Time to change RI’s Law Enforcement Officers Bill of Rights law


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Because of incidents like this, police officers should be subject to more, not less, public scrutiny of their actions.
Because of incidents like this, police officers should be subject to more, not less, public scrutiny of their actions.

A Providence police officer was arrested this week for texting death threats to a doctor. Last week, the same officer was arrested for threatening his police department bosses. In August, he was charged with possessing a gun with a scratched off serial number. In April, he was disciplined when a picture of him sleeping in a police cruiser while on duty was posted to Twitter.

He’s being held without bail at the ACI. But he’s still a Providence police officer.

That’s because Rhode Island police officers are protected by what’s known as the Law Enforcement Officers Bill of Rights, a state law that dictates a special process for disciplining cops. Anything more severe than a two day suspension requires a hearing by a three-board panel – one of whom the accused gets to select.

While a felony conviction would trump this law, there are untold examples of officer misconduct that go unpunished because of, according to Providence Public Safety Commission Steve Pare who says it’s time to make a change.

“It’s antiquated and doesn’t serve the purpose it was intended to,” he told RI Future. “It goes against the ethical standards and values of police departments.”

Rhode Island is one of just of 14 states to have a LEOBoR law, The others are: California, Delaware, Florida, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Minnesota, Nevada, New Mexico, Virginia, West Virginia and Wisconsin, according to a report by the Marshall Project., which says Rhode Island’s law is the most “officer-friendly version” in the nation.

Pare concurred. “No other state in the country has these kinds of protections,” said. “They may have varying protections but no where else in the country is both protection and process spelled out in state law.”

LEOBoR laws became a flash point earlier this year when the law shielded Baltimore police officers who killed Frieddie Gray from discipline, as well as other officers involved in high profile instances of violent police misconduct.

“The Law Enforcement Officers Bill of Rights has the same relationship to a real bill of rights that the Patriot Act has to a real patriot,” wrote Georgetown law professor Paul Butler in the New York Times this June. “The real Bill of Rights — the one enshrined in the United States Constitution — actually limits the power of government, including the police.”

And Radley Belko, a criminal justice/mass incarceration blogger for the Washington Post, wrote that LEOBoR “can essentially become a how-to guide for cops to get their colleagues out of trouble.”

Rhode Island’s LEOBoR law cost “$1.5 million in legal fees and officer pay while suspended” during the previous 5 years, reported WPRI’s Tim White in 2014.

The Ocean State has long been the poster child of right wing criticism LEOBoR laws. An oft-cited 2012 Reason article starts with several Ocean State anecdotes. “All of these Rhode Island cops, and many more like them across the county, were able to keep their jobs and benefits—sometimes only temporarily, but always longer than they should have—thanks to model legislation written and lobbied for by well-funded police unions,” writes Mike Riggs. “That piece of legislation is called the ‘law enforcement bill of rights,’ and its sole purpose is to shield cops from the laws they’re paid to enforce.”

Pare said the Rhode Island Police Chiefs Association tried to have the law amended in recent years, to no avail. “The unions were adamantly opposed to any changes,” he said, noting that 25 city and town councils endorsed amending the LEOBoR law.

With a renewed emphasis on police officer conduct across the nation and in Rhode Island, Pare said the time may finally be right to move the issue forward.

“Let’s come up with some recommendations that the General Assembly can consider,” he said.

Happy Day of Reason, why we celebrate the separation of church and state


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Reason_WorksThe National Day of Reason, which Governor Chafee was kind enough to officially recognize on behalf of the Humanists of Rhode Island (HRI) and the Secular Coalition of Rhode Island has been the subject of no small amount of  misinformation.

Here are some facts: The Day of Reason was created in 2003 by the American Humanist Association (of which HRI is a charter member) and the Washington Area Secular Humanists in response to the National Day of Prayer, held on the first Thursday of May since 1952. (The same day Chafee signed HRI’s proclamation he also signed a proclamation declaring May 1st a Day of Prayer.)

It is the opinion of the Humanists of Rhode Island that the National Day of Prayer violates the First Amendment of the Constitution because, as it says on the Day of Reason website, it “asks federal and local government entities to set aside tax dollar supported time and space to engage in religious ceremonies. This results in unconstitutional governmental support of religion over no religion.”

At noon today in the town halls of Johnston, Middletown, Newport, North Providence, Tiverton, Wakefield, Warwick, West Warwick and Westerly there will be prayer events taking place. Another event will take place at the Rhode Island State House in Providence. That’s a lot of mixing of church and state and a lot of government resources being spent on prayer events. Rhode Islanders should ask themselves, “To what end are these resources being diverted?”

got-reasonIt is already perfectly legal for any American to pray or not pray, in public or privately, on or off public property. Americans don’t need a national holiday to tell them that it is okay to pray. The National Day of Prayer is recommending public displays of praying, which not only excludes atheists, it excludes those Christians who might take seriously the words of Jesus who said, “And when you pray, do not be like the hypocrites, for they love to pray standing in the synagogues and on the street corners to be seen by others. Truly I tell you, they have received their reward in full, but when you pray, go into your room, close the door and pray to your Father, who is unseen.” (Matthew 6:6-5)

The National Day of Prayer is an attempt to inject religion into our secular government. As Rhode Islanders, we should be extra wary of such efforts, since ours is the state that pioneered separation of church and state.

RI humanistsThe Day of Reason, in contrast, is an attempt to find a value common to all Americans. This day is meant to be inclusive rather than exclusive. Nobody wants to be unreasonable, after all. However, there are those who feel the need to vilify and exclude others. They have called our efforts the “Day of Treason” and “Atheist’s Day” out of bigotry. Sadly, we Humanists and atheists have come to expect this kind of treatment from the ignorant and ill-informed.

Here’s the thing though: This wasn’t our first Day of Reason, and it will not be our last. Governor Chafee signed a similar proclamation last year and we fully expect the next governor, whoever he or she may be, to sign a proclamation for May 7, 2015.

The number of voters in Rhode Island who identify as Humanist and/or atheist in this state is growing, and we will be asserting our rights and holding our government accountable to the secular Constitution and to the ideal of separation of church and state. We fully support freedom of conscience, freedom of religion and freedom from religion. We are proud Rhode islanders and we are not going away.

What could be more reasonable than that?

Governor Chafee proclaims May 1st ‘Day of Reason’


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Day of Reason 2014For the second year in a row Governor Lincoln Chafee, at the request of the Humanists of Rhode Island and the Secular Coalition of Rhode Island, has declared May 1st the “Day of Reason.”

The United States is a product of the Age of Reason. As humanity faces economic and ecological uncertainty, we should remember that it is through the power of reason that we will overcome these challenges. Reason has cured disease, given us wonderful technologies and philosophical insights, and has allowed peace and prosperity to bloom. Rejecting reason leads to human suffering.

Though this observance is held in parallel with the National Day of Prayer, on the first Thursday in May each year, the goal of this effort is to celebrate reason- a concept all citizens can support- and to raise public awareness about the persistent threat to religious liberty posed by government intrusion into the private sphere of worship.

Governor Chafee has twice declared May 1st to be the Day of Reason, and the groups that have made this request hope that the next governor will be equally generous with support for our efforts. The Day of Reason extolls extolls a value almost everyone holds dear.

Almost everyone. Some people make a living being unreasonable, bombastic idiots:

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