COMMISSION TO RESTORE TRUST IN POLICING

Alexander Williams Jr., Chair (chosen by Governor, Senate President, & House Speaker)

Appointed by Governor: Gary W. McLhinney; Alicia Lynn Wilson, Esq.

Appointed by Senate President: Ashiah Parker; James N. Robey.

Appointed by House Speaker: Sean R. Malone, Esq.; Inez C. Robb.

Staff: Matthew B. Jackson; Jameson D. Lancaster; Shirleen M. Pilgrim; Claire E. Rossmark; Kenneth B. Weaver.


[photo, Legislative Services Building, 1st floor stairwell, 90 State Circle, Annapolis, Maryland] c/o Department of Legislative Services
Legislative Services Building, 90 State Circle, Annapolis, MD 21401
(410) 946-5510, (301) 970-5510
e-mail: shirleen.pilgram@mlis.state.md.us
web:http://dls.maryland.gov/policy-areas/commission-to-restore-trust-in-policing#!


Legislative Services Building, 1st floor stairwell, 90 State Circle (from Lawyers Mall), Annapolis, Maryland, January 2018. Photo by Diane F. Evartt.


Final Report to Governor & General Assembly due Dec. 31, 2019 (Chapter 753, Acts of 2018).

In May 2018, the Commission to Restore Trust in Policing was authorized (Chapter 753, Acts of 2018).

First, the Commission will review the operations of the Gun Trace Task Force of the Baltimore City Police Department. Created in 2007 as an elite unit charged with pursuing violent criminals and other persons illegally possessing and using guns, nearly all the Task Force's members were indicted and charged with crimes of their own in 2017. The Commission will scrutinize the Task Force's establishment, personnel, and oversight, as well as its investigations and the cases it handled.

Based on its own findings and the 2017 federal Consent Decree among the City of Baltimore, the Baltimore City Police Department, and the U.S. Department of Justice, the Commission will make recommendations concerning whether the Baltimore City Police Department needs to be reorganized, and the options for reorganization; which best practices should be used to establish and oversee specialized elite units within law enforcement agencies; continuation of State and Baltimore City oversight of the Baltimore City Police Department; legal obstacles to the effective management and discipline of Police Department officers; and any other relevant findings.

The Commission may conduct hearings, administer oaths and affirmations, issue subpoenas, and issue process to compel the appearance of witnesses and production of evidence.

Authorization for the Commission ends January 15, 2020.

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