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You have learned by now that a House and Senate Conference Committee last evening released a compromise bill aimed at instituting broad-based policing reforms in Massachusetts. The legislation, S2963, is scheduled for debate today in both the House and Senate, and votes in both chambers are expected quickly.

With your fierce commitment and dedication, the Massachusetts Coalition of Police has helped lead the fight to represent the interests of police officers and their families as a grossly unfair and opaque conference committee process played out in secret. We now know that process has ended in the same way it began – with Jaw enforcement professionals who protect the citizens of this Commonwealth each day being disregarded, dismissed and disrespected.

Scott A. Hovsepian
President
John E. Nelson
First Vice President
Robert W. Murphy
Secretary/Treasurer

P: 508-581-9336
F: 508-581-9564

Police Reform Bill a Final Attack on Police Officers

The final compromise legislation is a final attack on police officers by lawmakers on Beacon Hill. It is
129 pages crowded with punitive measures, layers and layers of new bureaucracy and the abridgement
of basic due process rights of police. It was delivered with almost zero notice and zero time for our
leadership, our legal team and our members to process it before debate and votes were scheduled.
It is plainly clear why the conferees have avoided transparency at all costs: their intent was to
eliminate basic rights for police that are enjoyed by all public employees. The proposed
Massachusetts Peace Officer Standards and Training Commission – with minimal representation from
those experienced in law enforcement – would have the power to revoke an officer’s certification and
end his or her employment even before a complete internal investigation and disciplinary hearing is
carried out.
The police reform bill also seeks to immediately strip immunity from officers who are de-certified at the whim of
this commission, even as the broader issue of qualified immunity would be subject to a full and public
hearing and review process in 2021. You fought hard with other police organizations to get that open
and public hearing process on QI included in the bill, and you won that fight. But the POST
Commission’s excessive power to end the livelihood of officers based on unsubstantiated and
unproven allegations would surely render it a hollow victory.
MassCOP has been very clear – from the first meetings we did with community stakeholders back in
June to our most recent public statements in November – that we support smart and productive police
reforms. We recognize S2963 ‘s focus on enhanced training for police. We understand the importance
of creating new commissions to address the challenges and historic biases experienced by people of
color and people with disabilities, and we acknowledge the demand for harsh new punishments for
officers who break the public trust and abuse citizens that are held in custody.

But the police reform bill as written simply goes too far in micromanaging police operations and establishing new
protocols that will create dangerous situations and bring harm to not only police officers on the job,
but to the public as well, and it does all this motivated by incidents of police violence in other states,
not Massachusetts. Our Commonwealth, as you may know, has the third lowest rate of police killings
in the entire nation, yet the conference committee has taken a radical, cruel swipe at those sworn to
protect and serve. They seek to punish police just for being police.
I am asking you to join us in calling on the 66 House members who chose to support us back in July
to once again stand with Massachusetts police and oppose this legislation, and for each of them to ask
just one other member to also join in opposition. Start calling right now! Start sending emails!
Encourage your friends and family to do the same. Don’t stop until we know how it ends.
You can find your State Senator and State Representative at www.wheredoivotema.com (enter your
address, if you don’t already know), then go to www.malegislature.gov to receive their phone number and
e-mail address.
The message is simple: “S2963 MUST NOT pass the House”. It hurts police and their families, and it
threatens public safety for all citizens of Massachusetts. Please stand with law enforcement and vote
NO.”
We are preparing for every possible outcome, and we know we are up against the influence and iron
hand of House and Senate leadership.
Make no mistake: MassCOP will lead the way in appealing to Governor Baker to veto this bill if the
conferees get their way. What was supposed to be a reasonable and thoughtful process to establish
sensible police reforms is now a runaway train that must be stopped .

Sincerely,

Scott Hovsepian
President

John Nelson
First Vice President

Robert Murphy
Secretary/Treasurer

Timothy King
In-House Counsel

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