Committee Advances Bill to Prohibit Use of Stats for Arrests, Citations in Officers’ Evaluations

Committee Advances Bill to Prohibit Use of Stats for Arrests, Citations in Officers’ Evaluations

 

TRENTON – A bill that would prohibit law enforcement agencies from using the volume of an officer’s arrests or citations as a factor when evaluating that officer’s overall professional performance or when making personnel determinations was passed today out of the Senate Law and Public Safety Committee.

 

The bill, S-1322, sponsored by Senators Shirley Turner and Dawn Addiego, is being advanced amid a backdrop of racial and social justice movements across the country that have called into question the ways in which law enforcement officers are trained, evaluated and held accountable for their actions.

 

Under the legislation, a law enforcement agency may collect, analyze and apply information concerning officers’ number of arrests and citations for the purpose of forwarding that information to the Superintendent of State Police for inclusion in the Uniform Crime Report, but would be disallowed from using the data gathered in any manner that would give way to so-called “quotas,” in policing.

 

“We have seen for too long the way that perceived or real efforts by some officers to achieve ‘quotas’ in order to attain higher evaluations through the sheer number of arrests and citations can have a detrimental effect on our communities. Additionally, officers are all too often pressured to write more tickets to increase revenue and help municipalities balance their budgets,” said Senator Turner (D-Hunterdon / Mercer). “These policies, whether written or unwritten, have fallen hardest upon low-income individuals and people of color, who are arrested and ticketed at much higher proportions than others. As we work to advance issues of social justice and create a more equitable criminal justice system, we hope this bill can put an end to these ill-conceived practices once and for all.”

 

Under current law, State and local law enforcement agencies are prohibited from establishing policies requiring officers to meet quotas for arrests and citations in enforcing the State’s motor vehicle code.  However, these agencies may consider arrest and citation data as part of the officer’s overall performance evaluation; the bill prohibits that practice altogether.

 

“We believe this bill will make for better policing, and build greater trust between law enforcement officers and the communities they serve,” said Addiego (D-Atlantic / Burlington / Camden). “This will allow us to finally put an end to the counterproductive and unfair practice that demands that our police meet ticket quotas as they go on their daily patrols.”

 

In addition, the language in the bill clarifies that law enforcement agencies shall not post data regarding arrests and summons in areas common to all police officers at a police station or barracks as a means to create competition between officers with respect to arrests and summonses.

 

The bill was passed out of committee by a vote of 6-0.

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