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President Joe Biden Signs Police Order To Mark George Floyd's 2nd Death Anniversary

President Joe Biden Signs Police Order to Mark George Floyd's 2nd Death Anniversary
On the second anniversary of George Floyd's death, President Joe Biden signeds an executive to improve policing accountability and public safety when Congress is deadlocked on stronger measures. SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images

On the second anniversary of George Floyd's killing, President Joe Biden will release a comprehensive executive order to overhaul federal and local policing, according to top administration officials.

According to officials, the order will direct all federal agencies to revise their use-of-force policies, create a national registry of federal and local officers fired for misconduct, and use grants to encourage state and local police to prohibit chokeholds and neck restraints unless deadly force is required.

Biden's New Order Enables To Publicize Police Misconduct Records

It limits the use of no-knock admissions to specific situations, such as when an announced entry would represent an urgent threat of physical harm. The directive affects around 100,000 federal law enforcement personnel, but the White House aims to broaden it to include more than 700,000 state and local officers.

As president, Biden committed to advocating for police reform, but talks in Congress on a measure fell in September. According to authorities, the presidential order would call for the development of national criteria for the certification of police agencies and will aim to attach sections of future grant money to achieving accreditation.

The White House has worked hard to get the backing of the civil rights sector while avoiding upsetting law enforcement officers, Reuters reported.

The order, which the White House and Justice Department have been working on since last year, will have less weight than Biden had hoped after discussions on police reform in Congress broke down when Democrat and Republican negotiators concluded the difference was too large.

On Monday, the Department of Justice (DOJ) changed its use-of-force policy for the first time in 18 years, instructing federal agents to intervene if they see police officers using excessive force. The four-page letter was issued to the chiefs of the FBI, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives, the Drug Enforcement Administration, and the United States Marshals Service. The Bureau of Prisons and the Marshals Service The letter also states that cops must seek medical attention if they encounter someone in need.

The letter also reiterates previous instructions that cops should not fire their firearms at someone who is fleeing and should not shoot at cars to halt them. The document goes on to say that deadly force should not be used against people whose activities represent a threat only to themselves or property unless the subject poses an imminent danger of death or significant physical damage to the officer or others in close vicinity.

The use-of-force policy, which was last modified in 2004, stated that police may use lethal force only when required, that is, when the officer has a reasonable belief that the subject of such force poses an imminent threat of death or significant physical damage to the officer or another person, according to Daily Mail.

George Floyd 2nd Death Anniversary: Where Is Derek Chauvin?

The killing of the father of five became a watershed event in the global Black Lives Matter movement against police brutality and systemic racism, which will keep his legacy alive in perpetuity. Derek Chauvin has just turned 46, the same age as the man he murdered, and has spent his birthday in prison after being convicted of second-degree murder. In the summer of 2021, he was condemned.

He was charged with three charges of a criminal offense: unintended second-degree murder, third-degree murder, and second-degree manslaughter. Following his conviction, the court granted the prosecution's plea to prevent Chauvin from being released on bail, and he was remanded to police custody.

When his bond was revoked, he was brought to the Hennepin County Sheriff's Office for processing before being sent to the Minnesota Department of Corrections. He was sent to Oak Park Heights Prison, where he had been imprisoned since his arrest in 2020, and where he has stayed ever since. Oak Park is Minnesota's sole Level 5 maximum-security prison, located approximately 25 miles outside of the state capital, Minneapolis, as per Mirror.

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