected] and Hilary Shelton of the NAACP at [email protected].

Sincerely,

The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights

A Little Piece Of Light

ActionAid USA

AFGE Local 3354

African American Ministers In Action

Alabama State Association of Cooperatives

Alianza Americas

Alianza Nacional de Campesinas

American Association for Justice

American Atheists

American Civil Liberties Union

American Family Voices

American Federation of Teachers

American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO)

American Humanist Association

American Indian Mothers Inc.

American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC)

Americans for Democratic Action (ADA)

Amnesty International USA

Arkansas United

Asian Americans Advancing Justice | AAJC

Atrisco Community

Autistic Self Advocacy Network

Autistic Women and Nonbinary Network

Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law

Bend the Arc: Jewish Action

Black Farmers and Agriculturalists Association, Inc.

Bread for the World

Center for Disability Rights

Center for Law and Social Policy

Center for Responsible Lending

Center for the Study of Hate & Extremism-California State University, San Bernardino

Chi-Town GVP Summit

Church of Scientology National Affairs Office

Clearinghouse on Women’s Issues

Climate Reality Project

Coalition of Black Trade Unionists

Coalition on Human Needs

Coalition to Stop Gun Violence

Common Cause

CommonSpirit Health

Congregation of Our Lady of Charity of the Good Shepherd, U.S. Provinces

Constitutional Accountability Center

Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR)

CURE (Citizens United for Rehabilitation of Errants)

Daniet Initiative Set Project

Defending Rights & Dissent

Demand Progress

DemCast USA

Democracy 21

Drug Policy Alliance

Earthjustice

End Citizens United // Let America Vote Action Fund

Equal Rights Advocates

Equality California

Farmworker Association of Florida

Feminist Majority Foundation

Government Information Watch

Hindu American Foundation

Hispanic Federation

Human Rights Campaign

Human Rights First

Immigration Hub

IndivisAbility

Innocence Project

Japanese American Citizens League

Jewish Council for Public Affairs

Joint Action Committee

Justice in Aging

Justice Roundtable

Juvenile Law Center

Kansas Black Farmers Association Inc

Lambda Legal

Landowners Association of Texas

Leadership Conference on Civil & Human Rights

League of Women Voters of the United States

Mennonite Central Committee U.S. Washington Office

Mommieactivist and Sons

MomsRising

MoveOn

Muslim Advocates

NAACP

NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc.

National Action Network

National Advocacy Center of the Sisters of the Good Shepherd

National Association of Human Rights Workers

National Association of Social Workers

National Center for Transgender Equality

National Council of Churches

National Council on Independent Living

National Domestic Workers Alliance

National Down Syndrome Congress

National Education Association

National Employment Law Project

National Equality Action Team (NEAT)

National Housing Law Project

National Latino Farmers & Ranchers Trade Association

National LGBTQ Task Force Action Fund

National Organization for Women

National Partnership for Women & Families

Natural Resources Defense Council

NETWORK Lobby for Catholic Social Justice

New America’s Open Technology Institute

Oklahoma Black Historical Research Project, Inc.

Open Society Policy Center

Oxfam America

People For the American Way

People’s Action

Pesticide Action Network

PFLAG National

Prison Policy Initiative

Public Citizen

Public Justice

Rabbinical Assembly

RAICES

Restore The Fourth

Rural Advancement Fund of the National Sharecroppers Fund

Rural Coalition

Silver State Equality-Nevada

Southern Border Communities Coalition

SPLC Action Fund

Stand for Children

Stand Up America

Students for Sensible Drug Policy

T’ruah

Texas Progressive Action Network

Texas Watch

The Agenda Project

The Black Alliance for Just Immigration (BAJI)

The Daniel Initiative

The Sikh Coalition

The Workers Circle

Union for Reform Judaism

United Church of Christ, Justice and Witness Ministries

UNITED SIKHS

United We Dream Action

Voices for Progress

Win Without War

Woman’s National Democratic Club (WNDC)



[1] Database of Police Shooting since 2015. (May 29, 2020). Fatal Force, The Washington Post, https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/investigations/police-shootings-database/

[2] The Sentencing Project. (Apr. 19, 2018). UN Report on Racial Disparities in the Criminal Justice System Available at, Report to the United Nations on Racial Disparities in the U.S. Criminal Justice System | The Sentencing Project

[3] Justice in Policing would prohibit no-knock warrants only in drug cases.

[4] Justice in Policing would eliminate QI for police officers only.

[5] Justice in Policing limits the transfer of certain equipment, doesn’t eliminate the 1033 program.

* * * * * END EXCERPT * * * * *
 

ISNOINews

Independent Scientology and Nation of Islam news
The Church of Scientology AGAIN opposes President Trump on the issue of police reform.

This time, the Church of Scientology National Affairs Office joined a letter urging the Senate to vote "NO" on the Motion to Proceed on the Republican backed S. 3985, the JUSTICE Act. (The full text of the letter is both set forth at the end of this story and attached thereto.)

The Church of Scientology urges the Senate to vote "NO" because, consistent with the wishes of President Trump, the Republican backed JUSTICE Act would:

(1) NOT creae a use of force standard that allows force only when necessary and as a last resort;

(2) NOT ban chokeholds;

(3) NOT ban racial profiling;

(4) NOT establish a police misconduct registry;

(5) NOT provide for the inclusion of a “reckless” standard in 18 U.S.C. Section 242 to enable federal prosecutors to hold law enforcement accountable for criminal civil rights violations;

(6) NOT include s prohibition on no-knock warrants, especially in drug cases;

(7) NOT eliminate the judge-made doctrine of qualified immunity; and

(8) instead provide more than $7 billion of additional federal dollars for law enforcement over the next five years, directly contradicting the coalition’s (including signatory Church of Scientology's) call and that of those marching in the streets to redefine public safety by reducing the footprint of our criminal legal system.

In a direct challenge to President Trump and Senate Republicans, the letter states, "The Leadership Conference will score this vote in our voting record for the 116th Congress."

*****************************************

FULL TEXT OF LETTER

Vote NO on the Motion to Proceed - S. 3985 the JUSTICE Act - The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights

* * * * * BEGIN EXCERPT * * * * *

Vote NO on the Motion to Proceed – S. 3985 the JUSTICE Act

JUSTICE REFORM RESOURCES 06.23,20

View this letter as a PDF here.

June 23, 2020

Vote NO on the Motion to Proceed – S. 3985 the JUSTICE Act

Dear Senators,

On behalf of The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights (The Leadership Conference), a coalition charged by its diverse membership of more than 220 national organizations to promote and protect civil and human rights in the United States, and the undersigned 138 organizations, we write to express our strong opposition to S. 3985, the Just and Unifying Solutions to Invigorate Communities Everywhere (JUSTICE) Act. The JUSTICE Act is an inadequate response to the decades of pain, hardship, and devastation that Black people have and continue to endure as a result of systemic racism and lax policies that fail to hold police accountable for misconduct. This bill falls woefully short of the comprehensive reform needed to address the current policing crisis and achieve meaningful law enforcement accountability. It is deeply problematic to meet this moment with a menial incremental approach that offers more funding to police, and few policies to effectively address the constant loss of Black lives at the hands of police. We therefore urge you to oppose the JUSTICE Act and vote no on the motion to proceed when this legislation is brought to the floor. The Leadership Conference will score this vote in our voting record for the 116th Congress.

Abusive policing practices, coupled with devastating state-sanctioned violence, have exacted systemic brutality and fatality upon Black people since our nation’s founding. Police have shot and killed more than 1,000 people in the United States over the past year,[1] and Black people are disproportionately more likely than white people to be killed by police.[2] The chronic structural issue of police killings and lawlessness against Black people have escalated to a boiling point in recent weeks following the deaths of individuals like Breonna Taylor, Dreasjon “Sean” Reed, George Floyd, Tony McDade, and others. The current protests in our cities are a response not only to the unjust policing of Black people, but also a call for action to public officials to enact bold, comprehensive, and structural change.

That is why, on June 1, 2020, The Leadership Conference sent Congress a letter outlining accountability principles that must be adopted as a baseline to address rampant, systemic, white supremacy in law enforcement across America. In less than 12 hours, more than 450 of this country’s most diverse civil rights, civil liberties, and racial justice organizations signed onto that letter because what was asked of Congress aligned with what advocates, policing experts, and other stakeholders agree is needed. The priorities highlighted are not only reasonable but reflect a bare minimum of what must be included in any policing legislation Congress adopts in order for systemic reform to occur.

These priorities are: (1) the creation of a use of force standard that allows force only when necessary and as a last resort; (2) a ban on chokeholds; (3) a ban on racial profiling; (4) the establishment of a police misconduct registry; (5) the inclusion of a “reckless” standard in 18 U.S.C. Section 242 that enables federal prosecutors to hold law enforcement accountable for criminal civil rights violations; (6) a prohibition on no-knock warrants, especially in drug cases[3]; (7) the elimination of the judge-made doctrine of qualified immunity, which allows officers and other government actors to evade accountability when they violate individuals’ rights[4]; and (8) the demilitarization of law enforcement agencies.[5] This accountability framework is reflected in S. 3912, the Justice in Policing Act of 2020.

Unfortunately, Senate majority leadership ignored these critical policies and introduced the JUSTICE Act, a bill that fails to align with our framework principles and will therefore not bring about the fundamental shift in policing our country needs. The bill does nothing to address current barriers to holding law enforcement accountable, such as abolishing qualified immunity or criminalizing the reckless use of force. It does not address, let alone prohibit, the perverse yet pervasive practice of racial profiling, nor does it include explicit bans on dangerous practices like chokeholds or no-knock warrants. It fails to address the militarization of police or the need for a national standard restricting the use of force, and lacks the national, robust, and publicly available misconduct registry required for true transparency.

Further, the JUSTICE Act provides more than $7 billion of additional federal dollars for law enforcement over the next five years, directly contradicting our coalition’s call and that of those marching in the streets to redefine public safety by reducing the footprint of our criminal legal system. Many of the crises that currently involve police responses, and which too often lead to mistreatment and increased mistrust, would be better handled through the addition of health providers, social workers, and others who can meet the needs of communities in a non-punitive manner. Pouring additional funding into a broken system is bad policy. Furthermore, considering the limited financial resources prompted by the COVID-19 pandemic, all policing reform models must reprioritize how limited dollars are spent. The programs authorized by the JUSTICE Act will necessarily mean fewer funds to tackle other issues critical to long-lasting safety, such as housing, education, and health care. Millions of people in the United States are calling for these kinds of direct investments into communities, and Congress should heed that call.

Now is the time for Congress to be bold and pass meaningful police accountability reform legislation. A vast and diverse collection of people from coast to coast are calling on lawmakers to prioritize Black communities and protect them from the systemic perils of over-policing, police brutality, misconduct, and harassment. It is your moral and ethical duty to ensure Black people and communities are free from the harm and threats from law enforcement and militarized police responses. It is also your responsibility to ensure that any legislation passed does not just provide lip service to these problems, but fully meets the critical needs of this moment and beyond. Passing watered-down legislation that fails to remedy the actual harms resulting in the loss of life is a moral statement that is inconsistent with a genuine belief that black lives matter. Anything less than full support for comprehensive legislation that holds police accountable is inexcusable. Further, any attempt to amend or salvage the JUSTICE Act will only serve to “check the box” and claim reform when, in actuality, no reform has occurred to combat police misconduct and to protect Black lives. For these reasons, we urge you to oppose the JUSTICE Act and vote no on the motion to proceed on this legislation.

Thank you for your leadership in advancing these important policy recommendations. If you have any questions about the issues raised in this letter, please contact Sakira Cook of The Leadership Conference at [email protected] or The Leadership Conference Justice Task Force co-chairs, Kanya Bennett of the ACLU, [email protected] and Hilary Shelton of the NAACP at [email protected].

Sincerely,

The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights

A Little Piece Of Light

ActionAid USA

AFGE Local 3354

African American Ministers In Action

Alabama State Association of Cooperatives

Alianza Americas

Alianza Nacional de Campesinas

American Association for Justice

American Atheists

American Civil Liberties Union

American Family Voices

American Federation of Teachers

American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO)

American Humanist Association

American Indian Mothers Inc.

American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC)

Americans for Democratic Action (ADA)

Amnesty International USA

Arkansas United

Asian Americans Advancing Justice | AAJC

Atrisco Community

Autistic Self Advocacy Network

Autistic Women and Nonbinary Network

Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law

Bend the Arc: Jewish Action

Black Farmers and Agriculturalists Association, Inc.

Bread for the World

Center for Disability Rights

Center for Law and Social Policy

Center for Responsible Lending

Center for the Study of Hate & Extremism-California State University, San Bernardino

Chi-Town GVP Summit

Church of Scientology National Affairs Office

Clearinghouse on Women’s Issues

Climate Reality Project

Coalition of Black Trade Unionists

Coalition on Human Needs

Coalition to Stop Gun Violence

Common Cause

CommonSpirit Health

Congregation of Our Lady of Charity of the Good Shepherd, U.S. Provinces

Constitutional Accountability Center

Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR)

CURE (Citizens United for Rehabilitation of Errants)

Daniet Initiative Set Project

Defending Rights & Dissent

Demand Progress

DemCast USA

Democracy 21

Drug Policy Alliance

Earthjustice

End Citizens United // Let America Vote Action Fund

Equal Rights Advocates

Equality California

Farmworker Association of Florida

Feminist Majority Foundation

Government Information Watch

Hindu American Foundation

Hispanic Federation

Human Rights Campaign

Human Rights First

Immigration Hub

IndivisAbility

Innocence Project

Japanese American Citizens League

Jewish Council for Public Affairs

Joint Action Committee

Justice in Aging

Justice Roundtable

Juvenile Law Center

Kansas Black Farmers Association Inc

Lambda Legal

Landowners Association of Texas

Leadership Conference on Civil & Human Rights

League of Women Voters of the United States

Mennonite Central Committee U.S. Washington Office

Mommieactivist and Sons

MomsRising

MoveOn

Muslim Advocates

NAACP

NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc.

National Action Network

National Advocacy Center of the Sisters of the Good Shepherd

National Association of Human Rights Workers

National Association of Social Workers

National Center for Transgender Equality

National Council of Churches

National Council on Independent Living

National Domestic Workers Alliance

National Down Syndrome Congress

National Education Association

National Employment Law Project

National Equality Action Team (NEAT)

National Housing Law Project

National Latino Farmers & Ranchers Trade Association

National LGBTQ Task Force Action Fund

National Organization for Women

National Partnership for Women & Families

Natural Resources Defense Council

NETWORK Lobby for Catholic Social Justice

New America’s Open Technology Institute

Oklahoma Black Historical Research Project, Inc.

Open Society Policy Center

Oxfam America

People For the American Way

People’s Action

Pesticide Action Network

PFLAG National

Prison Policy Initiative

Public Citizen

Public Justice

Rabbinical Assembly

RAICES

Restore The Fourth

Rural Advancement Fund of the National Sharecroppers Fund

Rural Coalition

Silver State Equality-Nevada

Southern Border Communities Coalition

SPLC Action Fund

Stand for Children

Stand Up America

Students for Sensible Drug Policy

T’ruah

Texas Progressive Action Network

Texas Watch

The Agenda Project

The Black Alliance for Just Immigration (BAJI)

The Daniel Initiative

The Sikh Coalition

The Workers Circle

Union for Reform Judaism

United Church of Christ, Justice and Witness Ministries

UNITED SIKHS

United We Dream Action

Voices for Progress

Win Without War

Woman’s National Democratic Club (WNDC)



[1] Database of Police Shooting since 2015. (May 29, 2020). Fatal Force, The Washington Post, https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/investigations/police-shootings-database/

[2] The Sentencing Project. (Apr. 19, 2018). UN Report on Racial Disparities in the Criminal Justice System Available at, Report to the United Nations on Racial Disparities in the U.S. Criminal Justice System | The Sentencing Project

[3] Justice in Policing would prohibit no-knock warrants only in drug cases.

[4] Justice in Policing would eliminate QI for police officers only.

[5] Justice in Policing limits the transfer of certain equipment, doesn’t eliminate the 1033 program.

* * * * * END EXCERPT * * * * *
Speaker Nancy Pelosi reads from letter signed by the Church of Scientology National Affairs Office oppsing the Republican sponsored JUSTICE Act supported by President Trump.

 

ISNOINews

Independent Scientology and Nation of Islam news
The Church of Scientology opposes President Trump on the issue of police reform.

On June 21, 2020, President Trump tweeted:



View attachment 4491


* * * * * BEGIN EXCERPT * * * * *

The Democrat House wants to pass a Bill this week that will destroy our police. Republican Congressmen & Congresswomen will hopefully fight hard to defeat it. We must protect and cherish our police, they keep us safe!

* * * * * BEGIN EXCERPT * * * * *


President Trump is referring to H.R. 7120, The George Floyd Justice in Policing Act of 2020.

The Church of Scientology not only supports The George Floyd Justice in Policing Act of 2020, but on June 18, 2020 the Church of Scientology National Affairs Office joined a letter urging Congress to strengthen the Act. (The full text of the letter is both set forth at the end of this story and attached thereto.)

Significantly, and contrary to the wishes of President Trump, the Church of Scientology urges Congress to strengthen the Act by:

(1l) abolishing qualified immunity;

(2) creating a federal cause of action against federal law enforcement officials to recover damages, also without qualifief immunity;

(3) making the changes in (1) and (2) above retroactive;

(4) making it clear that the existing pattern or practice statute (34 U.S.C. Section 12601) covers the actions of prosecutors and juvenile courts;

(5) adding a new section of the criminal statute, Section 242(A), which would specifically criminalize the reckless use of excessive force and all intentional use of excessive force;

(6) eliminating the1033 program, which currently provides for the transfer of military equipment through the Department of Defense to police departments, sheriff departments and other local law enforcement agencies; and

(7) banning not only no-knock warrants in all drug cases, but also all no-knock and quick-knock raids.

In short, the position taken by the Church of Scientology is diametrically opposed to the position of President Trump on all of these issues.


*****************************************

FULL TEXT OF LETTER

Church of Scientology National Affairs Office joins letter urging Congress to strengthen The George Floyd Justice in Policing Act of 2020 (JPA), H.R. 7120.

Coalition Letter on H.R. 7120 “George Floyd Justice in Policing Act” - The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights

* * * * * BEGIN EXCERPT * * * * *

Coalition Letter on H.R. 7120 “George Floyd Justice in Policing Act”

JUSTICE REFORM RESOURCES 06.18,20

View this letter as a PDF here.

June 18, 2020

Coalition Letter on H.R. 7120 “George Floyd Justice in Policing Act”

Dear Representatives,

On behalf of The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights (The Leadership Conference), a coalition charged by its diverse membership of more than 220 national organizations to promote and protect civil and human rights in the United States, and the 81 undersigned organizations, we write to urge you to strengthen The George Floyd Justice in Policing Act of 2020 (JPA). The JPA takes important steps forward in achieving meaningful police accountability, however, we believe we can, and must, rise to this moment and put forth the strongest bill possible by improving upon key areas within the bill.

On June 1, 2020, The Leadership Conference sent Congress a letter outlining accountability principles that must be adopted to address rampant, systemic, white supremacy in policing across America.[1] In less than 12 hours, more than 450 of this country’s most diverse civil rights, civil liberties and racial justice organizations signed on to that letter because what was asked of Congress aligned with what advocates, policing experts, and other stakeholders agree is needed. The priorities are not only reasonable but reflect a bare minimum of what must be in the JPA for systemic police reform to occur.

These priorities are: (1) the creation of a use of force standard that allows force when necessary and as a last resort; (2) a ban on chokeholds; (3) a ban on racial profiling; (4) the establishment of a police misconduct registry; (5) the inclusion of a “reckless” standard in 18 U.S.C. Section 242 that enables federal prosecutors to hold law enforcement accountable for criminal civil rights violations; (6) a prohibition on no-knock warrants, especially in drug cases; (7) the elimination of the judge-made doctrine of qualified immunity, which allows officers and other government actors to evade accountability when they violate individuals’ civil rights; and (8) the demilitarization of law enforcement agencies.[2]

Upon introduction of the JPA, The Leadership Conference and many partner organizations applauded the bill’s important provisions, particularly those sections that allow the use of deadly force only as a last resort, ban chokeholds, prohibit racial and religious profiling, and make it easier to hold police accountable for misconduct.[3] And while many of the provisions in the JPA are vital and responsive to the priorities called for by our coalition, they must be perfected to ensure that the intent behind the reforms is fully realized. There are a number of critical adjustments that should be made to the JPA in order to strengthen it and ensure the comprehensive police transparency and accountability that it intends.

Accountability: Qualified Immunity, Bivens, Pattern or Practice & Color of Law Prosecutions

Qualified immunity is a judge-made doctrine that provides police officers and other government actors with a defense when they have committed constitutional violations, including brutal acts of violence. This doctrine renders it nearly impossible to hold government officials accountable, leaving those who have experienced violence and misconduct by state actors with no recourse or prospect for recovering damages. The current JPA language would codify this doctrine by adopting flawed Supreme Court precedent and limiting it to a subset of state actors. No government actor should be able to deny a person of their civil rights and civil liberties with impunity, which is why qualified immunity must be abolished.

Additionally, the language in the JPA does not go far enough to address federal level accountability. While the Supreme Court has recognized that there are circumstances in which the U.S. Constitution authorizes victims of federal law enforcement officials to recover damages, federal courts have significantly curtailed the availability of these so-called “Bivens” claims in recent years.[4] The JPA does not create a federal cause of action, but merely removes qualified immunity for federal law enforcement in the Bivens context the Supreme Court currently recognizes. Congress must enact Bivens causes of action while completely eliminating the qualified immunity defense.

These changes must also apply retroactively, given the various cases before courts across this nation dealing with qualified immunity, Bivens, and accountability for federal law enforcement officials. Moreover, this week, the Supreme Court chose not to take up several qualified immunity cases, suggesting that the Court might not be likely to change the doctrine any time soon.[5] Therefore, it is all the more imperative for Congress to act, as the Court will not. that the JPA needs to abolish qualified immunity for all government actors so that individuals have access to a neutral judge who may vindicate their civil and constitutional rights.

Further, we ask that the JPA make clear that the existing pattern or practice statute (34 U.S. C. Section 12601) covers the actions of prosecutors and juvenile courts. In addition, in the authority given to states attorneys general, we would appreciate an explicit authorization of the use of grants for the creation of a special pattern and practice office that independently investigates potential abuses.

Finally, with respect to holding law enforcement officers criminally accountable for violating a person’s civil rights, we recommend adding a new section of the statute, Section 242(A), which specifically criminalizes the reckless use of excessive force and the intentional use of excessive force. These changes would address many of the current barriers to securing a conviction under 18 U.S.C. Section 242 that have prevented accountability and securing justice for victims, while preserving existing authority under Section 242.

Transparency: Police Misconduct Registry and Robust Data Collection

Police transparency and data accessibility are vital for progress to occur in our society. We welcome sections of the JPA that are responsive to our coalition’s call for increased data collection and reporting, ending racial profiling, and the establishment of a national registry of all federal, state, and local law enforcement officials.[6] We welcome the mandatory reporting provisions that would require law enforcement agencies to submit data to the U.S. Attorney General, including information about officer certifications, to remain eligible for Byrne grant funds.

However, to ensure public transparency, we also request that the JPA bill not obstruct public access to relevant records in the registry. The JPA bill currently contains a privacy provision, Section 201(e)(2) that may restrict public disclosure of important information in the police registry. For years, people of this nation have faced tremendous obstacles in accessing police records, which are critical for public oversight. The public interest in ensuring police transparency and accountability far outweighs the privacy concerns of police officers in their role as public servants. The public has a right to know when and which law enforcement officers have engaged in practices that are harmful to communities.

Furthermore, while we are pleased with the inclusion of misconduct records related to use of force and racial profiling, the bill does not include the collection of other pertinent information related to sexual assault, domestic violence, harassment, violence toward a minor, perjury, tampering with or destroying evidence, bias or other civil rights violations and other misconduct. These omissions limit the ability of the public and law enforcement executives to measure the extent of the officer misconduct.

Finally, the bill needs strong enforcement mechanisms to end racial profiling and must also strengthen data collection and publication on all police enforcement activities, including demographic information. Law enforcement should be required to report the legal justifications for investigatory activities; reporting requirements must mandate quarterly reporting cycles; all data should be publicly reported and subjected to the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA); and the data collection demonstration project section 333 of the bill is duplicative and thus should be eliminated.

Demilitarization: 1033 Program and No-Knock & Quick-Knock Warrants

The militarization of policing in America, and the rise of the warrior cop mentality against Black and other marginalized communities, is made possible in part through the federal government’s transfer of weapons and vehicles of war to state and local police.[7] Data has shown that the increased transfer of equipment through the Department of Defense 1033 program increases the number of police killings in communities,[8] particularly in the context of SWAT drug raids.[9]

While the JPA takes a good first step in limiting the transfer of military equipment, the bill keeps intact the 1033 program, which has been notoriously mismanaged through the years.[10] Our coalition calls for complete elimination of all surplus, military grade weapons and equipment to federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies.[11] As for non-military equipment, such as desks and other office equipment, we call on Congress to transfer those items through a new agency and program that makes this equipment available to community organizations and state and local institutions beyond law enforcement.

Moreover, while a complete end to all no-knock warrants in all drug cases is also a welcome first step, Congress can and should go further to ban quick-knock raids, which carry the same risks involved in the execution of no-knock warrants.[12] Militarized police responses to drug investigations, where either a no-knock warrant or quick-knock raid is executed, are disproportionately used against people of color and lead to loss of life.[13] The JPA must disallow these practices from continuing.

Funding: Additional Federal Dollars

As it currently stands, the JPA provides hundreds of millions of additional federal dollars to state and local law enforcement agencies, including prosecutors’ offices, without significant guardrails in place to ensure those resources are used in the manner in which they are intended. Providing more dollars to the criminal-legal system expressly contradicts what our coalition has reasonably requested – to condition existing federal dollars received by states on the adoption of the critical policies outlined in the bill.[14] The bill also allocates new resources to the Department of Justice to study and implement best practices in training and accreditation, among other things. These resources could be better spent supporting community-led solutions to reimagining public safety. The nearly $1 billion allocated in the JPA continues to pour federal money into systems that may not reflect community demands, when millions of people in the United States are calling for direct investments into communities during this critical moment. All funding amounts outlined in the bill should be removed and recaptured in a new general appropriations authorization provision, allowing stakeholders to work with Congress to determine through the appropriations process where money is most needed to increase accountability and transparency in policing.

Additionally, provisions in the bill allowing for grant funds to develop uniform standards on school safety — including with respect to use of lethal and nonlethal force — raise concerns about reinforcing the role of law enforcement in schools through the use of school resource officers. The coalition has previously taken the position in its Civil Rights Principles for Safe, Healthy, and Inclusive School Climates that school-based law enforcement should be eliminated and instead resources should be used to support students through evidence-based programs that are proven to create positive and safe school climates.[15] We urge Congress to ensure that relevant provisions of JPA are consistent with these principles.

Finally, the bill allocates grant dollars for body worn cameras, without restrictions to prevent them from contributing to our already bloated surveillance infrastructure. Specifically, the bill does not fully prohibit use of biometric and facial surveillance on footage obtained from these cameras. This omission is particularly striking, given that many jurisdictions already prohibit such actions and that a multitude of private companies, including Amazon, IBM, Microsoft, and Google, halted sales of face recognition to the police due to concerns that it can exacerbate existing police abuses.[16]

Conclusion

A vast and diverse collection of people, from coast to coast, and from streets across our nation, are calling on lawmakers to prioritize Black communities. It is time to change our laws to make “Black Lives Matter” more than a slogan. Congress has begun the process of heeding those calls with the historic introduction of The George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, but we can, and should go, further. We urge Congress to include the policy changes our coalition offers in order to perfect this bill and rectify the systemic racism that has taken the lives of countless Black and Brown people.

Ultimately, however, we must note that while the JPA takes important steps to address police violence and accountability, these changes will only take us so far. Congress must also reexamine federal spending priorities and shrink the footprint of the police and criminal legal system in this country. This means shifting billions of federal, taxpayer dollars away from criminalization, including policing, toward rebuilding communities of color, especially Black communities, which have been historically underfunded, under resourced and decimated by systemic racism.[17]

Thank you for your leadership in advancing these important policy recommendations. We look forward to continuing to work with members of this body as the legislation moves through Congress. If you have any questions or concerns follow-up, please contact Sakira Cook of The Leadership Conference at [email protected] or Kanya Bennett of the ACLU at [email protected].

Sincerely,

The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights

American Civil Liberties Union

ActionAid USA

Agroecology Research-Action Collective

Alabama Rivers Alliance

Alabama State Association of Cooperatives

Alianza Nacional de Campesinas

American Atheists

Amnesty International USA

Asian Americans Advancing Justice | AAJC

Autistic Self Advocacy Network

Autistic Women and Nonbinary Network

Bend the Arc: Jewish Action

Beyond Rosies

Black Farmers & Ranchers New Mexico

Bread for the World

Center for Disability Rights

Center for the Study of Hate & Extremism, California State University, San Bernardino

Church of Scientology National Affairs Office

Coalition to Stop Gun Violence

Concerned Citizens of Tillery

Congregation of Our Lady of Charity of Good Shepherd, U.S. Provinces

Constitutional Accountability Center

Defending Rights & Dissent

Demand Progress

Drug Policy Alliance

Farmworker Association of Florida

Friends Committee on National Legislation

Government Information Watch

Health in Justice Action Lab, Northeastern University School of Law

Human Rights Campaign

Human Rights for Kids

Innocence Project

Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy

Interfaith Action for Human Rights

Iowa Citizens for Community Improvement

Jewish Council for Public Affairs

The Justice Roundtable

Justice for Women Covid-19 Task Force

Kansas Black Farmers Association

King Bishop’s Entertainment LLC

Lambda Legal

Land Stewardship Project

League of Women Voters of the United States

March For Our Lives

Muslim Advocates

NAACP

National Advocacy Center of the Sisters of the Good Shepherd

National Coalition Against Domestic Violence

National Council of Churches

National Employment Law Project

National Hmong American Farmers

National Immigrant Farming Initiative, Inc.

National Latino Farmers and Ranchers Trade Association

National Organization for Women

National Urban League

NETWORK Lobby for Catholic Social Justice

Newtown Action Alliance

North Carolina Association of Black Lawyers Land Loss Prevention Project

Oklahoma Black Historical Research Project, Inc.

Open Society Policy Center

Operation Spring Plant, Inc.

OVEC-Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition

Pennsylvania Council of Churches

Release Aging People in Prison/RAPP

Results for America

Rural Advancement Fund of the National Sharecroppers Fund

Rural Coalition

Sisters of Mercy of the Americas Justice Team

States United to Prevent Gun Violence

Texas Mexico Border Coalition CBO

The Daniel Initiative

The Diversity Center

The Sikh Coalition

TN State Conference NAACP

Town of Atrisco (NM) Land Grant

UnidosUS

United Methodist Women

Voices for Progress

WE ACT for Environmental Justice

Women’s Community Justice Association

YWCA USA



[1] Letter from The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, et al., to Congressional Leadership. (June 1, 2020). http://civilrightsdocs.info/pdf/policy/letters/2020/Coalition_Letter_to_House_and_Senate_Leadership_on_Federal_Policing_Priorites_Final_6.1.20.pdf

[2] Ibid.

[3] Civil Rights Leaders’ Statement on Justice in Policing Act. (June 6, 2020). The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights. Civil Rights Leaders’ Statement on Justice in Policing Act - The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights

[4] See, e.g., Hemenway, A. (Dec. 15, 2017). Civil Rights Litigation: The Supreme Court Further Restricts Bivens Actions. The Lawletter Blog. National Legal Research Group, Inc. Civil Rights Litigation: The Supreme Court Further Restricts Bivens Actions

[5] Supreme Court of the United States. Certiori – Summary Dispositions (June 15, 2020). https://www.supremecourt.gov/orders/courtorders/061520zor_f2bh.pdf

[6] Letter from The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, et al., to Congressional Leadership. (June 1, 2020). http://civilrightsdocs.info/pdf/policy/letters/2020/Coalition_Letter_to_House_and_Senate_Leadership_on_Federal_Policing_Priorites_Final_6.1.20.pdf

[7] American Civil Liberties Union. (June 2014). War Comes Home: The Excessive Militarization of American Policing. War Comes Home: The Excessive Militarization of American Police.

[8] Ibid.

[9] Sack, K. (Mar. 18, 2018). Door-Busting Drug Raids Leave a Trail of Blood, The New York Times. Door-Busting Drug Raids Leave a Trail of Blood.

[10] John, A. (Sept. 2, 2014). Police Departments Keep Losing Their Military Humvees and Assault Rifles. The Atlantic. Police Departments Keep Losing Their Military Humvees and Assault Rifles

[11] Letter from The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, et al., to Congressional Leadership. (June 1, 2020). http://civilrightsdocs.info/pdf/policy/letters/2020/Coalition_Letter_to_House_and_Senate_Leadership_on_Federal_Policing_Priorites_Final_6.1.20.pdf

[12] Ibid.

[13] DPA Urges Congress to Strengthen Police Reform. (June 9, 2020). Drug Policy Alliance. DPA Urges Congress to Strengthen Police Reform Bill

[14] Testimony of Vanita Gupta, President and CEO, The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, Policing Practices and Law Enforcement Accountablity: Hearing Before the United States House of Representatives Committee on the Judiciary, 116th Cong. (2020). http://civilrightsdocs.info/VG Policing Testimony 06-10-20_final.pdf

[15] The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, Civil Rights Principles for Safe, Healthy, and Inclusive School Climates. (Sept. 4, 2019). http://civilrightsdocs.info/pdf/education/School-Climate-Principles.pdf

[16] See, e.g., Hamilton, I. (June 13, 2020). Outrage over police brutality has finally convinced Amazon, Microsoft, and IBM to rule out selling facial recognition tech to law enforcement. Here’s what’s going on. Business Insider. Outrage over police brutality has finally convinced Amazon, Microsoft, and IBM to rule out selling facial recognition tech to law enforcement. Here's what's going on.

[17] Testimony of Vanita Gupta, President and CEO, The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, Policing Practices and Law Enforcement Accountablity: Hearing Before the United States House of Representatives Committee on the Judiciary, 116th Cong. (2020). http://civilrightsdocs.info/VG Policing Testimony 06-10-20_final.pdf

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Defying President Trump, the House of Representatives approves police reform bill named in honor of George Floyd supported by the Church of Scientology.

House approves police reform bill named in honor of George Floyd


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