cross-posted from: https://sh.itjust.works/post/50073268

After more than a dozen years of federal oversight, a judge will finally decide whether New Orleans can police itself again.

U.S. District Judge Susie Morgan is expected to end the consent decree that has governed the NOPD since 2013. The city voluntarily entered the agreement following a federal investigation that found systemic problems including excessive force, biased policing and inadequate training and supervision.

The final hearing in U.S. v. The City Of New Orleans is scheduled for Wednesday morning at Loyola University Law School.

City attorneys argue the department has largely complied with court-ordered reforms and established safeguards to prevent backsliding. In a May brief to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeal, they wrote that “none of the systemic violations of the federal laws alleged in the DOJ’s 2012 complaint have been found in more than two years.”

The brief concluded that “the City had substantially fulfilled the Consent Decree’s objectives, with no evidence suggesting a likelihood of regression. Continued enforcement is inequitable and unconstitutional.”

The Department of Justice joined the city in September in calling for an end to the decree—a move that gained momentum after President Donald Trump signed an executive order requiring a review and possible termination of all existing federal consent decrees.

City leaders have increasingly viewed the oversight as overly burdensome and costly, with annual costs estimated at $11 million and total spending projected between $130 million and $150 million over the decree’s lifetime.

“The millions of taxpayer dollars sucked up by the Consent Decree after there was no longer an underlying Constitution violation are the very funds NOPD needed to keep the City safe,” Attorney General Liz Murrill’s office wrote in a brief that supported the city’s push to end the decree.

Mayor LaToya Cantrell has argued that federal oversight also hurts police morale and makes it difficult to recruit and retain officers.

The ACLU of Louisiana said it is deeply troubled by the move to end federal oversight. The organization called it “a stark reversal of the city’s recent commitment to a two-year sustainment period, agreed upon by both city officials and the courts just months ago.”

The ACLU also noted the decision reflects a troubling national trend, as the current administration’s Department of Justice “signals its intent to roll back police oversight and dismantle consent decrees nationwide.”

Judge Morgan’s decision will challenge the department to prove its reforms can endure without the court’s supervision.

  • Basic Glitch@sh.itjust.worksOP
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    14 days ago

    Oh wow, what lucky timing.

    The restrictive Federal “handcuffs” of the New Orleans consent decree are expected to finally be removed on Wednesday. Just in time for Border Patrol to arrive on Friday.

    Now that the oppressive overreach of the federal government is finally coming to an end, local law enforcement can relax and breathe a little easier knowing that they will have no (legal) excuse not to show some hospitality, and help out their federal occupiers guests with immigration arrests that are carried out during the federal takeover visit.

    However, if they try to refuse federal orders, or are accused by their federal occupiers friends of “hindering” immigration operations in any way, a state law which was passed in the spring may mean that law enforcement officers can actually be charged with a crime, and placed in physical handcuffs (not like the figurative handcuffs of the oppressive consent decree), and even sentenced to prison.

    Thank God our red as a baboon’s ass state is run by so many small government loving Republicans who were kind enough to create the state law. Especially after suing our city earlier in the year, to attempt to force the local sheriff to ignore the consent decree, and losing. Truly blessed 🙏

    And then to be kind enough to collude coordinate with the federal government to arrange our occupation visit from federal friends on our behalf. They really shouldn’t have done all that for our little blue dot. How kind of the state and federal governments to think about little ole us, and offer to help us in any way they can except just paying us the fucking money we’re owed.

    I would like to extend my most sincere southern gratitude to our governor and our out of state occupiers federal friends for your thoughtful and selfless gesture of kindness. I wish I could return the gesture by writing a message of gratitude on billboards all over the city. So that no matter where you go, it would always be visible for you during your occupation visit. Like a constant reminder that we all know why you’re really here, and what you’re really doing.

    Bless your hearts. 🖕