In a country devastated by the deaths and injuries of hundreds of people, many of them unarmed, at the hands of police officers, drastic changes are needed in our approach to public safety. This excessive force by police is particularly disturbing given its disproportionate impact on people of color.  

The underlying problem with policing isn't just the lack of de-escalation training or accountability procedures. The problem is the outsized and ever-expanding scale of policing that leads inevitably to officers’ unlawful use of excessive force and the killing of Black men and women. Racism is institutional and it infected our police and criminal legal systems at their origins centuries ago, bound in America’s history of slavery, Jim Crow, and discrimination.   

Dismantling this system of oppression will take all of us.  

The ACLU of Indiana relies on various strategies to challenge a broad range of unjust police practices. We work in the legislature and with communities to reduce the size and scope of police departments and reinvest the money saved into community-based services that are better suited to respond to actual community needs. We work with law enforcement to develop reforms at the departmental level, using data on deployment, stop, search, and arrest disparities to press for change. And we pursue litigation against departments enforcing unconstitutional and counterproductive policies and tactics that harm the communities the police are responsible for protecting.  

Our vision: a public safety system that treats all communities with dignity, employs restraint on police power, and uses only the degree of force necessary to maintain the community’s safety. 

Date

Tuesday, January 26, 2021 - 10:30am

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In just the first week of the 2021 Indiana Legislative Session, several pieces of legislation have been introduced in an attempt to take power and oversight of local police departments away from the very communities' police departments are meant to serve.  

Legislators are getting creative in their attempts to make it impossible for municipalities to reimagine policing. These bills aim to set limits on the abilities of municipalities to control funding and policy reform for local police departments.  

Communities all over the country, and here in Indiana, spent the summer protesting police brutality, demanding that elected officials divest from police and reinvest in the community. In many places, these calls to action led to powerful conversations between communities of color and city officials. 

As cities make strides to reform police use-of-force policies, and re-evaluate spending following requests from local communities, Indiana legislators are clearly making an effort to curb such progress and roll back some of the community-led reforms that have been put in place. 

Several bills introduced, including SB 34, SB 42, HB 1205 and HB 1070, would set limits on decreasing police department budgets. Some language would even set limits based on whether or not crime rates have decreased, despite research that shows that more policing does not equate to less crime. In fact, studies have shown in time periods we have seen decreases in police we have also seen a decrease in crime.  

If Indiana legislators truly want to decrease crime in Indiana, they will stop trying to take power away from local communities, and instead focus on reinvesting into community programs and services that have been proven to decrease crime such as mental health services and education. Right now, the majority of police are being deployed in response to nonviolent crime, that mental health professionals and social workers are better fit to address. 

An Associated Press poll from June, 2020 found that the vast majority of Americans believe that the criminal legal system needs to change — including a large majority of Republicans. Hoosiers are demanding this change as well. The 2020 Bowen Center Hoosier survey found that “The issue ranked as a top priority by the greatest number of Hoosiers was improving public safety, with 63% of Hoosiers ranking it as a top priority and another 34% ranking it as “important but not a top priority.” It is clear that Hoosiers are ready for broad changes to law enforcement policies, practices, and cultures. More of the same simply will not do.  

Now is the time to fight for bold, new approaches in policing, and additional community oversight. It is the time to fight for racial justice in the criminal legal system. 
 

We will bring you new details on these and other bills throughout session on our bill tracker.

Date

Friday, January 8, 2021 - 2:45pm

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