City Councilmember Helen Gym welcomed Outlaw’s goal.
“When little more than say four out of 10 murders leads to an arrest or conviction, it truly fractures relationships and trust. And that is truly a threat to public safety,” Gym said.
In addition to announcing changes to his revised budget proposal, Kenney also laid out a plan aimed at reforming the city’s scandal-plagued police department.
The administration’s list of proposed changes includes expanding the department’s use of force protocol to explicitly prohibit sitting or kneeling on a person’s neck, face or head; replacing its Police Advisory Commission with a permanent, civilian Police Oversight Commission; issuing quarterly reports on Internal Affairs activity; and creating an “early warning” system for police misconduct.
Four bills tied to those reforms, including re-establishing the city’s residency requirement for police officers, are slated to be introduced in City Council on Thursday, according to a source familiar with the legislation.
The goal is to pass at least some of them on June 25, the final legislative session before Council breaks for summer recess, the source said.
Outlaw on stop-and-frisk: ‘We have to track it’
During Wednesday’s budget hearing, Outlaw, hired with hope that she would be a change agent in the department, said she’s committed to adding more body-worn cameras, and establishing an early warning system that would help flag problem officers who appear prone to committing misconduct.
Roughly 2,200 police officers — roughly one-third of the force — are outfitted with body cameras.
Deputy Commissioner Christine Coulter said it will cost another $4.7 to purchase cameras for the entire department and several million more each year to pay for data storage.
Outlaw also wants to review the department’s performance appraisal process, recruiting and marketing efforts, and programs rooted in mental health and wellness.
Asked by City Councilmember David Oh if she would get rid of the controversial police practice known as stop-and-frisk, Outlaw said she would not.
“We have to track it, we have to measure it, and ensure that we’re not abusing this tool that is available to us,” she said.
Nearly a decade ago, the Philadelphia Police Department entered into a federal consent decree aimed at reducing the number of illegal stops and frisks conducted by police.
The latest report from the ACLU of Pennsylvania, which brought the lawsuit that led to the consent decree, showed that 16% of stops part of a random sample from the first half of 2018 were unlawful.
The same report found 21% of frisks included in a random sample from the same time period were illegal, meaning police did not “reasonably believe” that a suspect is armed and dangerous.