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For Immediate Release
Contact:

Andre Ory, media@aiusa.org

Trump's Executive Order on Policing Falls Flat on Accountability for the Taking of Black Lives

WASHINGTON

Responding to an Executive Order by United States President Donald J. Trump on policing, Kristina Roth, the Senior Program Officer for Criminal Justice Programs at Amnesty International USA, said:

"President Trump's Executive Order amounts to a band-aid for a bullet wound, and the public will not be easily fooled by half measures when this moment is calling for transformational change of policing. Black families will continue to have to prepare their children on how to survive an interaction with police and say the names of their loved ones that did not make it home. The United States needs much stronger national standards to provide parameters on the use of force and restrict the use of deadly force, to ensure accountability when these boundaries are breached by law enforcement officers. Law enforcement officers must respect people's basic human rights to equal protection of the law, freedom from discrimination, the right to be safe, and most importantly, the right to survive an interaction with law enforcement officers. This Executive Order attempts to cover harmful rhetoric from this administration encouraging excessive force and that police rough people up, with a modest proposal.

"When Eric Garner was killed by police nearly six years ago, the chokehold used by Officer Pantaleo was already banned by the NYPD's policy. Meaningful accountability cannot exclusively be relegated to a police department's use of force policies or training. In fact, there are police departments whose policies exceed that of their state's use of force law, yet officers continue to kill Black people with impunity. This kind of violence is pervasive in Black and brown communities. Our system of justice should seek to live up to its name, as people take to the streets to demand we reimagine public safety. We must push for our criminal justice system to be transformed, and that the use of force must be limited as a tactic, unless necessary in a situation, and with no other possible means to de-escalate."

Background and context

Amnesty International USA is calling for meaningful reforms to end police violence and demanding the U.S. government respect, protect and fulfill the human rights of Black people. These calls include a push for Congress to pass the PEACE Act, included in the Justice in Policing Act, to create a national use of force standard that prioritizes limiting lethal force as a last resort instead of a first option. It is not enough that only our federal law enforcement officers be subject to limitations of use of force, which is why the PEACE Act seeks to compel all 50 states to meet these new legal standards.

In response to George Floyd's killing, Amnesty International USA has been calling for police accountability for the use of deadly force. As protesters have taken to the streets to call for change, Amnesty International USA spoke out against the excessive force used by law enforcement, calling for demilitarization and dialogue. As President Trump has used rhetoric against those practicing their right to protest peacefully, Amnesty International USA has called for systemic change.

Amnesty International has been monitoring police forces in cities across the country using tear gas and other crowd control agents in the recent protests. A new investigation launched last week analyzes the misuse of tear gas in the U.S. and around the world. Amnesty International USA has created a guide for law enforcement officials policing demonstrations and a guide for those participating in the protests how they can protest safely.

This statement is available at: https://www.amnestyusa.org/press-releases/trumps-executive-order-on-policing-falls-flat-on-accountability-for-the-taking-of-black-lives

Amnesty International is a global movement of millions of people demanding human rights for all people - no matter who they are or where they are. We are the world's largest grassroots human rights organization.

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