TIME

How to Rebuild the Ferguson Police Department

Police are deployed to keep peace along Florissant Avenue in Ferguson, Mo. on Aug. 16, 2014.
Scott Olson—Getty Images Police are deployed to keep peace along Florissant Avenue in Ferguson, Mo. on Aug. 16, 2014.

Other troubled local police forces show the way after a scathing federal report

At the end of the U.S. Department of Justice’s report into widespread police misconduct in Ferguson, Mo., are a series of recommended reforms so extensive that it’s as if the law enforcement agency would be best served by tearing the whole thing down and starting from scratch.

That might just be the point.

The report listed a series of overhauls that would require retraining dozens of police officers while upending the agency’s policing strategies, all in an effort to repair the department’s relationship with communities of color in the aftermath of last summer’s shooting of unarmed black teenager Michael Brown by white police officer Darren Wilson. That shooting led to weeks of often violent protests in the St. Louis suburb. And while Wilson was never charged and the federal report largely corroborated his version of events, it nevertheless faulted the mostly white local police for being systemically and violently prejudiced against the majority black town’s residents.

[time-brightcove not-tgx=”true”]
[video id=jjL9bVhW]

“Members of the community may not have been responding to a single isolated confrontation but also to a pervasive, coercive and deep lack of trust,” Attorney General Eric Holder said of the protesters on Wednesday. “Some of those protesters were right.” He said federal authorities will make sure the local police force takes “immediate, wholesale and structural corrective action.”

MORE: These Are Some of the Racist Emails Ferguson Police Sent

So what’s next?

Ferguson has examples it can look to as it rebuilds: Over the last decade, several U.S. police departments have been subjected to federal oversight. Cincinnati reformed its department after an unarmed black teenager was shot in 2001. Maricopa County‘s force in Arizona was sued by the Department of Justice in 2012 over charges of racially profiling Latinos. Seattle and New Orleans both came under federal scrutiny for excessive force and misconduct.

See 23 Key Moments From Ferguson

Police Shooting Missouri APTOPIX Police Shooting Missouri Police Shooting Missouri Police move in to detain a protester in Ferguson, Mo. Missouri Police Shooting TEAR GAS SHOT AT PROTESTORS Johnson of the Missouri Highway Patrol addresses the media in Ferguson, Missouri Darren Wilson Outrage In Missouri Town After Police Shooting Of 18-Yr-Old Man Missouri race riot US-CRIME-RACE-POLICE-SHOOTING National Guard Called In As Unrest Continues In Ferguson Michael Brown Sr, yells out as his son's  casket is lowered into the ground at St. Peter's Cemetery in St. Louis Rally Held in Ferguson Over Police Killing Of Michael Brown Police Shooting Missouri Memorial Protesters call for resignation of Ferguson police chief Ferguson St. Louis Protests Cornel West UN Committee Against Torture A police car burns on the street after a grand jury returned no indictment in the shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri Eric Holder Outrage In Missouri Town After Police Shooting Of 18-Yr-Old Man Police officers respond to a fellow officer hit by gunfire outside the Ferguson Police Headquarters in Ferguson

But the most relevant example might be found in East Haven, Conn.—a town and police force that is similar in size to Ferguson—where the DOJ found a pattern of illegal searches, traffic stops and use of force against Latinos by local cops. In October 2012, the Justice Department reached a settlement with the town to change the police agency’s treatment of Latino residents. Two years later, compliance expert Kathleen O’Toole, now the Seattle police chief, called the progress of the East Haven Police “remarkable.”

The kind of reforms that will likely take place in Ferguson may be similar to what occurred in East Haven. Police officers there each completed 60-100 hours of training on practices like bias-free policing and use of force. One lieutenant attended an executive education program at Harvard’s Kennedy School.

The training appears to have made a difference. In December 2011, the Justice Department found that traffic stops of Latino drivers by the East Haven police accounted for 19.9% of stops, which was more than the percentage of Latino drivers (15.5%). But during the year the police trained—from December 2012 to June 2013—the federal report found that only 8.9% of traffic stops were of Latinos. It cost roughly $2.5 million over four years to reform the department, according to the New Haven Register,

Kym Craven, the director of the Public Safety Strategies Group, a police consulting firm, says that reforms for agencies like Ferguson need to begin at the recruiting and hiring phase to ensure a department’s officers are reflective of its community. She says departments also need to have explicit policies and procedures in place that lay out what police chiefs expect from officers.

Ferguson may go through scenario-based training like what happened in East Haven to better react to situations where implicit racial biases may affect how an officer handles a situation. Those biases, Craven says, should also be talked about honestly and openly within the department and with the community.

But the biggest changes could likely come with a shift toward community policing, which has been routinely discussed as an alternative to the so-called “broken windows” strategy—which focuses on lower-level crimes on the assumption that it helps keep overall crime rates down.

MORE: U.S. Faults Ferguson Police for Racial Bias

The DOJ report’s first recommendation includes implementing a shift from “policing to raise revenue to policing in partnership with the entire Ferguson community,” while calling for more community partnerships between police and residents.

One city that appears to have found success with community policing is Atlanta. Two incidents eroded trust between the city’s residents and the police department over the years: a 2009 incident in which officers raided a gay bar while reportedly using derogatory slurs that triggered a federal lawsuit, and the death of a 92-year-old black woman by a drug strike force team in 2006.

[video id=S6qcoMx5]

“We lost the confidence in both our black community and the GLBT community,” says Atlanta Police George Turner, who took over the agency in 2010.

Turner soon shifted the department toward community-based policing that required police to get out of their cars, patrol their neighborhoods and engage with citizens. He outfitted cops with less-lethal weapons like TASERs, but sought the community’s involvement in the decision first. The city today has 4,600 surveillance cameras that feed into police headquarters, but the department asked for community input on where they should be placed. Turner has also set up special liaisons with the Hispanic and gay and lesbian communities.

“I think this is the most effective way,” Turner says. “You have to work every day with community leaders. People will give you an opportunity to investigate when crises happen, but you don’t get that unless you have a relationship with people and relationships are built on trust.”

The department has been widely praised by police experts, but it’s a cautionary tale nonetheless: The Atlanta Citizen Review Board actually saw complaints go up between 2012 and 2013, but numbers have remained stable since, according to statistics compiled by the Christian Science Monitor.

“Community policing was something that was started a long time ago, and it’s morphed into community relations,” Craven says. “But departments need to get back to the root of it, which is joint problem-solving between the police and the community. It’s more than having a BBQ or a picnic.”

The Justice Department also appears more willing to fully back community policing in ways it hasn’t in the past. Bob Stewart, president of Bobcat Training and Consulting, says that in the last two years, consent decrees—which are court-mandated orders that require police departments to follow federal guidelines—have increasingly recommended initiatives that deal with community trust and civilian oversight.

It’s likely that Ferguson will eventually be the subject of a consent decree, forcing the town’s police department to reform. But it’s possible that those reforms, taking place at a police department that drove a national conversation about race and use of force nationwide last summer, could be the focus of a new discussion, one about better ways of policing.

Witness Tension Between Police and Protestors in Ferguson, Mo.

A man backs away as law enforcement officials close in on him and eventually detain him during protests over the death of Michael Brown, an unarmed black teenager killed by a police officer, in Ferguson, Mo. Ferguson St. Louis Missouri Police Shooting Riots Protests Ferguson St. Louis Missouri Police Shooting Riots Protests Ferguson St. Louis Missouri Police Shooting Riots Protests Ferguson St. Louis Missouri Police Shooting Riots Protests Ferguson St. Louis Missouri Police Shooting Riots Protests Ferguson St. Louis Missouri Police Shooting Riots Protests Ferguson St. Louis Missouri Police Shooting Riots Protests Outrage In Missouri Town After Police Shooting Of 18-Yr-Old Man Outrage In Missouri Town After Police Shooting Of 18-Yr-Old Man Outrage In Missouri Town After Police Shooting Of 18-Yr-Old Man Outrage In Missouri Town After Police Shooting Of 18-Yr-Old Man Outrage In Missouri Town After Police Shooting Of 18-Yr-Old Man Outrage In Missouri Town After Police Shooting Of 18-Yr-Old Man TEAR GAS SHOT AT PROTESTORS Police Shooting Missouri Outrage In Missouri Town After Police Shooting Of 18-Yr-Old Man Police Shooting Missouri APTOPIX Police Shooting Missouri Police Shooting Missouri Police Shooting Missouri Outrage In Missouri Town After Police Shooting Of 18-Yr-Old Man Demonstrators protest outside of Greater St. Marks Family Church in Ferguson, Missouri Protesters take part in a peaceful demonstration against shooting of Michael Brown, in Ferguson, Missouri Missouri State Highway Patrol Captain Ron Johnson speaks to protesters as he walks through a peaceful demonstration as communities continue to react to the shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson Outrage In Missouri Town After Police Shooting Of 18-Yr-Old Man Outrage In Missouri Town After Police Shooting Of 18-Yr-Old Man Ferguson Lowenstein Ferguson Lowenstein Ferguson Lowenstein Ferguson Jon Lowenstein Teargas Ferguson Lowenstein Ferguson Lowenstein Ferguson Lowenstein Ferguson Lowenstein Police Shooting Missouri Ferguson Lowenstein Police Shooting Missouri Outrage In Missouri Town After Police Shooting Of 18-Yr-Old Man Protesters react to the effects of tear gas which was fired at demonstrators reacting to the shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri Demonstrators march down West Florissant during a peaceful march in reaction to the shooting of Michael Brown near Ferguson, Missouri REUTERS PICTURE HIGHLIGHT Police arrest two in front of McDonalds US-CRIME-RACE-POLICE-SHOOTING National Guard Called In As Unrest Continues In Ferguson Violence between police and protestors erupts in Ferguson - again Police fire tear gas in the direction of where bottles were thrown from crowds gathered near the QuikTrip on W. Florissant Avenue on Aug. 18, 2014. Demonstrators stand in the middle of West Florissant as they react to tear gas fired by police during ongoing protests in reaction to the shooting of Brown, near Ferguson Demonstrators protest against the fatal shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo. Aug. 19, 2014. A police officer in riot gear detains a demonstrator protesting against the shooting of Michael Brown, in Ferguson Police officers in riot gear watch demonstrators protesting against the shooting of Michael Brown from the side of a building in Ferguson TOPSHOTS-US-CRIME-RACE-POLICE-SHOOTING A man is doused with milk and sprayed with mist after being hit by an eye irritant from security forces trying to disperse demonstrators protesting against the shooting of Brown in Ferguson APTOPIX Police Shooting Missouri
Tap to read full story

Your browser is out of date. Please update your browser at http://update.microsoft.com


YOU BROKE TIME.COM!

Dear TIME Reader,

As a regular visitor to TIME.com, we are sure you enjoy all the great journalism created by our editors and reporters. Great journalism has great value, and it costs money to make it. One of the main ways we cover our costs is through advertising.

The use of software that blocks ads limits our ability to provide you with the journalism you enjoy. Consider turning your Ad Blocker off so that we can continue to provide the world class journalism you have become accustomed to.

The TIME Team