Crime & Safety

Mayor Promises Changes In How Atlanta Police Officers Use Force

Congress is considering limits on police use of force after the death of Rayshard Brooks. In Atlanta, police will be required to intervene.

Tomika Miller, the wife of Rayshard Brooks, hugs their daughter Memory, 2, during the family press conference on June 15 in Atlanta. Brooks was killed by an APD officer Friday and the family was determined that his death spark positive change.
Tomika Miller, the wife of Rayshard Brooks, hugs their daughter Memory, 2, during the family press conference on June 15 in Atlanta. Brooks was killed by an APD officer Friday and the family was determined that his death spark positive change. (Curtis Compton/Atlanta Journal-Constitution via AP)

ATLANTA (AP) — Atlanta’s mayor is vowing to change police use-of-force policies and require continuous training so that officers do more to deescalate situations before consequences become fatal.

Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms announced her plans after more large protests were touched off by the police killing of another black man, Rayshard Brooks, outside a fast-food restaurant on Friday.

“I am often reminded of the words of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. — ‘There is a fierce urgency of now in our communities,'" the mayor said. “It is clear that we do not have another day, another minute, another hour to waste."

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Bottoms said she'll also require officers to intervene if they see a colleague using excessive force, saying “they are duty-bound to intercede."

“It’s very clear that our police officers are to be guardians and not warriors within our communities,” the mayor said.

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Fulton County District Attorney Paul Howard said he hopes to decide by midweek whether to bring charges in the Brooks case. Officer Garrett Rolfe, who fired the shots that killed Brooks, was fired, and the other officer at the scene, Devin Brosnan, was put on desk duty. Police Chief Erika Shields resigned.

Other cities nationwide are taking similar steps to limit force, and police reform proposals are emerging in Congress. Republicans plan a bill with restrictions on police chokeholds and other practices, while a Democratic proposal would limit legal protections for police, create a national database of excessive-force encounters and ban chokeholds. The White House plans to announce executive actions Tuesday.

Three weeks of mostly peaceful protests around the nation have now followed the death on May 25 of Floyd at the knee of a white Minneapolis officer. But there have also been violent clashes between police and protesters, destruction, and acts of rage.

The Wendy’s restaurant where Brooks was shot was burned down over the weekend. And in Louisville, Kentucky, where no officers have been fired or charged in the fatal shooting of Breonna Taylor in March, police said nine people were arrested Monday after demonstrators blocked traffic and threw a brick into a news station’s car while police shot them with pepper balls.

And in Albuquerque, New Mexico, the FBI is helping police investigate a shooting that critically injured a man during a confrontation Monday night between protesters and armed men protecting the statue of a Spanish conquistador. Police disarmed and detained the gunmen involved.

Albuquerque's mayor cited the shooting as evidence that the statue must be removed as soon as possible as a matter of public safety, and Democratic Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham said there's no room in New Mexico for any escalation of “reckless, violent rhetoric” against the demonstrators.

Pleading through tears on Monday, Brooks' relatives also called for non-violence but insisted on changes in policing and criminal justice.

An autopsy found that Brooks, 27, was shot twice in the back. Two white officers had responded to calls about a man who was asleep at the wheel in a Wendy's drive-thru lane.

Police video showed him cooperating until a breath test determined his blood-alcohol level was over the legal limit and one of the officers moved to handcuff him. Brooks was wrestled to the ground, broke free and took off with a stun gun; a white officer shot him as he tried to run away.

“When does it stop? We’re not only pleading for justice. We’re pleading for change,” said his niece, Chassidy Evans.

Relatives described Brooks as a loving father of three daughters and a stepson who had a bright smile and a big heart and loved to dance. Evans said there was no reason for him “to be shot and killed like trash in the street for falling asleep in a drive-thru.”

Several Democratic lawmakers joined the protests and called for Georgia to repeal its citizen’s arrest and stand-your-ground laws, among a slate of other reforms. Republicans who control the legislature have pushed back against most of the Democratic agenda, but even some GOP leaders called for swift action on a hate crimes bill.

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Associated Press contributors include Russ Bynum in Savannah, and Ben Nadler in Atlanta.

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