HomeMy WebLinkAbout08-11-2020 Community Police Review Board PostponedCity of I 4 01
Date 0 311 V2020
o Mad- C h ris
P h o n e_ 319-3 56-50 43
community Police Review Board - Meeting POSTPONED
The Community Police Review Board meeting scheduled for Tuesday, August 11: 2020: 5.30 P.m -
has been postponed d U a to wide spread p o%rarer outages- A revised meeting date is to be
dote rm in ed .
For additional information., please contact Chris Olney at 319-3 5 6- 5043 or h ristin n-oIn i owa-
ci _o W _
MEMORANDUM
COMMUNITY POLICE REVIEW BOARD
A Board of the City of Iowa City
DATE: August 6, 2020
TO: CPRB Members
FROM: Chris Olney
RE: Board Packet for meeting on Tuesday, August 11, 2020
Enclosed please find the following documents for your review and comment at the next board meeting:
Agenda for 8/11 /20
• Minutes of the meeting on 7/14/20
ICPD General Order 99-05 (Use of Force)
• Correspondence from Carol deProsse (x8), Jessica Kraemer, Iowa Freedom Riders (IFR)
• Draft Fiscal Year 2020 CPRB Annual Report
• Draft Community Forum Information
• Draft Questionnaire Letter
• Suggestions for CPRB changes
• Iowa City Police Chief Search Information
• Office Contacts — July 2020
• Complaint Deadline
A
COMMUNITY POLICE REVIEW BOARD
Tuesday, August 11, 2020
Electronic Formal Meeting — 5:30 PM
ZOOM MEETING PLATFORM
Electronic Meeting
(Pursuant to Iowa Code section 21.8)
An electronic meeting is being held because a meeting in person is
impossible or impractical due to concerns for the health and safety of
Commission members, staff and the public presented by COVID-19.
You can participate in the meeting and can comment on an agenda
item by going to https://zoom.us/webinar/register/wN _SiDCUgL0Q10R19PdgbjMPA via the
internet to visit the Zoom meeting's registration page and submit the req fired information.
Once approved, you will receive an email message with a link to join the . g. If you are asked
for a meeting or webinar ID, enter the ID number found in the email. A eetin assword may
also be included in the email. Enter the password when prompted.
If you have no computer or smartphone, or a computer without a
telephone by dialing (312) 626-6799. When prompted, eyo
number for this meeting is: 964 0071 3572 �
Once connected, you may dial *9 to "raise your har
like to speak. Providing comments in person is not
ITEM NO. 1
ITEM NO. 2
ITEM NO. 3
ITEM NO. 4
CALL TO ORDER a
CONSIDER MOTI
AMENDED A0%
Pne, you may call in by
or webinar ID. The ID
meeting host know you would
ING CONSENT CALENDAR AS PRESENTED OR
• es the eting on 07/14/20
• e der 99-05 (Use of Force)
Corr ondence from Carol deProsse (x8), Jessica Kraemer
NE SINESS
• DRA -Fiscal Year 2019 CPRB Annual Report
OLD BUSINESS
• Community Forum Discussion
• Discussion Item No. 8 of Resolution 20-159 (Resolution of Initial Council
Commitments addressing the Black Lives Matter Movement and Systemic Racism in
the wake of the murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis Police and calls for action from
protesters and residents)
ITEM NO. 5 PUBLIC COMMENT OF ITEMS NOT ON THE AGENDA (Commentators shall address
the Board for no more than 5 minutes. The Board shall not engage in discussion with
the public concerning said items).
ITEM NO. 6 BOARD INFORMATION
ITEM NO. 7 STAFF INFORMATION
ITEM NO. 8 CONSIDER MOTION TO ADJOURN TO EXECUTIVE SESSION based on Section
21.5(1)(a) of the Code of Iowa to review or discuss records which are required or
authorized by state or federal law to be kept confidential or to be kept confidential as a
condition for that government body's possession or continued receipt of federal funds,
and 22.7(11) personal information in confidential personnel records of public bodies
including but not limited to cities, boards of supervisors and school districts, and 22-7(5)
police officer investigative reports, except where disclosure is authorized elsewhere in
the Code; and 22.7(18) Communications not required by law, rule or procedure that are
made to a government body or to any of its employees by identified persons outside of
government, to the extent that the government body receiving those communications
from such persons outside of government could reasonably believe that those persons
would be discouraged from making them to that government body if they were available
for general public examination.
ITEM NO. 9 MEETING SCHEDULE and FUTURE AGENDAS
• September 8, 2020) 5:30 PM, Electronic Zoom Meeting
• September 21, 2020, 5:30 PM, (Community Forum) Electronic Zoom Meeting
• October 13, 2020, 5:30 PM, Electronic Zoom Meeting
• November 10, 2020) 5:30 PM, Electronic Zoom Meeting
• December 8, 2020) 5:30 PM, Electronic Zoom Meeting
ITEM NO. 10 ADJOURNMENT
If you will need disability -related accommodations in order to participate in this program/event, please contact
Chris Olney at 319-356-5043, Christine-Olney@iowa-city.org. Early requests are strongly encouraged to allow
sufficient time to meet your access needs.
DRAFT
COMMUNITY POLICE REVIEW BOARD
MINUTES —July 14, 2020
Electronic Meeting (Pursuant to Iowa Code section 21.8)
An electronic meeting was held because a meeting in person was impossible p e or impractical due to concerns for the
health and safety of council members, staff and the public resented b
P y C OVID-19.
CALL TO ORDER: Vice -Chair Orville Townsend a c Iled the meeting to order at 5:30 P.M.
Townsend welcomed new Board members Jerri MacConnell
Amanda Nichols. and
MEMBERS PRESENT.- Jerri MacConnell (5:37), Latisha McDaniel (5:32 p.m.), Amanda Nichols,
David Semler
MEMBERS ABSENT:
STAFF PRESENT:
OTHERS PRESENT:
None
Staff Chris Olney, Kellie Fruehling and Legal Counsel
g Patrick Ford
Interim Police Chief Denise Brotherton
RECOMMENDATIONS TO COUNCIL
None.
CONSENT CALENDAR
Motion by Selmer, seconded by McDaniel to adopt the p consent calendar as presented or amended.
Minutes of the Meeting on 6/9/2020
ICPD General order 20-01 (Duty to Intervene and Rep
ort)
Correspondence from Cecelia Profitt, Chris Wei Nic A
� rp, Kenn &Pat Bowen,
Caroline Die terle, Carol deProsse (x36), Erin Gould on behalf of Keith Porter
Motion carried, 4/0, MacConnell absent.
OLD BUSINESS
Community Forum Discussion — rescheduling forum d
Community F 9 ate. After Board discussion it was determined the
y Forum would be held on Monday, September 21 Sr at 5:30 . m. via
a Zoom meeting platform
Olney asked if Board wanted to keep the same previously
advised of p usly planned forum topic. Legal Course( Ford
having an option to not have a presentation, which would
answers. Board members allow more time for questions and
agreed to skip the Police camera presentation and have an o •
forum format. Olney will include a revised draft forumpen discussion
notice and agenda in the next meeting packet
for the Board to review.
NEW BUSINESS
Item No. 8 of Resolution 20-159 (Resolution of Initial Co
uncil Commitments addressing the Black
Lives Matter Movement and Systemic Racism in the wake of the murder of George Floyd b
Minneapolis Police and calls for action from protesters y
p and residents}
Townsend introduced City Council Member/CPRB LiaisonWeiner
Janke Weiand asked her to provide
background and information as to what direction the City y Council is requesting the CPRB regardin item 8 of the resolution. g
CPRB minutes
DRAFT
July 14, 2020
Councilor Weiner stated she found it positive for Iowa Cityo be the '
P , te only city in Iowa that currently has
a Community Police Review Board which was established in the late 90's and that
comparable board in Iowa. there is no other
Weiner explained that the Council is requestingthe board to present
p en# a report and recommendations in
consultation with an attorney of its choice. The report should include
includingwhat P changes to the CPRB ordinance
additional powers that would be useful to help the CPRB more effectively function, listing
both those permitted by those not currently allowed.
McDaniel questioned what currently is not allowed b state law an • • y sdhow is it tied to legislation. Weiner
noted she wa
s not familiar with the restrictions and limitations of the laws but this c
an attorney to et the scope of w could be referred to
g p hat is allowed under the law.
Townsend noted the January deadline for the CPRB to have the recom
mendations report to Council.
Councilor Weiner noted a preliminary recommendations draft would be acceptable.
Selmer commented that Legal Counsel Ford has been extremely instrumental on providing guidance to
the board on procedural and state law issues relatingto the updating p ng of the Ordinance in the past. He
felt the Board should stay with Ford as Legal Counsel to further advise on this ma
tter.
#ter.
PUBLIC COMMENT OF ITEMS NOT ON THE AGENDA
None.
BOARD INFORMATION
Nichols suggested adding an option to submit CPRB Complaints o
issues. P on-line which would help with
accessibility ues. This would be in addition to the currently available hard Copy option. I~ruehling
noted that it would need to be approved by legal due to the required certified signature and at this time
the City does not have the DocuSign capability. Legal Counsel F
y g Ford suggested +t could be added to the
list of CPRB want items. Fruehling added she will check with Staff on the process.
McDaniel was wondering why more complaints are not filed. Stating it could be dust that there are not
very many, or it could be an accessibility issue, or possibly that people are afraid
havingto submit their personal P P d of retaliation due to
p onal information to the police department and CPRB. She suggested an
option of filing a complaint anonymously y which could be useful in order to initiate an investigation into a
specific incident. 9
Nichols mentioned the lack of public awareness of the Iowa Cit CP
the available r Y RB complaint processes and
esources.
MacConnell stated she wants to be sure everything is fair and transparent to the public and police
officers.
Legal Counsel Ford advised the Board that the should look at th
asked the 6 Y e big picture of what Council has
Board to address and that these items could be part of the Board's recommendation report.
Selmer agreed and noted these are all great ideas and suggestions, however he also noted this all ties
back to the New Business item that the Council has charged to the
g CPRB. He suggested further
discussion now
as opposed to waiting until the next meeting to formulate a plan of action.
RESUME NEW BUSINESS ITEM DISCUSSION
Selmer suggested approaching the Council charge in a three -step ep plan.
CPRB minutes
DRAFT
July 14, 2020
1. Formulate a list from each member detailing their suggestion as to what addition al powers
p Board to most efficiently function.
2. Discuss/Review/Debate suggestions
3. Research options and create report of recomm
endations to Council
Legal Counsel Ford encouraged members to review
and become familiar with the CPR Ordinance
By -Laws and Standard Operating Procedures, As they would be useful tools to help with ideas on
changes the Board is wanting since the over of the what
also stated p e Board �s determined by the Ordinance itself. For he is available if anyone should need assistance or d
members PDI;'s of O has any questions. Olney will email
Ordinance, By -Laws and Standard OperatingProcedures. ures.
After discussion the Board agreed to have individual members submit their list of suggested
recommendations to staff by August 3rd to include in the next '
meeting packet for Board review.
Townsend suggested creating a questionnaire tab e sent to past board members asking for their tout
and suggestions. Members agreed that this would be p
useful. Board members will submit their
suggestions for questions to Townsend to prepare a draft
packet p questionnaire which will be included in the
next meeting p et for board review.
STAFF INFORMATION
Olney asked the Board to review the updated member '
advise of p ber contact list submitted in the meeting packet
any changes needed. g p and
TENTATIVE MEETING SCHEDULE and FUTURE
AGENDAS sub ect to chan e
August 11, 2020 5:30 PM, Electronic Zoom Meeting
September Platform
p 8, 2020 5:30 PM, Electronic Zoom MeetingPlatform
September 21, 2020 5:30 P
M, Community Forum Electronic Zoom Meetin PI
October 13, 2020 5:30 PM, Electronic Z oom Meeting Platform g atform
November 10, 2020, 5:30 PM, Hellin Conference g Rm
ADJOURNMENT
Motion for adjournment by Selmer, seconded by McDaniel
Motion carried, 5/0.
Meeting adjourned at 6:25 P.M.
COMMUNITY POLICE REVIEW BOARD
ATTENDANCE RECORD
YEAR 2 019-2 02 0
Meet Date
NAME
?!I 1119
8I13l19
9lI0119
�1O
9l24/19
10/8/19
11/12/19
12/10/19
1/14/20
2/11/20
3/10/20
5/12I20
6/9/2 0
QUORUM
7/lvzo
Sam
Conaway
X
X
X
X O/E
O
O
O
O
Monique
Galpin
X X
X
X X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Jerri
MacConnell
O
X
Latisha
McDaniel
O X X
X X X O/E
X
X
O
X
X
Amanda
Nichols
X
David Selmer
O X X
X
X X X
X
X
X
X
X
Orville
Townsend
X X X
X X O/E X
X
X
X
X
X
KEY*
X = Present
O = Absent
O/E = Absent/Excused
NM ` No meeting
--- = Not a Member
OPS-03.1
Original Date of Issue
April 28, 2001
Effective Date of Reissue
August 5, 2020
Reevaluation Date
Au a ust 2021
USE OF
FORCE
General Order Number
99-05
Section Code
OPS-03
Amends
.A. L. E.A. Reference `.."
1.3.1—1.3.8, 1.3.13 see "INDEX AS"
NM hMW, ' i
INDEXAS:
• Use of Force
Use of F"`-
orce Mods;
• Reporting • Canine --
• h
• Significant Force • Arrests „w
• Investigation • Warning Shots
I. PURPOSE
The purpose of this policy is to provide members of the Iowa City Police
Department with guidelines on the use of deadly and non -deadly force.
II. POLICY
The Iowa City Police Department recognizes and respects the value and special
integrity of each human life. In investing officers with the lawful authority to use force to
protect the public welfare, a careful balancing of all human interests is required.
Therefore, it is the policy of the Iowa City Police Department that police officers shall
use only that force that is reasonable and necessary to accomplish lawful objectives
and effectively bring an incident under control, while protecting the lives of the officers
and others.
III. DEFINITIONS
OPS-03.2
A. Deadiv Force (Section 704.2, Code of Iowa) — For the purpose of this
policy, shall mean any of the following:
1. Force used for the purpose of causing serious injury.
2. Force which the actor knows, or reasonably should
know, will create a strong probability that serious
injury will result.
3. The discharge of a firearm, in the direction of some person with the
knowledge of the person's presence there, even though no intent to
inflict serious physical injury can be shown.
4. The discharge of a firearm, at a vehicle in which a person is known
to be.
B. Serious In (Section 702.18 Code of Iowa) — Means 1. disabling mental
illness; or 2. bodily injury which creates a substantial risk of death or which
causes serious permanent disfigurement, or protracted loss or impairment
of the function of any bodily member or Organ.
C. Use of Force — Any contact applied by an officer that significantlwrestricts
or alters the actions of another and/or compels compliance ,with`e
demands or instructions of the officer. This includes the userof "restraint
devices such as handcuffs.
D. Verbal Commands/Directives — Verbal communication by"iWoffider
directing someone to perform or not to perform an act: e.g:'_,.":`,top" "Don't
move", "Put your hands up", or "Get on the ground". ` 4
E. De-escalation - Taking action to stabilize a situation and reduce the
immediacy of a threat so that more time, options, and resources are
available to resolve the situation. The goal of de-escalation is to gain the
voluntary compliance of subjects, when feasible, and thereby reduce or
eliminate the necessity to use physical force.
F. De-escalation Techni ues - Actions used by members of the department,
that seek to minimize the likelihood of the need to use force during an
incident and increase the likelihood of gaining voluntary compliance from a
subject. Note that these techniques should only be employed when it is
safe to do so.
IV. THE REASONABLENESS OF THE USE OF FORCE
The use of force is analyzed under the Fourth Amendment. "The right to be free
from excessive force is included under the Fourth Amendment's prohibition
against unreasonable seizure of the person." Andrews v. Fuoss, 417 F.3d 813,
818 (8th Cir. 2005). On the other hand, "the right to make an arrest or
investigatory stop necessarily carries with it the right to use some degree of
CAPS-03f3
physical coercion or threat thereof to effect it." Graham v. Connor, 109 S.Ct.
1865, 1872 (1989).
A. Reasonable Officer: Ob'ective Standard
1. "The 'Reasonableness' of a particular use of force must be judged from the
perspective of a reasonable officer on the scene rather than with the 20/20
vision of hindsight." Graham v. Connor, 109 S.Ctf 1865, 1872 (1989).
2. "Reasonableness" also takes into account that police officers make
judgments in a split second under circumstances that are "tense, uncertain,
and rapidly evolving - about the amount of force that is necessary in a
particular situation." Graham v. Connor, 109 S.Ctf 1865, 1872 (1989).
3. Reasonableness is "not capable of precise definition or mechanical
application." Bell v. Wolfish, 441 U.S. 520,559 (1979). Reasonableness is
determined by the totality of circumstances, which include the "severity of the
crime at issue, whether the suspect poses an immediate threat to the safety
of the officers or others, and whether he is actively resisting arrest or
attempting to evade arrest by flight." Graham v. Connor, 109 S.Ct1 1865,
1872 ( 1989).
B. The Code of loins authorizes the use of force in makinq an arrest rr 1'
a e d
preventingan escape.
1. Section 804.8 Use of force bv Peace officer makina an arrest, :
..i 1 1 •P
A peace officer, while making a lawful arrest, is justified in the use otan
force which the peace officer reasonably believes to be necessary to effect
the arrest or to defend any person from bodily harm while making the arrest.
However, the use of deadly force or a chokehold [chokehold is specifically
defined if . n the state codej►s only justified when a person cannot be captured
any other way and either:
a. The person has used or threatened to use deadly force in
committing a felony, or
b. The peace officer reasonably believes the person would use deadly
force against any person unless immediately apprehended.
A peace officer making an arrest pursuant to an invalid warrant is justified in
the use of any force which the peace officer would be justified in using if the
warrant were valid, unless the peace officer knows that the warrant is invalid.
[Note: The use of a chokeholds and other lateral restraints is further limited by this
policy. See Section X below. ]
2. Section 804.13 Use of force in preventing an escape.
CAPS-o3.4
A peace officer or other person who has an arrested person in custody is
justified in the use of such force to prevent the escape of the arrested person
from custody as the officer or other person would be justified in using if the
officer or other person were arresting such person.
V. PROCEDURES
A. DEADLY FORCE
1. Purpose of statement
a. To delineate the Department's policy regarding the use of deadly
force.
b. To establish policies under which the use of deadly force is
permissible.
2. Policy
a. officers of the Iowa City Police Department may use dead) force
iy
to stop or incapacitate an assailant to prevent serious bodily injury
or death. For this purpose and to minimize danger to innocent
bystanders, the officer should shoot at the center bod M.anass
Y ,
whenever possible.
b. An officer may use deadly force to protect him/her or others from
what he/she reasonably believes to be an imminent threat of d ath
serious injury.
or serf µ
. .._..
c. An officer may use deadly force to effect the capture or prevent
escape if:
i. The person used or threatened to use deadly force in
committing a felony, and
ii. The peace officer reasonably believes the person would use
deadly force against a person unless immediately
apprehended.
d. Provided the criteria for paragraph 2(a), 2(b) or 2(c) have been
satisfied, no distinction shall be made relative to the age of the
intended target.
e. warning shots by officers of the Iowa City Police Department are
prohibited.
f. A verbal warning shall be utilized prior to an officer discharging a
g g
weapon unless it would compromise the safety of the officer or
others.
OPS 03.5
g. Shooting at or from a moving vehicle is prohibited, except p � under the
follo
wing g circumstances:
i. When the y occupant of the vehicle is utilizingdead/ force
against the police officer or other persons.
ii. As a last resort to prevent death or serious injury in1'u to officers o r
other persons.
�
iii. As a last resort to apprehend a person who has just committed J ommltted
a felony resulting in death or serious injury.
iv. The discharge of firearms shall not be utilized when
circumstances do not provide a high probability of striking an
• Y g
intended target or when there is substantial risk to the safety
persons, including
of other
p udrng the risk of causing vehicle
accidents.
3. Rendering medical aid following police actions
a. Officers shall render immediate and appropriate medical aid ld in
incidents that involve injuries sustained during detainments or
apprehension
b. officers shall immediately activate the emergency medical g Y system
when: b....
i. obvious severe injuries have occurred, -
ii. Medical distress is apparent, or the individual +s ' _
F it
unconscious,
iii. Requested b the subject(s) Y ject() involved,
iv. The extent of an injury is unknown or not visible or
V. The nature or extent of the injury dictates.
b. officers shall err on the side of caution, requesting q g emergency
medical system to respond to the scene if in doubt about the
existence or extent of an injury_
4. Surrender of firearm.
When officers discharge a firearm that results in personal injury Jury or death
to any person, the officer or employee shall surrender that firearm
to
his/her supervisor or a higher authority consistent with departmental p rtmental
directives. Firearms involved in police shootingincidents shall all not be
OPS-03.6
unloaded, cleaned, nor in any way altered from the condition
immediately following discharge other than to make the weapon safe for
transport.
a. When more than one officer or weapon has been involved in a
shooting situation resulting in any injury or death, the involved
weapons must be surrendered to the commanding officer in
accordance with departmental directives.
b. The commanding officer receiving such firearm or firearms shall
immediately secure and document the same as evidence.
B. LESS LETHAL FORCE
1. Where deadly force is not authorized under this policy, officers should
assess the incident in order to determine which less lethal technique will
best de-escalate the incident and bring it under control in a safe manner.
Officers shall use no more force than is reasonably necessary to gain
control of an individual or situation. Officers are authorized to use force
consistent with the Use of Force model.
2. An officer shall use no more force than that officer reasonably feels is
necessary in the performance of their official duties. Use of force by an
officer is justified in, but not limited to, the following situations:
a. To protect the officer or others from physical harm. -'
b. To control an arrestee or a potentially violent person. -
c. To restrain or subdue a resistant individual. Approved restraint
devices are handcuffs (hinged and chain style), flex -cuffs and nylon
leg restraints.
d. To bring an unlawful situation safely and effectively under control.
3. Officers shall offer medical treatment to any non -combative person who
has been exposed to a chemical irritant / OC spray. Officers shall
decontaminate a person exposed to a chemical irritant and continue to
monitor the condition of that person until they are no longer in the
custody of the officer.
C. NOTIFICATIONS
1. Any officer who discharges a firearm in the course of their duty, shall
immediately contact his/her supervisor. (This does not apply to animal
euthanasia where supervisory permission to discharge the weapon must
be sought prior to the destruction of the animal (see section B in
"REPORTING USE OF FORCE INCIDENTS") or training situations) If
this is not practical, the officer shall contact the on -duty patrol supervisor.
The notified supervisor shall then contact the following individuals:
CAPS®D3.7
a. The involved officer's Division Commander.
i. It shall be the Division Commander's responsibility to notify the
Chief of Police.
ii. If the Division Commander cannot be notified, a watch
supervisor shall notify the Chief of Police.
b. The County Attorney of the county in which the incident occurred.
c. The City Attorney.
d . The City Manager.
e. The Criminal Investigation Commander or his/her designee.
f. Other as Required by the Mandatory Call Matrix
2. The on -duty watch supervisor shall be immediately notified or
summoned to the scene of any incident where use of force results in a
physical injury.
3. The on -duty watch supervisor shall be immediately notified when a
chemical irritant / OC spray is utilized.
4. The on -duty watch supervisor shall be immediately notified when a
conducted energy device is discharged.
D. REPORTING USE OF FORCE INCIDENTS
.tY
1. Discharge of Firearms -- report required. .
Any officer who discharges a firearm for any reason or purpose other
than those exceptions listed in this section, shall make a written report to
his/her immediate supervisor as soon as circumstances permit. This
written report will then be forwarded through the chain of command to
the Chief of Police for review. Exceptions to the requirement of a written
report apply to the following circumstances in which no accident or injury
results:
a. The discharge of firearms on firearm ranges or in an area for
firearms practice.
b. sporting events to include lawful hunting and organized shooting
matches.
2. When, in accordance with applicable law, it becomes necessary for an
officer to discharge a firearm to destroy an animal which presents a
CPS-03.8
danger or is seriously injured or ill, the officer will, prior to discharging the
g 9
firearm, request permission to do so from the on -duty supervisor. If such
ip
action must be immediately taken in order to protect the officer's or
another person's safety, the officer need not delay action in order to
request this permission. In this circumstance, however, the Watch
Supervisor must be notified immediately after the firearm is used. A Use
of Force report is required.
3. Administrative Review Committee.
a. Use of force incidents shall be reviewed by a committee consisting
of a minimum of three sworn personnel.
i. The committee should consist of two supervisors as
designated by the chief of Police and one officer -preferably a
use of force instructor. To provide differing perspectives, the
Chief of Police may appoint multiple committees that alternate
review responsibilities.
ii. This group should, at a minimum, meet every month to review
the Use of Force Re orls from the previous month.
iii. The purpose of this committee shall be to review all facts and
reports concerning use of force incidents to determine whether
policy, training, equipment, or disciplinary issues should be
addressed. This committee will make recommendations on
these matters to the Chief of Police.
b. All non-use of force firearms discharges (e.g. accidental/negligent
discharge), with the exception of the destruction of animals which are
reviewed by the Use of Force Committee, shall be reviewed in'a
manner consistent with General order 99-06: Internal Affairs
Investigations as assigned by a Division commander.
L At a minimum, this will consist of a Report of Inquiry 6' p q ry a-nd
supervisory review.
ii. The Division Commander and the Training and Accreditation
Sergeant will review the investigation and findings to identify
any training recommendations which are necessary, and/or
any need for policy changes. Recommendations on these
matters will be forwarded to the Chief of Police.
4. Use of Force ReDort _.
a. A Use of Force Report with a written narrative regarding an use of
f iY
force incident will be submitted n addition to any incident report.
The report(s) shall contain the following information:
i. Arrestee/suspect information.
OPS-o3.9
ii. Incident numbers), date and time of incident, and reporting
. p g
officer.
iii. Description of actual resistance encountered,
iv. All required fields completed in Use of Force report.
v. The force used by the officer to overcome the resistance and
the specific weapon or technique used.
vi. A description of any alleged or actual injuries to either the
officer or suspect.
vii. Pictures taken of any injuries to either the officer or suspect.
viii. Exposure to Chemical Irritant / oC spray will additionally
require the documentation of medical treatment being offered,
supervisor notification, and decontamination procedures.
ix. A Conducted Energy Device deployment will additionally
require the documentation of medical treatment, if medical
treatment is refused by the suspect, supervisor notification,
and the number of cycles/applications used.
b. When the only use of force is the application of handcuffs, double
locked, no use of force report is necessary. The application,.of
handcuffs, double locked will be documented on a written complaint
or citation or in the body of an incident report.
c. A supervisor of the reporting person shall review the report for
adherence to Department policy and procedure and document their
conclusions.
d. All reports concerning use of force shall be forwarded to the
Sergeant of Planning/Research.
e. The Captain of Field operations and Chief of Police shall review all
use of force reports where any participant is injured during the use
of force and/or where a deadly force option has been utilized
(excludes display of a weapon).
5. Executive Review.
At a minimum, the Chief of Police and/or designee will conduct a
documented analysis of all reports and incidents of force annually. An
analysis of reports and incidents of force could reveal patterns or trends
that indicate training needs, equipment upgrades and/or policy
.. p Y
modifications.
OPS-03. 1 a
6. Duty to Intervene and Report
All employees are required to be familiar with and abide b Go 20-
01 i Y
titled Duty to Intervene and Report.
E. INVESTIGATION OF USE OF FORCE RESULTING IN DEATH OR
SERIOUS INJURY
1. when any member of the police department is involved in an incident
resulting in death or serious injury, a thorough and objective
investigation of facts and circumstances will be initiated as soon as
practical by the Chief of Police's designees and completed as soon as
practical.
2. The Chief of Police or his/her designee shall decide whether the DCI
and/or any other outside agency shall be called to assist in the
investigation.
3. If an incident resulting in death or serious injury which involves a sworn
Iowa City police officer occurs in another police jurisdiction, the officer
shall cooperate with that jurisdiction, as set forth in Iowa City Police
Department directives.
4. The on -duty watch commander/supervisor shall ensure that a -
Pp,r6priate
case reports are initiated and that potential evidence is preserved.
b ••
5. The officer(s) or employee involved in the death ...
or serious injury -shall be
relieved of field duty without the loss of pay or benefits, pendingthe
results of the departmental investigation. Other officers or employees`
involve � d in the incident also may be relieved of field duty without `Toss of
pay or benefits at the discretion of the Chief of Police, while the
investigation is pending:
a. The officer or employee shall be available at all times for official
interviews and statements regarding the case, and shall be subject
to recall to duty at any time. The officer or employee must receive
permission from the Chief of Police, or from their Division
Commander, prior to leaving the area. If such permission is given,
,
the officer or employee shall supply the phone numbers of his/her
location and duration of the absence.
b. The officer or employee will not discuss the case with anyone
except the prosecuting attorney and/or persons designated by the
Chief of Police or their designee. This does not prohibit the officer
or employee from discussions with his/her attorney. If the officer or
employee may be the subject of internal review or criminal charges,
his/her constitutional rights and administrative protections will be
maintained. The officer or employee will attend post -traumatic
stress counseling at the discretion of the Chief of Police.
CAPS-03.11
c. At the discretion of the Chief of Police, the officer or employee may
be returned to duty upon departmental receipt of notification from
the counselor or mental health professional indicating the officer's
fitness for duty.
6. The investigation and administrative leave policy outlined herein is not
intended to imply or indicate the officer or employee has acted
improperly, but is designed to safeguard the officer or employee and the
Department.
7. The Chief of Police may appoint one or more individuals to conduct a
separate yet parallel (administrative) investigation into a use of force
incident to ensure all personnel followed departmental policies and
guidelines.
VI. USE OF FORCE MODEL
Police officers are given the unique right to use force, even deadly force,
against others for legitimate law enforcement purposes. The right to use
force carries with it an obligation to use that force in a responsible manner.
Police agencies have an obligation to provide their employees with the
policies, training, and tools necessary to accomplish their mission. Selection
of a use of force response from the options articulated in this model will be
based on: the skills, knowledge, and ability of the officer; the perceived
threat and amount of resistance offered by a subject; and consideration of
the situational framework. A defined Use of Force Model will enhance the
department's ability to manage the use of force and will benefit the officer by
providing guidance, resources, and options.
A. ESCALATION OF FORCE
Officers of the Iowa City Police Department shall follow the
principles of the Use of Force Model. The model describes an
escalation of force, which is based on a reasonable officer's
perception of threat or resistance. As a subject's resistance
escalates, more force options become available to the officer.
When resistance stops or reduces, the officer must correspondingly
de-escalate. Officers of the Iowa City Police Department must
generally employ the tools, tactics, and timing of force utilization
consistent with the Model's proscription and training protocols. Due
to the fact that officer/member of the public confrontations occur in
environments that are potentially unpredictable, "tense, uncertain,
and rapidly evolving" (Graham v. Connor, 109 S.Ct. 1865, 1872
(1989)) the officer may utilize tools, tactics, and timing outside the
parameters of the Model. However, these applications of force must
meet the same test of reasonableness as those which have been
previously identified and approved by the Department.
B. DE-ESCALATION of FORCE
De-escalation strategies shall be applied in an effort to reduce the need
for application of force, when safe and feasible.
De-escalation techniques are actions used by members of the department
that seek to minimize the likelihood of the need to use force during an
incident and increase the likelihood of gaining voluntary compliance from a
p
subject. Note that these techniques should only be employed when it is
safe
.
When safe and feasible under the totality of circumstances, members of
the department shall attempt to slow down or stabilize the situation so that
more time, options and resources are available for incident resolution.
When time and circumstances reasonably permit, members of the
department shall consider whether a subject's lack of compliance is a
deliberate attempt to resist or an inability to comply based on factors
including, but not limited to:
Medical conditions
Mental impairment
Developmental disability
_w
Physical limitation
.1WH
Language barrier
Drug interaction
Behavioral crisis
An officer's awareness of these possibilities, when time and
circumstances reasonably permit, shall then be balanced a ainst the facts
` of th g
e incident facing the officer when deciding which tactical op tions are
the most appropriate to bring the situation to a safe resolution.
Mitigating the immediacy of threat gives officers of the department time to
utilize extra resources, and increases time available to call. more officers
or specialty units.
The number of officers on scene may increase the available force options
and may increase the ability to reduce the overall force used.
Other examples include:
Placing barriers between an uncooperative subject and an officer
Containing a threat
Moving from a position that exposes officers to potential threats to a
safer position
OPS-03. 1 3
Decreasing the exposure to potential threat by using
- Distance
- Cover
- Concealment
Communicating from a safe position intended to gain the subject's
compliance, using:
- Verbal persuasion
- Advisements
- Warnings
Avoiding physical confrontation, unless immediately necessary (for
example, to protect someone, or stop dangerous behavior)
Using verbal de-escalation techniques to generate cooperation and gain
voluntary compliance.
Calling extra resources to assist or officers to assist:
- More officers
- CIT officers
- officers equipped with less -lethal tools
,4
- Supervisors.
* Using any other tactics and approaches that attempt to achieve
gaining the compliance of the subject.
D. Reasonable officer's perception/Reasonable officer's response (see
attached matrix)
VII. CIVILIAN OFFICERS (COMMUNITY SERVICE AND ANIMAL
CONTROL OFFICERS)
A. Community Service Officers assigned to the road and Animal Control Officers
shall carry chemical irritants (OC) under this policy for the sole purpose of
self-defense from persons or from animals.
B. When dealing with upset persons, civilian officers must first attempt to
deescalate the situation, if it is reasonable to do so, by backing away from the
situation to a place of safety (vehicle or other barrier) and calling for a sworn
officer to come to the scene. If after attempting to deescalate the situation, the
civilian officer reasonably believes that they are going to be assaulted, the
officer may deploy their chemical irritant in a manner consistent with training.
C. When dealing with aggressive animals, civilian officers should try backing
away from the situation to a place of safety (vehicle or other barrier) and call
OPS-a3.14,
for a sworn officer to come to the scene to assist. If the civilian officer is
unable to make it to a place of safety and they reasonably believe that they
may be attacked, the officer may deploy their chemical irritant at the animal in
a manner consistent with training.
D. civilian officers that deploy chemical agents at a person are subject to all
reporting requirements set forth in this policy. Additionally, they are
responsible to immediately contact the on duty Watch supervisor as well as
summoning medical personnel to the scene for any injuries.
E. Civilian officers that deploy chemical agents at an animal shall notify their
supervisor to make them aware that a chemical agent was deployed as well
as the circumstances involved.
F. When dealing with persons, a civilian officer will be held to the "Reasonable
officer's perception/Reasonable officer's response" standard. (see level four
and five in the attached matrix)
VIII. PREREQUISITES TO CARRYING LETHAL / LESS LETHAL
WEAPONS
All personnel authorized to carry weapons intended for use of force
application must receive training on their use from the perspectives of
practical application and organizational policy. Instruction should include
confirmation of employee understanding of legal implications and
requirements, weapon specific operating and care procedures,
documentation and reporting procedures, and obligations following the
use of force.
IX. FBI NATIONAL USE of FORCE DATA COLLECTION
The Department voluntarily participates in the FBI National Use of Force Data
Collection. The sergeant of planning and research shall track the following use of
force incidents:
When a fatality to a person occurs connected to a use of force by an Iowa
City police officer.
When there is serious bodily injury to a person connected to a use of force
by an Iowa city police officer. For this section the definition of serious
bodily injury will be based, in part, upon Title 18, United States code,
Section 2246 (4). The term "serious bodily injury" means "bodily injury that
involves a substantial risk of death, unconsciousness, protracted and
obvious disfigurement, or protracted loss or impairment of the function of a
bodily member, organ, or mental faculty."
In the absence of either death or serious bodily injury, when a firearm is
discharged by an Iowa city police officer at or in the direction of a person.
0PS-03.1 E,
When an incident meeting the above criteria is met the sergeant of planning and
research shall report the following information to the FBI:
Incident information
Date and time of the incident
Total number of officers who applied actual force during the incident
- Number of officers from the Iowa City Police Department who applied
actual force during the incident
- Location of the incident (address orlatitude/longitude)
Location type of the incident (street, business, residence, restaurant,
school, etc.)
- Did the officer(s) approach the subject(s)?
- Was it an ambush incident?
Was a supervisor or a senior officer acting in a supervisory capacity
present or consulted at any point during the incident?
- What was the reason for initial contact between the subject and the officer
(response to unlawful or suspicious activity, routine patrol, traffic stop,
etc.)?
- If the initial contact was due to itunlawful or criminal activity," what were
the most serious reported offenses committed by the subject prior to or at
the time of the incident?
If applicable, the National Incident -Based Reporting System or local
incident number of the report detailing criminal incident information on the
subject and/or assault or homicide of a law enforcement officer
If the incident involved multiple law enforcement agencies, the case
numbers for the local use -of -force reports at the other agencies
Subject Information
Age, sex, race, ethnicity, height, and weight
Injury/death of subject(s) (gunshot wound, apparent broken bones,
unconsciousness, etc.)
Type(s) of force used connected to serious bodily injury or death (firearm,
electronic control weapon, explosive device, blunt instrument, etc.)
Did the subject(s) resist?
- Was the threat by the subject(s) directed to the officer or to another party?
-- Type(s) of subject resistance/weapon involvement (threatened officer,
threatened others, threatened self, active aggression, firearm, attempt to
flee, etc.)
- Was there an apparent or known impairment in the physical condition of
subject? If yes, indicate which (mental health/alcohol/drugs/unknown)
At any time during the incident, was the subject(s) armed or believed to be
armed with a weapon?
Officer Information
Age, sex, race, ethnicity, height, and weight
Years of service as a law enforcement officer (total tenure, number of
years)
At the time of the incident, was the officer a full --time employee?
Was the officer readily identifiable?
Was the officer on duty at the time of the incident?
- Did the officer discharge a firearm?
Was the officer injured?
- What was the officer's injury type (gunshot wound, apparent broken
bones, severe laceration, unconsciousness, etc.)
X. CHOKE HOLDS, LATERAL NECK RESTRAINTS, and SIMILAR
COMPLIANCE TECHNIQUES
A. Choke holds, lateral neck restraints, and similar compliance techniques
that are specifically designed or intended to restrict the ability to breathe or
the flow of blood to the brain, or any intentional and prolonged application
of force to the throat or windpipe of another that prevents or hinders
breathing or reduces the intake of air, are prohibited except:
1. Where a person cannot be captured any other way;
AND
2. a. The person has used or threatened to use deadly force in
committing a felony OR
OPB-g3.17
b. The officer reasonably believes the person would use deadly
force against any person unless immediately apprehended;
[Note: 1 and 2 are requirements that must be present before the
exception on the use of chokeholds in Section 804.8 of the Iowa Code
applies.]
UMA, rw
3. It is the only reasonable means of protecting oneself or a third
party.
[Note: 3 is an additional City of Iowa City requirement that must be
present before the exception applies.]
B. If utilized, the technique must be immediately loosened or released if the
individual on whom it is being applied becomes compliant.
C. Any individual who has been subjected to a lateral choke hold, neck
restraint, or similar compliance technique, regardless of whether he/ she
was rendered unconscious, shall be promptly examined by emergency
medical services and shall be monitored until examined by
medical personnel.
D. The officer shall inform any person receiving custody, or any person.
placed in a position of providing care, that the individual has been
subjected to a choke hold, lateral neck restraint, or similar compliance
technique and whether the individual lost consciousness as a resull .,
E. Any officer applying a choke hold, lateral neck restraint, or similar =}
compliance technique shall promptly notify a supervisor of the use'uor
attempted use of such hold. A use of force report shall be compled.
X11. ANNUAL IN-SERVICE TRAINING
On an annual basis all officers will receive in-service training on this policy.
The training shall include a review of the definitions of conditional terms, such as
those for reasonable belief, serious physical injury, or similar terms used to
qualify the policy.
Denise Brotherton, Interim Chief of Police
WARNING
This directive is for departmental use only and does not apply in any criminal or civil
proceeding. The department policy should not be construed as a creation of higher
legal standard of safety or care in an evidentiary sense with respect to third -party
claims. Violations of this directive will only form the basis for departmental
administrative sanctions.
OPS-a3.19
LEVEL ONE
,Perception — Subject is compliant
.Response — Cooperative controls {includes: mental preparation, spatial positioning,
communications skills, handcuffing positions and techniques, searching techniques,
arrest and transport controls}
USE OF FORCE MODEL - FUNCTIONAL PROFILE
COMPLIANT: LEVEL 1 COOPERATIVE CONTROLS
>
PERCEPTION SKILLS
MENTAL PREPARATION
>
RISK ASSESSMENT
>
SURVIVAL ORIENTATION
>
OFFICER STANCE
SPATIAL POSITIONING
>
BODY LANGUAGE.
>
RELATIVE POSITIONING
VERBAL
- VERBAL COMMANDSIDIRECTIVes
COMMUNICATION SKILLS
>
- VERBAL DE-ESCALATION
TECHNIQUES
>
NON-VERBAL
>
WALL
HANDCUFFING POSITIONS
>
STANDING `
=-
>
PRONE-
>
KNEELING '.
HANDCUFFING TECHNIQUE
>
zr
CONTROLLED
>
WALL
SEARCHING TECHNIQUES
>
STANDING
>
PRONE
>
KNEELING
>
OPPOSITE SEX
SPECIALIZED TECHNIQUES
>
FRISK
>
STRIP
ARREST TECHNIQUES
>
SINGLE OFFICER
>
MULTIPLE OFFICERS
ESCORT CONTROLS
>
SINGLE OFFICER
>
MULTIPLE OFFICERS
TRANSPORT CONTROLS
>
SINGLE OFFICER
>
MULTIPLE OFFICERS
OPS-03.2V
LEVEL TWO
Perception — Subject is passively resistant
Res onse — Contact controls (includes: contact controls, conflict management
techniques, and mass formation arrest techniques including: multiple officer lifts,
stretchers, wheelchairs etc.)
USE OF FORCE MODEL —FUNCTIONAL PROFILE
RESISTIVE (Passive): LEVEL 2
CONTACT CONTROLS
FORCE OPTIONS (also includes all options from lower Levels
COMMUNICATION SKILLS
CONTACT CONTROLS
ARREST TECHNIQUES
> VERBAL
- VERBAL DIRECTIVES
- VERBAL DE-ESCALATION TECHNIQUES
> NON-VERBAL
> ARM
> WRIST
> HAND
> ESCORT TECHNIQUES
> TRANSPORT TECHNIQUES
> MASS FORMATION
OPS-03w21
LEVEL THREE
Perception — Subject is actively resistant
Response — Compliance techniques (includes: neuromuscular controls, joint
manipulation, nerve compression, chemical irritants, e.g. CSC spray, controlled stopping
devices for fleeing vehicle incidents)
COMPLIANCE TECHNIQUES
USE OF FORCE MODEL - FUNCTIONAL PROFILE
RESISTANT (Active): LEVEL 3 COMPLIANCE TECHNIQUES
FORCE OPTIONS also includes all options from lower Levels
> NERVE COMPRESSION TECHNIQUES
COMPLIANCE CONTROLS > CHEMICAL IRRITANTS, CROWD CONTROL
CHEMICAL MUNITIONS
> CONTROL TACTICS
NERVE COMPRESSION TECHNIQUES: 'HEAD
NEURO-MUSCULAR CONTROLS 'ARM
> LEG
CONTROL TACTICS > WRIST ROTATION
> ELBOW LEVERAGE
BICYCLE > TAKE DOWN TECHNIQUES
r.�
VEHICLE PURSUIT TACTICS > COMMUNICATIONS/ASSESSMENT SKILLS
> PACING/TRAILING TECHNIQUES ,
OPS-93.22
LEVEL FOUR
Percept — Subject is physically assaultive and may cause bodily injury
Response — Defensive tactics (includes: personal weapon defense, e.g. hands, knees,
feet, active countermeasures, etc.; impact weapons, e.g. ASP, weapon retention
techniques, conducted energy devices)
DEFENSIVE TACTICS
USE OF FORCE MODEL — FUNCTIONAL PROFILE
ASSAULTIVE Potential Bodily Harm): LEVEL 4
DEFENSIVE TACTICS
FORCE OPTIONS also includes all options from lower Levels
>
HEAD
>
HANDS
PERSONAL WEAPON DEFENSES >
ELBOWS
>
FEET
>
KNEES
IMPACT WEAPONS (ASP) >
STRIKES
>
IMPACT PROJECTILES
>
CANINE OPERATIONS
LESS LETHAL WEAPONS >
CONDUCTED ENERGY
DEVICES
>
OTHER OPTIONS
>
FRONT
WEAPON RETENTION TECHNIQUES (Less Lethal) >
REAR
>
SIDE
OTHER WEAPONS >
CONTROL/APPREHENSION
CANINE
TECHNIQUES
*Deployment of canine for apprehension/protection shall be preceded by actions of
suspect which are consistent with Level 4 (Assaultive — Potential Bodily Harm)""behavior.
The exception to this is the deployment of canine for building searches or relat.
circumstances, where the suspect actions are not known. In this circumstance" :-
procedures spelled out in the "Canine operations" General Order (99-04�1"hall e
followed.~
rW a
OPS-03.23
LEVEL FIVE
Perception - Subject is assaultive and likely to cause SERIOUS bodily injury or death
Response- Deadly force (includes: weapon/weapons attack defense, lethal force
utilization with service/supplemental weapons, forcible stopping techniques for assault
with vehicle incidents)
DEADLY FORCE
USE OF FORCE MODEL - FUNCTIONAL PROFILE
ASSAULTIVE (Serious Bodily Harm/Death): DEADLY FORCE
LEVEL 5
FORCE OPTIONS also includes all options from lower Levels
> WEAPON
ATTACK DEFENSE > WEAPONLESS> WEAPON RETENTION
TECHNIQUES
> SERVICE WEAPON
LETHAL FORCE UTILIZATION > SUPPLEMENTAL WEAPON
> OTHER OPTIONS
OTHER OPTIONS' > CONTACT
FORCIBLE STOPPING TECHNIQUES > ROADBLOCK
OPS-03.24
41
REDLINE VERSION
Red highlights are deletions
Green highlights are additions
USE OF
FORCE
Original Date of Issue General order Number
April 28, 2001 199-05
Effective Date of Reissue Section Code
Au ust 5, 2020 OPS-03
Reevaluation Date Amends
August 2021
C.A.L. E.A. Reference
1.3.1 — 1.3.8, 1.3.13 see "INDEX AS" �,.,...,.
INDEXAS:
• Use of Force
• Reporting
• Significant Force
• Investigation
OPS-03.1
.: G ..
• Use of Force Model
• Canine
• Arrests pt
• Warning Shots
I. PURPOSE
The purpose of this policy is to provide members of the Iowa City Police
Department with guidelines on the use of deadly and non -deadly force.
II. POLICY
The Iowa City Police Department recognizes and respects the value and special
integrity of each human life. In investing officers with the lawful authority to use force to
protect the public welfare, a careful balancing of all human interests is required.
Therefore, it is the policy of the Iowa City Police Department that police officers shall
use only that force that is reasonable and necessary to accomplish lawful objectives
and effectively bring an incident under control, while protecting the lives of the officers
and others.
III. DEFINITIONS
OPS-03.2
A. Deadly Force (Section 704.2, Code of Iowa) -- For the purpose of this
policy, shall mean any of the following:
1. Force used for the purpose of causing serious injury.
2. Force which the actor knows, or reasonably should
know, will create a strong probability that serious
injury will result.
3. The discharge of a firearm, in the direction of some person with the
knowledge of the person's presence there, even though no intent to
inflict serious physical injury can be shown.
4. The discharge of a firearm, at a vehicle in which a person is known
to be.
B. Serious In (Section 702.18 Code of Iowa) — Means 1. disabling mental
illness; or 2. bodily injury which creates a substantial risk of death or which
causes serious permanent disfigurement, or protracted loss or impairment
of the function of any bodily member or organ.
w
C. Use of Force — Any contact applied by an officer that significantly'rrestricts
or alters the actions of another and/or compels compliance with the
demands or instructions of the officer. This includes the use of restraint
devices such as handcuffs.
D. Verbal Commands/Directives — Verbal communication by an office,
directing someone to perform or not to perform an act: e.g. "Stop", "Don't
move", "Put your hands up", or "Get on the ground".
E. De-escalation - Taking action to stabilize a situation and reduce the
immediacy of a threat so that more time, options, and resources are
available to resolve the situation. The goal of de-escalation is to gain the
voluntary compliance of subjects, when feasible, and thereby reduce or
eliminate the necessity to use physical force.
F. De-escalation Techniques - Actions used by members of the department,
that seek to minimize the likelihood of the need to use force during an
incident and increase the likelihood of gaining voluntary compliance from a
subject. Note that these techniques should only be employed when it is
safe to do so.
IV. THE REASONABLENESS OF THE USE OF FORCE
The use of force is analyzed under the Fourth Amendment. "The right to be free
from excessive force is included under the Fourth Amendment's prohibition
against unreasonable seizure of the person." Andrews v. Fuoss, 417 F.3d 813,
818 (8th Cir. 2005). on the other hand, "the right to make an arrest or
investigatory stop necessarily carries with it the right to use some degree of
OPS-03.3
physical coercion or threat thereof to effect it." Graham v. Connor, 109 S.Ct.
1865, 1872 (1989).
A. Reasonable Officer: Obi: e Standard
1. "The 'Reasonableness' of a particular use of force must be judged from the
perspective of a reasonable officer on the scene rather than with the 20120
vision of hindsight." Graham v. Connor, 109 S.Ct. 1865, 1872 (1989).
2. "Reasonableness" also takes into account that police officers make
judgments in a split second under circumstances that are "tense, uncertain,
and rapidly evolving - about the amount of force that is necessary in a
particular situation." Graham v. Connor, 109 S.Ct. 1865, 1872 (1989).
3. Reasonableness is "not capable of precise definition or mechanical
application." Bell v. Wolfish, 441 U.S. 520, 559 (1979). Reasonableness is
determined by the totality of circumstances, which include the "severity of the
crime at issue, whether the suspect poses an immediate threat to the safety
of the officers or others, and whether he is actively resisting arrest or
attempting to evade arrest by flight." Graham v. Connor, 109 S.Ct. 1865,
1872 (1989).
B. The Code of Iowa authorizes the use of force in making an arrest and,
Preventinq an escape.
1. Section 804.8 Use of force bv Peace officer making an arrest. �
A peace officer, while making a lawful arrest, is justified in the use of any
force which the peace officer reasonably believes to be necessary to effect
the arrest or to defend any person from bodily harm while makinq the arrest.
However, the use of deadly force or a
is only justified when a person cannot be captured
any other way and either:
a. The person has used or threatened to use deadly force in
committing a felony, or
b. The peace officer reasonably believes the person would use deadly
force against any person unless immediately apprehended.
A peace officer making an arrest pursuant to an invalid warrant is justified in
the use of any force which the peace officer would be justified in using if the
warrant were valid, unless the peace officer knows that the warrant is invalid.
2. Section 804.13 Use of force in oreventinq an esca e.
CAPS-03A
A peace officer or other person who has an arrested person in custody is
justified in the use of such force to prevent the escape of the arrested person
from custody as the officer or other person would be justified in using if the
officer or other person were arresting such person.
V. PROCEDURES
A. DEADLY FORCE
1. Purpose of statement
a. To delineate the Department's policy regarding the use of deadly
force.
b. To establish policies under which the use of deadly force is
permissible.
2. Policy
a. officers of the Iowa City Police Department may use deadly force
to stop or incapacitate an assailant to prevent serious bodily injury
or death. For this purpose and to minimize danger to innocent
bystanders, the officer should shoot at the center body mass,
whenever possible.
b. An officer may use deadly force to protect him/her or others from
what he/she reasonably believes to be an imminent threat,,Of death
or serious injury.
Ali
wD
c. An officer may use deadly force to effect the capture or prevent
escape if:
hyl
i. The person used or threatened to use deadly force in
committing a felony, and
ii. The peace officer reasonably believes the person would use
deadly force against a person unless immediately
apprehended.
d. Provided the criteria for paragraph 2(a), 2(b) or 2(c) have been
satisfied, no distinction shall be made relative to the age of the
intended target.
e. Warning shots by officers of the Iowa City Police Department are
prohibited.
f. A verbal warning shall be utilized prior to an officer discharging a
weapon unless it would compromise the safety of the officer or
others.
OPS-o3.5
g. Shooting at or from a moving vehicle is prohibited, except under the
following circumstances:
i. When the occupant of the vehicle is utilizing deadly force
against the police officer or other persons.
ii. As a last resort to prevent death or serious injury to officers or
other persons.
iii. As a last resort to apprehend a person who has just committed
a felony resulting in death or serious injury.
iv. The discharge of firearms shall not be utilized when
circumstances do not provide a high probability of striking an
intended target or when there is substantial risk to the safety
of other persons, including the risk of causing vehicle
accidents.
4. Injuries resulting from LIse of force_
police awe
a. Officers shall render knrnedTate appropriate first aid to
any person injured or complaining of pairs T`Vlo ping the use of force -
in incidents that invo[ve injuries skistainetJ during detairiments or
apprehension
b. EMS will be summoned to the scene to ensure delivery of
appropriate medical treatment when:
fficers shall l iniq a c t i v tk a At-11 q."
r •
�r
r
Vi�a. u
r�
Requested by the subject(s) involved, s
iv. The extent of an injury is unknown or not visible, or
V. The nature or extent of the injury dictates.
c. Officers shall err on the side of caution, requesting emergency
medical system to respond to the scene if in doubt about the
existence or extent of an injury.
4 - Surrender of firearm.
PS-03.6
When officers discharge a firearm that results in personal injury or death
to any person, the officer or employee shall surrender that firearm to
his/her supervisor or a higher authority consistent With departmental
directives. Firearms involved in police shooting incidents shall not be
unloaded, cleaned, nor in any way altered from the condition
immediately following discharge other than to make the weapon safe for
transport.
a. When more than one officer or weapon has been involved in a
shooting situation resulting in any injury or death, the involved
weapons must be surrendered to the commanding officer in
accordance with departmental directives.
b. The commanding officer receiving such firearm or firearms shall
immediately secure and document the same as evidence.
B. LESS LETHAL FORCE
1. Where deadly force is not authorized under this policy, officers should
assess the incident in order to determine which less lethal technique will
best de-escalate the incident and bring it under control in a safe manner.
Officers shall use no more force than is reasonably necessary to gain
control of an individual or situation. officers are authorized to use force
consistent with the Use of Force model.
2. An officer shall use no more force than that officer reasonably feels is
necessary in the performance of their official duties. Use of force by an
officer is justified in, but not limited to, the following situations:
Y :
a. To protect the officer or others from physical harm.
b. To control an arrestee or a potentially violent person.
c. To restrain or subdue a resistant individual. Approved restraint
devices are handcuffs (hinged and chain style), flex -cuffs and nylon
leg restraints.
d. To bring an unlawful situation safely and effectively under control.
I officers shall offer medical treatment to any non -combative person who
has been exposed to a chemical irritant / OC spray. Officers shall
decontaminate a person exposed to a chemical irritant and continue to
monitor the condition of that person until they are no longer in the
custody of the officer.
C. NOTIFICATIONS
1. Any officer who discharges a firearm in the course of their duty, shall
immediately contact his/her supervisor. (This does not apply to animal
euthanasia where supervisory permission to discharge the weapon must
CAPS-g3.7
be sought prior to the destruction of the animal (see section 6 in
"REPORTING USE OF FORCE INCIDENTS") or training situations) If
this is not practical, the officer shall contact the on -duty patrol supervisor.
The notified supervisor shall then contact the following individuals:
a. The involved officer's Division Commander.
i. It shall be the Division Commander's responsibility to notify the
Chief of Police.
ii. If the Division Commander cannot be notified, a watch
supervisor shall notify the Chief of Police.
b. The County Attorney of the county in which the incident occurred.
c. The City Attorney.
d. The City Manager.
e. The Criminal Investigation Commander or his/her designee.
f. Other as Required by the Mandatory Call Matrix
2. The on -duty watch supervisor shall be immediately notified or
summoned to the scene of any incident where use of force results in a
physical injury.
3. The on -duty watch supervisor shall be immediately notified when a
chemical irritant / OC spray is utilized.
4. The on -duty watch supervisor shall be immediately notified when a
conducted energy device is discharged.
D. REPORTING USE OF FORCE INCIDENTS
1. Discharge of Firearms — report required.
Any officer who discharges a firearm for any reason or purpose other
than those exceptions listed in this section, shall make a written report to
his/her immediate supervisor as soon as circumstances permit. This
written report will then be forwarded through the chain of command to
the Chief of Police for review. Exceptions to the requirement of a written
report apply to the following circumstances in which no accident or injury
results:
a. The discharge of firearms on firearm ranges or in an area for
firearms practice.
O PS-03.8
b. Sporting events to include lawful hunting and organized shooting
matches.
2. When, in accordance with applicable law, it becomes necessary for an
officer to discharge a firearm to destroy an animal which presents a
danger or is seriously injured or ill, the officer will, prior to discharging the
firearm, request permission to do so from the on -duty supervisor. If such
action must be immediately taken in order to protect the officer's or
another person's safety, the officer need not delay action in order to
request this permission. In this circumstance, however, the Watch
Supervisor must be notified immediately after the firearm is used. A Use
of Force report is required.
3. Administrative Review Committee.
a. Use of force incidents shall be reviewed by a committee consisting
of a minimum of three sworn personnel.
i. The committee should consist of two supervisors as
designated by the Chief of Police and one officer -preferably a
use of force instructor. To provide differing perspectives, the
Chief of Police may appoint multiple committees that alternate
review responsibilities.
ii. This group should, at a minimum, meet every month to review
the Use of Force Reports from the previous month.
iii. The purpose of this committee shall be to review all facts and
reports concerning use of force incidents to determine whether
policy, training, equipment, or disciplinary issues should be
addressed. This committee will make recommendations on
these matters to the Chief of Police.
as .
b. All non-use of force firearms discharges (e.g. accidental/negligOnt
discharge), with the exception of the destruction of animals which are
reviewed by the Use of Force Committee, shall be reviewed in a
manner consistent with General Order 99-06: Internal Affairs
Investigations as assigned by a Division Commander.
i. At a minimum, this will consist of a Report of Inquiry and
supervisory review.
ii. The Division Commander and the Training and Accreditation
Sergeant will review the investigation and findings to identify
any training recommendations which are necessary, and/or
any need for policy changes. Recommendations on these
matters will be forwarded to the Chief of Police.
4. Use of Force Reports.
OPSW03.9
a. A Use of Force Report with a written narrative regarding any use of
force incident will be submitted in addition to any incident report.
The report(s) shah contain the following information:
i. Arrestee/suspect information.
ii. Incident number(s), date and time of incident, and reporting
officer.
iii. Description of actual resistance encountered.
iv. All required fields completed in use of Force report.
v. The force used by the officer to overcome the resistance and
the specific weapon or technique used.
vi. A description of any alleged or actual injuries to either the
officer or suspect.
vii. Pictures taken of injuries to either the officer or suspect.
viii. Exposure to Chemical Irritant / oC spray will additionally
require the documentation of medical treatment being offered,
supervisor notification, and decontamination procedures.
ix. A Conducted Energy Device deployment will. additionally
require the documentation of medical treatment, if medical
treatment is refused by the suspect, supervisor notification,
and the number of cycles/applications used.
b. When the only use of force is the application of handcuffs; double
locked, no use of force report is necessary. The application.1'0f
handcuffs, double locked will be documented on a written '"omplaint
or citation or in the body of an incident report.
c. A supervisor of the reporting person shall review the report for
adherence to Department policy and procedure and document their
conclusions.
d. All reports concerning use of force shall be forwarded to the
Sergeant of Planning/Research.
e. The Captain of Field Operations and Chief of Police shall review all
use of force reports where any participant is injured during the use
of force and/or where a deadly force option has been utilized
(excludes display of a weapon).
5. Executive Review.
OPS-03.10
At minimum, the Chief of Police and/or designee will conduct
documented analysis of all reports and incidents of force annually. An
analysis of reports and incidents of force could reveal patterns or trends
that indicate training needs, equipment upgrades and/or policy
modifications.
E. INVESTIGATION OF USE OF FORCE RESULTING IN DEATH OR
SERIOUS INJURY
1. When any member of the police department is involved in an incident
resulting in death or serious injury, a thorough and objective
investigation of facts and circumstances will be initiated as soon as
practical by the Chief of Police's designees and completed as soon as
practical.
2. The Chief of Police or his/her designee shall decide whether the DCl
and/or any other outside agency shall be called to assist in the
investigation.
3. If an incident resulting in death or serious injury which involves a sworn
Iowa City police officer occurs in another police jurisdiction, the Oficer
shall cooperate with that jurisdiction, as set forth in Iowa City Polio"
Department directives.
4. The on -duty watch commander/supervisor shall ensure that appropriate
case reports are initiated and that potential evidence is preserved'.
5. The officer(s) or employee involved in the death or serious injury shall be
relieved of field duty without the loss of pay or benefits, pending the
results of the departmental investigation. Other officers or employees
involved in the incident also may be relieved of field duty without loss of
pay or benefits at the discretion of the Chief of Police, while the
investigation is pending:
a. The officer or employee shall be available at all times for official
interviews and statements regarding the case, and shall be subject
to recall to duty at any time. The officer or employee must receive
permission from the Chief of Police, or from their Division
Commander, prior to leaving the area. If such permission is given,
the officer or employee shall supply the phone number(s) of his/her
location and duration of the absence.
b. The officer or employee will not discuss the case with anyone
except the prosecuting attorney and/or persons designated by the
Chief of Police or their designee. This does not prohibit the officer
QPs-03. 1 1
or employee from discussions with his/her attorney. If the officer or
employee may be the subject of internal review or criminal charges,
his/her constitutional rights and administrative protections will be
maintained. The officer or employee will attend post -traumatic
stress counseling at the discretion of the Chief of Police.
c. At the discretion of the Chief of Police, the officer or employee may
be returned to duty upon departmental receipt of notification from
the counselor or mental health professional indicating the officer's
fitness for duty.
6. The investigation and administrative leave policy outlined herein is not
intended to imply or indicate the officer or employee has acted
improperly, but is designed to safeguard the officer or employee and the
Department.
7. The Chief of Police may appoint one or more individuals to conduct a
separate yet parallel (administrative) investigation into a use of force
incident to ensure all personnel followed departmental policies and
guidelines.
VI. USE OF FORCE MODEL
Police officers are given the unique right to use force, even deadly force,
against others for legitimate law enforcement purposes. The right to use
force carries with it an obligation to use that force in a responsible manner.
Police agencies have an obligation to provide their employees with the
policies, training, and tools necessary to accomplish their mission. Selection
of a use of force response from the options articulated in this model will be
based on: the skills, knowledge, and ability of the officer; the perceived
threat and amount of resistance offered by a subject; and consideration of
the situational framework. A defined Use of Force Model will enhance the
department's ability to manage the use of force and will benefit the officer by
providing guidance, resources, and options.
h
Officers of the Iowa City Police Department shall follow the
principles of the Use of Force Model. The model describes an
escalation of force, which is based on a reasonable officer's
perception of threat or resistance. As a subject's resistance
escalates, more force options become available to the officer.
When resistance stops . the officer must
de-escalate. control (e.g. handcuffing) is,
a1(" . Officers of the Iowa City Police Department must
generally employ the tools, tactics, and timing of force utilization
consistent with the Model's proscription and training protocols. Due
to the fact that officer/member of the public confrontations occur in
environments that are potentially unpredictable, "tense, uncertain,
GPS-93.12
and rapidly evolving" {Graham v. Connor, 109 S.Ct. 1865, 1872
(1989)) the officer may utilize tools, tactics, and timing outside the
parameters of the Model. However, these applications of force must
meet the same test of reasonableness as those which have been
previously identified and approved by the Department.
C. When safe under the totality of the circumstances and if time and
circumstances permit, members of the department shall use de-
escaiatio n techniques in order to reduce the need for force.
15. DE-ESCALATION OF FORCE,
De -elation strategies shall be a pOed *in an effort to reduthe needfog. ppli� f f force, when safe and feas!bI _
De-escalation techniques are actions used by members of the department
that seek to minimize the likelihood of the need to use force during an
incident and increase the likelihood of gaining voluntary compliance from a
subject. Note that these techniques should only be employed when it is
safe to do so.
When safe and feasible under the totality of circumstances, members of
the department shall attempt to slow down or stabilize the situation so that
more time, options and resources are available for incident resolution.
When time and circumstances reasonably permit, members of the
department shall consider whether a subject's lack of compliance is a
deliberate attempt to resist or an inability to comply based on factors
including, but not limited to:
Medical conditions
Mental impairment
Developmental disability
Physical limitation _ w{
Language barrier , -r
Drug interaction
Behavioral crisis.:::
An officer's awareness of these possibilities, when time and
circumstances reasonably permit, shall then be balanced against the facts
of the incident facing the officer when deciding which tactical options are
the most appropriate to bring the situation to a safe resolution.
Mitigating the immediacy of threat gives officers of the department time to
utilize extra resources, and increases time available to call more officers
or specialty units.
OPS-g3.13
The number of officers on scene may increase the available force options
and may increase the ability to reduce the overall force used.
Other examples include:
Placing barriers between an uncooperative subject and an officer
Containing a threat
Moving from a position that exposes officers to potential threats to a
safer position
Decreasing the exposure to potential threat by using
- Distance
- Cover
- Concealment
Communicating from a safe position intended to gain the subject's
compliance, using:
- Verbal persuasion
- Advisements
- Warnings
Avoiding physical confrontation, unless immediately necessary` (for
example, to protect someone, or stop dangerous behavior)
Using verbal de-escalation techniques to generate cooperation and gain
voluntary compliance.
Calling extra resources to assist or officers to assist:
More officers
- C IT officers
- officers equipped with less -lethal tools
- Supervisors.
Using any other tactics and approaches that attempt to achieve
gaining the compliance of the subject.
D. Reasonable officer's perception/Reasonable officer's response (see
attached matrix)
VII, CIVILIAN OFFICERS (COMMUNITY SERVICE AND ANIMAL
CONTROL OFFICERS)
A. Community Service officers assigned to the road and Animal Control Officers
shall carry chemical irritants (OC) under this policy for the sole purpose of
self-defense from persons or from animals.
OPS-03.14
B. When dealing with upset persons, civilian officers must first attempt to
deescalate the situation, if it is reasonable to do so, by backing away from the
situation to a place of safety (vehicle or other barrier) and calling for a sworn
officer to come to the scene. If after attempting to deescalate the situation, the
civilian officer reasonably believes that they are going to be assaulted, the
officer may deploy their chemical irritant in a manner consistent with training.
C. When dealing with aggressive animals, civilian officers should try backing
away from the situation to a place of safety (vehicle or other barrier) and call
for a sworn officer to come to the scene to assist. If the civilian officer is
unable to make it to a place of safety and they reasonably believe that they
may be attacked, the officer may deploy their chemical irritant at the animal in
a manner consistent with training.
D. Civilian officers that deploy chemical agents at a person are subject to all
reporting requirements set forth in this policy. Additionally, they are
responsible to immediately contact the on duty Watch supervisor as well as
summoning medical personnel to the scene for any injuries.
E. Civilian officers that deploy chemical agents at an animal shall notify their
supervisor to make them aware that a chemical agent was deployed as well
as the circumstances involved.
F. When dealing with persons, a civilian officer will be held to the "Reasonable
officer's perception/Reasonable officer's response" standard. (see level four
and five in the attached matrix)
VIII. PREREQUISITES TO CARRYING LETHAL / LESS LETHAL -"-
WEAPONS
All personnel authorized to carry weapons intended for use of force
application must receive training on their use from the perspectives of
practical application and organizational policy. Instruction should include
confirmation of employee understanding of legal implications and
requirements, weapon specific operating and care procedures,
documentation and reporting procedures, and obligations following the
use of force.
IX. FBI NATIONAL USE of FORCE DATA COLLECTION
The Department voluntarily participates in the FBI National Use of Force Data
Collection. The sergeant of planning and research shall track the following use of
force incidents:
When a fatality to a person occurs connected to a use of force by an Iowa
City police officer.
CPS-03.1 %5
When there is serious bodily injury to a person connected to a use of force
by an Iowa City police officer. For this section the definition of serious
bodily injury will be based, in part, upon Title 18, United States Code,
Section 2246 (4). The term "serious bodily injury" means "bodily injury that
involves a substantial risk of death, unconsciousness, protracted and
obvious disfigurement, or protracted loss or impairment of the function of a
bodily member, organ, or mental faculty."
In the absence of either death or serious bodily injury, when a firearm is
discharged by an Iowa City police officer at or in the direction of a person.
When an incident meeting the above criteria is met the sergeant of planning and
research shall report the following information to the FBI:
Incident Information
Date and time of the incident
Total number of officers who applied actual force during the incident
Number of officers from the Iowa City Police Department who applied
actual force during the incident
- Location of the incident (address or latitude/longitude)
Location type of the incident (street, business, residence, restaurant,
school, etc.)
- Did the officer(s) approach the subject(s)?
Was it an ambush incident?
Was a supervisor or a senior officer acting in a supervisory capacity
present or consulted at any point during the incident?
What was the reason for initial contact between the subject and the officer
(response to unlawful or suspicious activity, routine patrol, traffic stop,
etc.)?
If the initial contact was due to "unlawful or criminal activity," what were
the most serious reported offenses committed by the subject prior to or at
the time of the incident?
- If applicable, the National Incident -Based Reporting System or local
incident number of the report detailing criminal incident information on the
subject and/or assault or homicide of a law enforcement officer
If the incident involved multiple law enforcement agencies, the case
numbers for the local use -of -force reports at the other agencies
OPS-03. 1 6
Subject Information
Age, sex, race, ethnicity, height, and weight
- Injury/death of subject(s) (gunshot wound, apparent broken bones,
unconsciousness, etc.)
- Type(s) of force used connected to serious bodily injury or death (firearm,
electronic control weapon, explosive device, blunt instrument, etc.)
- Did the subject(s) resist?
- Was the threat by the subject(s) directed to the officer or to another party?
- Type(s) of subject resistance/weapon involvement (threatened officer,
threatened others, threatened self, active aggression, firearm, attempt to
flee, etc.)
- Was there an apparent or known impairment in the physical condition of
subject? If yes, indicate which (mental health/alcohol/drugs/unknown)
- At any time during the incident, was the subject(s) armed or believed to be
armed with a weapon?
Officer Information
Age, sex, race, ethnicity, height, and weight
- Years of service as a law enforcement officer (total tenure, number of
years)
At the time of the incident, was the officer a full-time employee?
-- Was the officer readily identifiable?
- Was the officer on duty at the time of the incident?
- Did the officer discharge a firearm?
- Was the officer injured?
What was the officer's injury type (gunshot wound, apparent broken
bones, severe laceration, unconsciousness, etc.)
OPS-03.17
OPs-03.18
Denise Brotherton, Interim Chief of Police
WARNING
This directive is for departmental use only and does not apply in any criminal or civil
proceeding. The department policy should not be construed as a creation of higher
legal standard of safety or care in an evidentiary sense With respect to third -party
claims. Violations of this directive will only form the basis for departmental
administrative sanctions.
LEVEL ONE
Perception -- Subject is compliant
OPS-03.19
Response — Cooperative controls (includes: mental preparation, spatial positioning,
communications skills, handcuffing positions and techniques, searching techniques,
arrest and transport controls)
COOPERATIVE
CONTROLS
USE OF FORCE MODEL — FUNCTIONAL PROFILE
COMPLIANT: LEVEL 1
COOPERATIVE CONTROLS
>
PERCEPTION SKILLS
MENTAL PREPARATION
>
RISK ASSESSMENT
>
SURVIVAL ORIENTATION
>
OFFICER STANCE
SPATIAL POSITIONING
>
BODY LANGUAGE
>
RELATIVE POSITIONING
VERBAL
- VERBAL COMMANDS/DIRECTIVES
COMMUNICATION SKILLS
>
- VERBAL DE-ESCALATION
TECHNIQUES
>
NON-VERBAL
>
WALL
HANDCUFFING POSITIONS
>
STANDING>
PRONE
>
KNEELING
HANDCUFFING TECHNIQUE
>
CONTROLLED
>
WALL
SEARCHING TECHNIQUES
>
STANDING
>
PRONE
>
KNEELING
>
OPPOSITE SEX
SPECIALIZED TECHNIQUES
>
FRISK
>
STRIP
ARREST TECHNIQUES
>
SINGLE OFFICER>
MULTIPLE OFFICERS
ESCORT CONTROLS
>
SINGLE OFFICER
>
MULTIPLE OFFICERS
TRANSPORT CONTROLS
>
SINGLE OFFICER
>
MULTIPLE OFFICERS
OPS-a3.2o
LEVEL TWO
Perce Lion — Subject is passively resistant
Response — Contact controls (includes: contact controls, conflict management
techniques, M mass formation arrest techniques multiple officer lifts,
stretchers, wh e Ekicha i rs etc.)
USE OF FORCE MODEL -FUNCTIONAL PROFILE
RESISTIVE (Passive): LEVEL 2 CONTACT CONTROLS
FORCE OPTIONS also includes all options from lower Levels
> VERBAL
COMMUNICATION SKILLS -VERBAL DIRECTIVES
- VERBAL DE-ESCALATION TECHNIQUES
> NON-VERBAL
> ARM
CONTACT CONTROLS > WRIST
> HAND
> ESCORT TECHNIQUES
ARREST TECHNIQUES > TRANSPORT TECHNIQUES
> MASS FORMATION
OPS-03.21
LEVEL THREE
Perception — Subject is actively resistant
Response — Compliance techniques (includes: neuromuscular controls, joint
manipulation, nerve compression, chemical irritants, e.g. OC spray, controlled stopping
devices for fleeing vehicle incidents)
COMPLIANCE TECHNIQUES
USE OF FORCE MODEL - FUNCTIONAL PROFILE
RESISTANT (Active): LEVEL 3
COMPLIANCE TECHNIQUES
FORCE OPTIONS (also includes all options from lower Levels
COMPLIANCE CONTROLS
NERVE COMPRESSION TECHNIQUES:
NEURO-MUSCULAR CONTROLS
CONTROL TACTICS
Ift 15to] 44
VEHICLE PURSUIT TACTICS
> NERVE COMPRESSION TECHNIQUES
> CHEMICAL IRRITANTS, CROWD CONTROL
CHEMICAL MUNITIONS
> CONTROL TACTICS
> H EAD
NECK
> ARM
> LEG
> WRIST ROTATION
> ELBOW LEVERAGE
> TAKE DOWN TECHNIQUES
> COMMUNICATIONS/ASSESSMENT SKILLS
> PACING/TRAILING TECHNIQUES
O PS-03.22
LEVEL FOUR
Perception — Subject is physically assaultive and may cause bodily injury
Response — Defensive tactics (includes: personal weapon defense, e.g. hands, knees,
feet, active countermeasures, etc.; impact weapons, e.g. ASP, weapon retention
techniques, conducted energy devices)
DEFENSIVE TACTICS
USE OF FORCE MODEL - FUNCTIONAL PROFILE
ASSAULTIVE (Potential Bodily Harm): LEVEL 4 DEFENSIVE TACTICS
FORCE OPTIONS (also includes all options from lower Levels
PERSONAL WEAPON DEFENSES
IMPACT WEAPONS (ASP)
LESS LETHAL WEAPONS
WEAPON RETENTION TECHNIQUES (Less Lethal)
OTHER WEAPONS
CANINE*
* HEAD
* HANDS
* ELBOWS
> FEET
* KNEES
> STRI KES
> IMPACT PROJECTILES
> CANINE OPERATIONS
> CONDUCTED ENERGY
DEVICES
> OTHER OPTIONS`,::'
> FRONT
> REAR * M
> SIDE i
> CONTROL / APPREHENSION
TECHNIQUES
a
*Deployment of canine for apprehension/protection shall be preceded by actio`of
suspect which are consistent with Level 4 (Assaultive — Potential Bodily Harm) behavior.
The exception to this is the deployment of canine for building searches or related
circumstances, where the suspect actions are not known. In this circumstance
procedures spelled out in the "Canine operations" General Order (99-04) shall be
followed.
OPS-03.23
LEVEL FIVE
Perception - Subject is assaultive and likely to cause SERIOUS bodily injury or death
Response- Deadly force (includes: weapon/weapons attack defense, lethal force
utilization with service/supplemental weapons, forcible stopping techniques for assault
with vehicle incidents)
DEADLY FORCE
USE OF FORCE MODEL — FUNCTIONAL PROFILE
ASSAULTIVE (Serious Bodily Harm/Death):
LEVEL 5
DEADLY FORCE
FORCE OPTIONS (also includes all options from lower Levels
ATTACK DEFENSE
LETHAL FORCE UTILIZATION
OTHER OPTIONS:
FORCIBLE STOPPING TECHNIQUES
* WEAPON
> WEAPONLESS
> WEAPON RETENTION
TECHNIQUES
> SERVICE WEAPON
> SUPPLEMENTAL WEAPON
> OTHER OPTIONS
• CONTACT
• ROADBLOCK
[)P[5-03.24
Chris OIne
From: Carol deProsse <lonetreefox@mac.com>
Sent: Wednesday, July 15, 2020 9:43 AM
To: Council; Community Police Review Board; Geoff Fruin; Bill Campbell
Subject: 'Less Lethal' Weaponry
At
/ RI.SKX
https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2020/7/14/1960695/-At-least-8-people-partially-blinded-same-day-during-police-
ra mpage-against-George-Floyd-protesters
Chris Olney
From: Carol deProsse < lonetreefox@ mac.com >
Sent: Thursday, July 16, 2020 9:48 AM
To: Council; Geoff Fruin; Eleanor M. Dilkes; Community Police Review Board
Subject: FOIA #2
Attachments: Cover Letter to City Council July 16, 2020.docx; FOIA Request #2.docx; Letter to ACLU
July 16, 2020.docx
Council, et, all.
I am submitting another FOIA request as a follow-up to the one I sent on .tune 20, 2020. Please see attachments. i have also dropped
in today's mail a copy of the attachments with my signature.
Carol
This email is from an external source.
1401 Burry Drive
Iowa City, IA 52246-4513
July 16, 2020
City Council of Iowa City
410 E Washington Street
Iowa City, IA 52240
Dear Councilors:
On June 20, 2020 I submitted an FOIA request to the City and provided you with a copy. I have
received a reply to that request from Sue Dulek, Assistant City Attorney and am following up
with an additional FOIA request that I am including with this correspondence.
First: I am angered that the City is having to expend tax payer dollars to hire an "outside
investigatorls" to procure information relating to the deployment of tear gas and other weaponry
on peaceful protestor on the night of June 3. I strongly recommend that you do this hiring on the
Mayor's signature with Council concurrence, rather than permit the City Manager to determine
who or what entity will conduct the "outside investigation'.
From the July 8, 2020 Press -Citizen by Zachary Owen Smith:
Iowa City Police are reviewing whether officers followed policy on June 3 when they
deployed a chemical irritant on George Floyd protesters as they marched to Interstate 80.
Police have declined to release how many canisters were deployed, what chemical was
used and who ordered the crowd control measure. Iowa City Police were assisting Iowa
State Patrol during the protest that evening.
On Monday, new public information officer Doug Hart said the events were under
investigation but that there wasn't much more he could add.
"I wasn't there, so I don't know all the particular details about it, and all I can tell you is
that there is going to be a review to see if policy was followed, and... if there might have
been a policy failure," Hart said. "So that's all part of the review."
Hart said "command staff," including interim Police Chief Bill Campbell and
Capt. Denise Brotherton, are likely to be involved in the review. He gave no timeline for
the investigation.
Hart repeated a claim the police department has maintained since June 3 that a protester
threw a rock at a police officer before police deployed chemical irritants; protesters who
were part of the demonstration have denied that rocks were thrown.
"Probably, most people were just trying to legitimately voice their concern and their
opinion, but I don't think all of them had been going there with the intent to be peaceful,"
Hart said.
I hope you as a collective body representing the citizens of Iowa City are as interested as I am as
to why, even if true, that a protestor throwing a rock at a police officer dressed in full riot
protection gear constitutes a threat of such severity that it requires a response of a weapon that is
banned in war. I am sure you aware that police often use the flimsiest of excuses to justify the
use of excessive force on civilians.
I refer you to the email attached to my second FOIA request that states: "Closing Civic Center
down at 5 for the weekend. only news so far is a 1800 protest and ANTIFA mi ht be in town
with bricks." Do you know what ANTIFA is? I will answer that question for you: No, you do
not know. The police do not know. The FBI does not know. Donald Trump and Bill Barr do not
know. So no, you don't know either. I defy any of you to define ANTIFA other than that it
stands for anti-fascist/m, a personal and political belief based on knowing about historical and
current authoritarian governments. I hope all seven of you agree with the concept of being anti-
fascist/m.
The fact that Donald Trump says that ANTIFA is a terrorist organization does not make it
one; we know he is a pathological liar.
The truth is that white Supremacist organizations, several or more of which have been
designated as terrorist organizations by the Southern Poverty Law Center are the reak threat to
our democracy. Donald Trump does not condemn these groups or says they are terrorist groups.
ANTIFA is not designated a terrorist organization because the Justice Department,
headed by the authoritarian Bill Barr, is unable to define it as such under current laws,
I consider myself ANTIFA and hope you do as well.
Carol deProsse
Carol deProsse
1401 Burry Drive
Iowa City, IA 52246-4513
July 16, 2020
Iowa City City Council, City Manager Geoff Fruin, City Attorney Eleanor Dilks
410 E Washington Street
Iowa City, IA 52240
On June 20, 2020, I submitted a request to the City of Iowa City under the Iowa open Records
Law § 22.1 et seq., I am in receipt of your response dated July 9, 2020, with responsive documents.
Your response identifies approximately 35 emails which are responsive to my request but were
not provided on the basis that they constitute an "intelligence assessment" and/or are based on
"intelligence data" as defined by Iowa Code §692.1(13) and (14) and are therefore not subject to
disclosure under Iowa Code §22.7(55). In order for date to constitute "intelligence data" it must
constitute "information on identifiable individuals" and be compiled related to suspected criminal
activity. In turn, an "intelligence assessment" means an analysis based on "intelligence data" or an
assessment of data related to "identifiable individuals."
On information and belief, all or some of the 35 emails withheld from your response to my Iowa
Open Records Law request do not contain information related to "identifiable individuals" based
on the inclusion of a name, date of birth, address, specific physical description, photograph, etc.
To the degree that any of the emails warn only of generalized threats or potential criminal activity
by groups of people or unidentified individuals, the emails would not contain information relating
to "identifiable individuals." By this letter, and pursuant to the Iowa Open Records Law, I am
requesting release of any of the 35 emails which do not include information on "identifiable
individuals." For any email that you continue to withhold, please identify with specificity the basis
for withholding the email on the grounds that it contains information about an "identifiable
individual,"
Further, to constitute an "intelligence assessment" protected from disclosure, the record must be
held by certain agencies. To the degree that any record was viewed by, or shared with, any
individual or entity other than those listed in Iowa Code §692.18(2), I request disclosure of the
records as such information would no longer be exempt from disclosure if held by an individual
or entity not identified in the Code.
In addition, I am at this time requesting the release of additional documents under the Iowa open
Records Law §22.1. et, seq:
1. Any use of force reports filed by Iowa City Police, or other law enforcement agencies and
which are held by the City of Iowa City, relating to the time period June 3, 2020, from
12:00 p.m. until June 4, 2020, at 12:00 p.m. This includes, but is not limited to, all reports
related to the use of crowd control techniques or non. -lethal munitions at the I-80
interchange on North Dubuque Street (hereafter referred to as North Dubuque Street) in
the early evening of June 3, 2020.
2. All police reports authored by Iowa City Police, or other law enforcement agencies and
which are held by the City of Iowa City, relating to the law enforcement response to and
the use of crowd control techniques or non -lethal munitions on North Dubuque Street in
the early evening of June 3, 2020.
3. All operational planning documents generated by the Iowa City Police, or other law
enforcement agencies and which are held by the City of Iowa City, relating to deployment
of law enforcement officers in response to an anticipated protest on June 3, 2020. This
includes a request for all documents related to planning for crowd control measures and
the decision to equip officers with non -lethal munitions or other riot equipment.
4. All documents related to the decision to deploy chemical munitions, tear gas, CS gas,
pepper spray, or other crowd control techniques, on June 3, 2020, in the area of North
Dubuque Street, including the name of any person who authorized the use of such items.
S. All documents which would reveal or relate to the number and type of specific items
deployed by law enforcement on June 3, 2020, including the number of canisters or
containers of tear gas, CS gas, the number of rubber bullets, bean bag projectiles, or any
other specific lethal or non -lethal munitions, including "pepper spray", used by law
enforcement on June 3, 2020,
6. All documents which would reveal or relate to the number and type of specific crowd
control devices currently possessed by the Iowa City Department of Police, including the
number of canisters or containers of tear gas, CS gas, the number of rubber bullets, bean
bag projectiles, "sound cannons," pepper spray, or any other specific lethal or non --lethal
munitions, and a list of any and all types of military grade equipment procured by Iowa
City and currently in possession of the Iowa City Police Department.
If there are any fees for searching or copying these records, please inform me if the cost will
exceed $100.00. However, I would also like to request a waiver of all fees in that the disclosure
of the requested information is in the public interest.
The Iowa Open Records Law requires a response time within ten to twenty business days. If
access to the records I am requesting will take longer than that time period, please contact me
with information about when I might expect copies or the ability to inspect the requested records.
If you deny any or all of this request, please cite each specific exemption you feel justifies the
refusal to release the information and notify me of the appeal procedures available to me.
Sincerely,
Carol deProsse
1401 Burry Drive
Iowa City, IA 52246-4513
July 16, 2020
ACLU of Iowa
505 511 Avenue
Suite 808
Des Moines, IA 50309
Greetings:
On June 15, 2020 1 filed an FOIA request with the City of Iowa City regarding the use of
weaponry, specifically tear gas, used against those protesting the murder of George Floyd and
other Black individuals by various law enforcement agencies. Please find attached the reply to
my FOIA request, particularly the copy of the email attached to same.
I am particularly disturbed by the second sentence of this email: Closing Civic Center down at 5
for the weekend. Only news so far is a 1800 protest and ANTIFA might be in town with bricks.
With Donald Trump and Bill Barr trying to convince the public that ANTIFA is a terrorist
organization, when they have no evidence of such, is worrisome in and of itself. False
declarations of this sort none -the -less plant in some portion of the public's mind that ANTIFA is
a terrorist group. It stands for anti -fascism and I therefore consider myself ANTIFA.
I do not know the extent to which you are undertaking looking at surveillance of leftist groups
in the state, but I think that the matter would benefit by your so doing.
Donald Trump is a threat to democracy, but too often so are law enforcement agencies
including local police departments and the federal government.
thank you for any attention to this issue you can provide.
Sincerely,
Carol deProsse
319-400-8390
Chris Olney
From: Carol deProsse <Ionetreefox@mac.com>
Sent: Thursday, July 16, 2020 6:41 PM
To: Council; Community Police Review Board; Geoff Fruin
Subject: Reparations
A
And as Americans debate how far the country should go to make amends for racial injustices, Asheville, N.C.,
has taken the first step — it approved reparations for Black residents, in the form of funding to promote
homeownership and business opportunities.
Chris dine
From: Carol deProsse < Io netreefox@ mac,com >
Sent: Thursday, July 16, 2020 2:39 PM
To: Council; Geoff Fruin; Lonny Pulkrabek; Community Police Review Board; Bill Campbell
Subject: Black Lives Matter
JIRRISK
The police just don't get it ...
https://www.cnn.com/2020/07/16/us/blue-lives-matter-mural-nvc-trnd/index.html
Chris Olney
From: Carol deProsse <lonetreefox@mac.com>
Sent: Saturday, July 18, 2020 9:06 AM
To: Community Police Review Board; Geoff Fruin; Bill Campbell; Council
Subject: NYTimes: I'm a Black Police Officer. Here's How to Change the System.
I'm a Black Police Officer. Here's How to Change the System
https://protect-us.mimecast.com/s/hCKKCYEZPDUVK3gH04EIR?domain=nytimes.com
This email is from an external source.
Chris Olney
From: Carol deProsse <Ionetreefox@mac.com>
Sent: Saturday, July 18, 2020 9:11 AM
To: Council; Geoff Fruin; Community Police Review Board
Subject: John Lewis 'loved this country so much that he risked his life and his blood ...'
https:Hprotect-us.mimecast.com/s/02TfCORMzjtNn2KcwSdTa?domain=dailykos.com
This email is from an external source.
Chris Olney
From: Carol deProsse <lonetreefox@mac.com>
Sent: Tuesday, July 21, 2020 6:54 PM
To: Council; Community Police Review Board: Tracy Jon Sargeant
Subject: AP News: Defying governor, Iowa City mayor mandates masks in public
Ani!sx
Way to go Mayor Teague. We have never had a mayor quite as grand as Bruce Teague. I am so
proud to have voted for him and proud to be a citizen of Mayoralty.
Defying governor, Iowa City mayor mandates masks in public
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) —Iowa City's mayor on Tuesday ordered people to wear masks in public to stop the spread
of the coron...
Read the full story
Sent from AP News. Download now on the App Store or Goggle Play
Chris Olney
From: Carol deProsse <lonetreefox@mac.com>
Sent: Thursday, July 23, 2020 12:59 PM
To: Council; Community Police Review Board; Bill Campbell; Geoff Fruin
Subject: Walz signs police accountability bill sparked by Floyd's death - https://protect-
us.mimecast.com/s/iJUVCZ6gQEiKwzyCzM EyY?domain=startribune.com
https://protect-us.mimecast.com/s/451gC1wMAkTJO8KTGMujq?domain=startribune.com
This email is from an external source.
Chris Olney
From: Kraemer, Jessica E <jessica-kraemer@uiowa.edu>
Sent: Monday, July 27, 2020 8:40 PM
To: Community Police Review Board
Subject: Witness to Action on June 3rd
At
/RISK%,
To whom it may concern,
My name is Jessica Kraemer, and I am an instructor at the University of Iowa and a graduate student in the Nonfiction
Writing Program.
I am writing because on the night of June 3rd I was a part of the peaceful march at which officers deployed teargas.
I need to tell you that I'm not sure I've even fully processed the fear of that night.
A night that began with chanting and marching across the city with my colleagues and students the age of which I teach
in my literature classes --and ended with my seeing those same colleagues and students screaming, tearing at their eyes,
or collapsed, stunned and unable to move.
"I can't see. I can't see," is what I keep hearing. or, "it hurts so bad, please make it stop. It hurts so bad."
"Water, please, water, I need water."
Earlier in the night, a student beside me was skipping and sort of dancing as we chanted, a bit before twilight as we
walked by Filmscene. They bumped into me and I turned to apologize. They said, "I'm sorry, sweetie," and we exchanged
a smile behind our masks. It felt really hopeful, as we were out together, a big group, after weeks isolating inside for the
greater good. That night we were out, all in masks, a bit uncertain about the virus, but certain beyond a doubt that what
had happened to George Floyd in Minnesota, and what happens to Black individuals at the hands of the police
everywhere, needed to be confronted, and we were doing what people in this country do when they want the
government to listen: gathering in the street.
I remember that student's smile, remembered it as we separated naturally in the flow of the march. I remembered it a
few hours later when I saw that same student on his knees, eyes like searchlights, reaching out in front of him and
unable to speak after being showered in the teargas, like it were steam from a hot pot. He couldn't breath. "I can't see
anything. I don't think I can see anything." I walked to get him, holding my arm against my mouth, my hand hand
clenched mercilessly around my partner's wrist so we wouldn't lose each other in the dark, but a few other students got
to him first and quickly dragged him across the pavement by his arms. It was a warzone. Iowa City. A street I walked
every day to get to class.
I don't know with what words you could possibly defend this action. Firing weapons into a crowd of students, of student -
aged young people, of morns and dads and teachers and hundreds of people who work and live in this city, who are
taxpayers and artists and the same people who attend basketball games and caucused in the winter and shovel
sidewalks and rollerblade and play basketball in the park and do all the things that human people do in this city when
they are not being brutalized by the state. Perhaps you've learned since that a peaceful protest does not need to be met
with violence, even if its disobedience intends to shut down a major road.
What were you afraid of -- someone getting injured because they were walking in the street? Were you trying to serve
and protect? But perhaps you should have been more afraid of someone having a seizure after your police deployed a
flashbang into a crowd? Perhaps you should have been more afraid of someone having a seizure, EMTs being called, and
those EMTs arriving to be hit with teargas while they were tending to someone actively having a seizure?
I witnessed that happen. And I need you to publicly explain this action. And if by any stretch of the imagination you find
this action defensible, I need you to tell us in great detail why. And if you do not find this action defensible, then
someone needs to be fired or otherwise held accountable and this needs to be done publicly.
A great violence was done to this community that night. And that violence needs to be held to account. The trust this
city's people has in its city is destroyed. And you have a long way to go to repair it.
Members of the community with cardboard signs. Amazon boxes from weeks of being inside and guiltily clicking covered
in block letters with Sharpies we all had lying around leftover from class presentations.
A parade of people with signs, chanting and singing in the road.
A group of people armed at worst with cans of spray paint who at no point showed signs of aggression.
Honestly, and I want to know: what were you afraid of? Something you'd seen on the news?
You became the terror on the news.
hope now you are more afraid to see Iowa City drenched in gas, people running and screaming, as pictured in the
Washington Post, in the New York Times. Videos and photographs that tell the same story: police use state weapons
against people saying Black Lives Matter. An old story.
You need to answer publicly and at length for these actions and you need to let the community know how you plan hold
those responsible to account: firing whoever ordered this action, forbidding the use of these tactics in any future
instance, and with your actions and words begging for the forgiveness of a community that you have viciously wronged.
Because myself and thosw present that night on Dubuque --because our neighbors and friends and those people who
love us across the country, because the people who saw Iowa City protesters get gassed and assaulted in the national
news -- will not be forgetting that night.
Jessie
725 E. College St.
Iowa City, IA
Chris Olney
From: Iowa Freedom <iowafreedomriders@gmail.com>
Sent: Tuesday, August 4, 2020 8:21 PM
To: Community Police Review Board
Cc: raneemhamad@gmail.com; smith.akia.nyrie@gmail.com; sabarali@gmail.com;
david.drustrup@gmail.com
Subject: I FR & CPRB
Z
(C[1�7K
Dear CPRB,
We'd first like to thank you for your service to the community and any efforts towards the humanizing of BIPOC lives as
they are policed in Iowa City. As you may know, we have been interfacing with City Council about changes in policing in
Iowa City. Since these are issues you all have been working on for a very long time, we are hoping to be in
communication with you. Below are the near -term demands we have recently presented to City Council. We believe
these are very reasonable suggestions that directly address the primary problem that police are tasked to handle far too
many public wellness concerns, for which they are unable to assist. We look forward to hearing the discussion of these
issues at your meeting next week, and please feel free to be in touch with us anytime to further discuss questions and
concerns.
Goal 1: Construction of the Community Wellness & Accountability architecture
• City Manager Fruin must immediately prioritize the City Council agenda to begin the construction of the
Community Wellness & Accountability architecture to address public safety, security, accountability,
and self -governance. This new architecture for Community Wellness & Accountability will be based on
empirical evidence and theory offered by experts such as Angela Davis, Ruth Wilson Gilmore, Mariame
Kaba, and others who have successfully fought for the well-being of the most marginalized populations.
o The Community Wellness & Accountability architecture will initially consist of 5 response teams:
Mental Health, Road Safety, Drug & Alcohol, Anti -Homelessness, and Interpersonal Conflict.
These teams will be staffed with mental health professionals, social workers, EMTs, nurses, and
other Peer Professionals who are community members and trained to respond to community
concerns in non -punitive ways. Once implemented, they will respond to emergency and non -
emergency calls for help within their fields of expertise to resolve disputes and ensure the safety
of citizens requiring assistance.
o The Community Wellness & Accountability architecture will also include 4 departments to
address long-term community needs: Affordable Housing, Income Support & Job Preparation,
Immigrant & Refugee Support, and Community Wellness Programs. These departments can
work alongside, or join with, already existing structures within City government.
■ By September 30, 2020, there will be 3 paid positions within City government to
construct these aspects of the Community Wellness & Accountability architecture.
■ By January 1, 2021 we expect to see The Community Wellness & Accountability
architecture to be funded $5 million annually. This money will come from the city policing
budget for calls that they are no longer required to handle, as well as through the
removal of unnecessary military -grade weaponry, armor, uniforms, and other material
contributing to the oversized budget.
Goal 2: A detailed report of the events of violence against protesters on June 3 in Iowa City.
• City Manager Fruin must immediately engage in a more earnest attempt to understand more details
about the violence against protesters that was committed by police on June 3, 2020. The mixed reports
and drawn -out investigation are not aligned with the "deep introspections" that he promised Iowa City in
his letter on June 10. City Manager Fruin must immediately use his relationships within the police
department to get a clear answer about who was responsible for the violence that night, why no one
has come forward yet, and what the repercussions will be.
o This report from City Manager Fruin must be completed and made public by 09/01/20.
Goal 3: A publicly searchable database of complaints made against officers
• City Manager Fruin must immediately prioritize a new agenda item for City Council: creating a public
database for complaints against police officers. This should be easily accessible, browsable, and
searchable by officer name. While we understand the construction of a publicly accessible website may
take some time, we expect a list, publishable as a PDF on the City government's website.
o The public list must be made viewable by 09/01 /20.
o The searchable database must be operational on the City government website by 01/01/21.
• City Manager Fruin and City Council should immediately begin discussions with FIR and other
community leaders including BVP and SDNA around repercussions for officers who have caused harm
in the community.
o By 09/01 /20, City Councilors and City Manager Fruin will have completed their first meeting with
IFR, BVP, SDNA, and other community stakeholders. They will have jointly constructed a
blueprint for regular meetings and a timeline for action and decision -making.
Thank you for your time and consideration.
Black Lives Matter,
FIR
Raneem Hamad
Akia Nyrie Smith
Saba Ali
David D rustru p
D)l no loll 1 V COMMUNITY POLICE REVIEW BOARD
GENERAL RESPONSIBILITIES
Established in 1997, by ordinance #97--3792, the Iowa City Police Citizens Review Board formerly
known as Citizens Police Review Board and now known as Community Police Review Board
(hereafter referred as the CPRB), consists of five members appointed by the City Council. The CPRB
has its own outside legal counsel.
The Board was established to review investigations into claims of police misconduct, and to assist the
Police Chief, the City Manager, and the City Council in evaluating the overall performance of the
Police Department by reviewing the Police Department's investigations into complaints. The Board is
also required to maintain a central registry of complaints and to provide an annual report setting forth
the numbers, types, and disposition of complaints of police misconduct. The Board shall hold at least
one community forum each year for the purpose of hearing citizens' views on the policies, practices
and procedures of the Iowa City Police Department. To achieve these purposes, the Board complies
with Chapter 8 of the Iowa City Code and the Board's By -Laws and Standard Operating Procedures
and Guidelines.
ACTIVITIES AND ACCOMPLISHMENTS FOR FISCAL YEAR 2020
Meetings
The CPRB tentatively holds monthly meetings on the second Tuesday and special meetings as
necessary. During FY20 the Board held eleven meetings. Due to Covid-19 restrictions the Community
Forum scheduled for April was postponed until later in the year.
ICPD Policies/Procedures/Practices Reviewed By CPRB
The ICPD provided various General Orders for the Board's review and comment. A senior member of
the Police Department routinely attended the open portion of the CPRB meetings and was available
for any questions Board members had regarding these reports.
Presentations
At the March 10, 2020 meeting Police Captain Brotherton and Officer Puente demonstrated the police
departments new body cameras.
Board Members
In October 2019 officers were nominated with Monique Galpin as Chair and Orville Townsend as
Vice -Chair. Sam Conaway was appointed in July 2019 for a four-year term. Jerri MacConnell was
appointed in June 2020 to fill the unexpired term of Sam Conaway,
COMPLAINTS
Number and Type of Allegations
Five complaints (19-03,19-04,19-05, 20-01, 20-02) were filed during the fiscal year July 1, 2019 —
June 30, 2020. Five public reports were completed during this fiscal period (19-01,19-02119-03, 19-04,
19-05). Two complaints filed in FY20 are pending before the Board (20-01,20-02).
CPRB Annual Report FY 2020 --- DRAFT 8/11/2020 — 1
ALLEGATIONS
Complaint ##19-01
Allegation 1 — Excessive force against Complainant's Spouse.
Board's Findings: Allegation 1— NOT SUSTAINED
The board affirmed the opinion set forth in the report of the police chief and/or city manager.
Chief's Report Findings: Allegation 1— NOT SUSTAINED
Allegation 2 — Excessive force against Complainant.
Board's Findings: Allegation 2 — NOT SUSTAINED
The board affirmed the opinion set forth in the report of the police chief and/or city manager.
Chief's Report Findings: Allegation 2 — NOT SUSTAINED
Allegation 3 — Failure to provide a copy of search warrant.
Board's Findings: Allegation 3 — NOT SUSTAINED
The board affirmed the opinion set forth in the report of the police chief and/or city manager.
Chief's Report Fin din s: Allegation 3 — NOT SUSTAINED
Allegation 4 — Wrecked the apartment during execution of search warrant.
Board's Findings: Allegation 4 — NOT SUSTAINED
The board affirmed the opinion set forth in the report of the police chief and/or city manager.
Chief's Report Findings: Allegation 4 - NOT SUSTAINED
Complaint #19-02
Allegation 1 — Use of excessive force in entering a residence to serve a civil commitment order
on the individual subject of the order.
Board's Findings: Allegation 1 - NOT SUSTAINED
The Board has elected not to determine this incident based on the procedural grounds of whether or
not the complainant has standing as the Chief did in his letter, but rather on the merits. Upon careful
review of the record, there is no evidence to sustain this allegation.
Chief's Report Findings: Allegation 1 — COMPLAINANT LACKED STANDING FOR LACK OF
PERSONAL KNOWLEDGE.
Allegation 2 — Use of excessive force and/or improper procedure in assisting with the
transport of an individual that is the subject of a Civil Commitment Order.
Board's Findings: Allegation 2 — NOT SUSTAINED
The Board has elected not to determine this incident based on the procedural grounds of whether or
not the complainant has standing as the Chief did in his letter, but rather on the merits. Upon careful
review of the record, there is no evidence to sustain this allegation.
Chief's Report Findings: Allegation 2 - COMPLAINANT LACKED STANDING FOR LACK OF
PERSONAL KNOWLEDGE
CPRB Annual Report FY 2020 — DRAFT 8/11 /2020 — 2
Complaint #19-03
Allegation 1 — Improper towing of vehicle.
Board's Findings: Allegation 1 - NOT SUSTAINED
The board affirmed the opinion set forth in the report of the police chief and/or city manager.
Chief's Report Findings: Allegation 1 - NOT SUSTAINED
Complaint #19-04
Allegation 1 — The officer's decision to not file charges against the other participant was
influenced by him personally knowing the other participant's boyfriend.
Board's Findings: Allegation 1 — NOT SUSTAINED.
The board affirmed the opinion set forth in the report of the police chief and/or city manager.
Chief's Report Findings: Allegation 1 — NOT SUSTAINED.
Allegation 2 — Illegal search of personal property and seizure of cell phone.
Board's Findings: Allegation 2 — NOT SUSTAINED.
The board affirmed the opinion set forth in the report of the police chief and/or city manager.
Chief's Report Findings: Allegation 2 — NOT SUSTAINED.
Allegation 3 — Failure to properly investigate the incident.
Board's Findings: Allegation 3 — NOT SUSTAINED.
The board affirmed the opinion set forth in the report of the police chief and/or city manager.
Chief's Report Findings: Allegation 3 — NOT SUSTAINED.
Complaint #19-05
Allegation 1 — Improper investigation.
Board's Finding : Allegation 1 — NOT SUSTAINED
The board affirmed the opinion set forth in the report of the police chief and/or city manager.
Chief's Report Findings: Allegation 1 — NOT SUSTAINED.
Level of Review
The Board decided, by simple majority vote, the level of review to give each report, selecting one or
more of the six levels specified in the City Code per complaint:
Level a
On the record with no additional investigation 4
Level b
Interview or meet with complainant 0
Level c
Interview or meet with named officer 0
Level d
Request additional investigation by Chief or 1
City Manager, or request police assistance
in the Board's own investigation
Level a
Board performs its own additional investigation 1
Level f
Hire independent investigators 0
CPRB Annual Report FY 2020 — DRAFT 8/11/2020 3
Complaint Resolutions
The Police Department investigates complaints to the CPRB of misconduct by police officers. The
Police Chief summarizes the results of these investigations and indicates in a report (the Chief's
Report) to the CPRB whether allegations are sustained or not sustained. (If complaints are made
against the Chief, the City Manager conducts the investigation and prepares and submits the reports.)
The Board reviews both the citizens' complaint and the Chief's Report and decides whether its
conclusions about the allegations should be sustained or not sustained. The Board prepares a report
which is submitted to the City Council.
Of the eleven allegations listed in the five complaints for which the Board reported, none were
sustained.
The Board made comments and/or recommendations for improvement in police policy, procedures, or
conduct in three of the reports:
Complaint #19-02 —
Due to the procedures, the Board was originally presented only with a copy of the Complaint and the
Chief's letter indicating that the Complainant had no personal knowledge of the allegations and that
no additional investigation will occur at this time. This put the Board in the position of having to set a
level of review without information the Board felt was sufficient to make such a definitive determination
on the outcome of the claim, as lack of standing.
The Board elected to investigate further, as outlined above. Rather than determine this matter on the
legal aspect of "standing," after reviewing with legal counsel, the Board determined it would be wiser,
in this instance, to determine this Complaint based on the merits. We believe this action to be more
aligned with the service of the Board; to provide substantive reviews of possible officer misconduct.
Complaint #19-03 —
The Chief's report addressed an additional finding that the Officer failed to remove the license plate
prior to towing, although this was not a part of the Complaint
Complaint #19-05 —
While Complainant states in her Complaint that the other woman involved in the dispute continued to
make contact with her, she does not present any evidence that she notified the Iowa City Police
Department of these additional contacts. Moreover, the record does not support that the Officers
subject to this Complaint ever had occasion to learn of any of this additional contact.
Name -Clearing Hearings
The ordinance requires that the Board not issue a report critical of the conduct of a sworn officer until
after a name -clearing hearing has been held. During this fiscal period, the Board scheduled no name -
clearing hearing.
Complaint Histories of officers
City ordinance requires that the annual report of the CPRB must not include the names of
complainants or officers involved in unsustained complaints and must be in a form that protects the
confidentiality of information about all parties. In the five complaints covered by the FY20 annual
report a total of twelve officers were involved with allegations against them.
CPRB Annual Report FY 2020 DRAFT 8/11 /2020 — 4
COMPLAINT DEMOGRAPHICS
The following is demographic information from the three complaints that were completed in this fiscal
year. Because complainants provide this voluntarily, the demographic information may be
incomplete.
Aqe:
18-25 26-35 36-45 46-55 56-64 (1) 65+
Disability:
(1) Physical Mental None
Annual Household Income:
100K 75-99K 50-75K 25-49K (1) Under 25K
Gender:
(1) Female Male Other
Sexual Orientation:
LGBTQ Heterosexual (1) Other
Ethnic Origin:
Black/African-American (1) Hispanic American Indian/Alaska Native
Asian/Pacific Islander White/Caucasian Other
Were you born in the United States:
(1) Yes No
Religion:
Muslim None (1) Other
Marital Status:
(1) Married Single Divorced Separated Widowed Other
* Information is reported as presented by the person completing the form.
BOARD MEMBERS
Monique Oalpin, Chair
Orville Townsend, Vice -Chair
Latisha McDaniel
David Semler
Sam Conaway/Jerri MacConnell
CPRB Annual Report FY 2020 — DRAFT 8/11 /2020 — 5
ERE 1 Electronic Zoom Meeting
The forum is being held via Zoom due to
concerns presented by COVID-1 9
COMMUNITY POLICE REVIEW BOARD
COMMUNITY FORUM
TheCommunity Police Review Board will be hold'ung a Community
Forum for the purpose of hearing views on the policies, practices
and procedures of the Iowa City Police Department.
QUESTIONS & COMMENTS:
Send your questions or comments you'd like addressed at the
forum to the follownng by Monday, September 7, 2020:
Please include full name and address. (All correspondence is public)
CPRB
City of Iowa City
410 E Washington St, 52240
Or e-mail to CPRB staff:
christine-olney@iowamcity.org
COMMUNITY POLICE REVIEW BOARD
COMMUNITY FORUM
SEPTEMBER 21, 20203 5:30 PM
ELECTRONIC ZOOM MEETING PLATFORM
Electronic Meeting
(Pursuant to Iowa Code section 29.8)
An electronic meeting is being held because a meeting in person is
impossible or impractical due to concerns for the health and safety of
Commission members, staff and the public presented by COVID-19.
You can participate in the meeting and can comment on an agenda .
item by going to hILtps://zoom.us/webinar/register/N" vuuRqN5KRr2XyhMGs9EUvw via
the internet to visit the Zoom meeting's registration page and submit the required information.
Once approved, you will receive an email message with a link to join the
. meeting If you are
asked for a meeting or webinar ID, enter the ID number found in the email. A meeting
password may also be included in the email. Enter the password when prompted.
If you have no computer or smartphone, or a computer -without a microphone, you may call in
by telephone by dialing (312) 626-6799. When prompted, enter the meeting or webinar ID.
The ID number for this meeting is: 95-2 8410 9770
Once connected, you may,dial *g to "raise, your hand," letting the meeting host know you
would like to speak. Providing comments in person is not an option.
i
AGENDA
ITEM NO. 1 CALL TO ORDER & ROLL CALL
ITEM NO. 2 INTRODUCTION OF BOARD
ITEM NO. 3 CONSIDER MOTION TO ACCEPT CORRESPONDENCE AND/OR
DOCUMENTS
ITEM NO. 4 PUBLIC DISCUSSION WITH COMMUNITY POLICE REVIEW BOARD
ITEM NO. 5 ADJOURNMENT
ls' General News Release DRAFT [� �
Community invited to attend Community Police Review Board forum
The Community Police Review Board (CPRB) will host its annual Community Forum to hear
views on Iowa City Police Department policies, practices and procedures. The community is
invited to submit questions and comments that will be used during the event.
The forum will begin at 5:30 p.m., Monday, September 21, 2020. An electronic Zoom meeting is
being held because a meeting in person is impossible or impractical due to concerns for the
health and safety of Commission members, staff and the public presented by COVID-19.
Questions and comments are due by Monday, September 7 and can be emailed to christine-
olne Iowa-cit .or or mailed to CPRB at City Hall, 410 E. Washington St., Iowa City, Iowa
52240. Be sure to include your full name and address as all submissions are public.
The board will try to address all questions and comments it receives.
The forum will also be recorded and later shown on City Channel 4. You can view programming
and the schedule at www.cit channel4.com,
2nd General News Release DRAFT
PDRI
Community Police Review Board Forum
The Community Police'Review Board will host its annual community Forum to hear
Views on Iowa City Police Department policies, practices and procedures.
The forum will begin at 5:30 p.m., Monday September 21, 2020. An electronic Zoom
meeting � is being held because a meeting in person is impossible or impractical due to
concerns for the health and safety of Commission members, staff and the public
presented by COVI D-19.
Additional information about the community Police Review Board is available at
https://www.icgov.org/citv-qovernment/boards/community-polive-review-board-c rb
CPRB Community Forum ZOOM
Monday September 21,,2020 5:30 p.m.
Board members hand out fivers (directly to people) pick different neighborhoods
(Email/Handout to Board by 8/12/20) 0
Publicizing Forumgo D
• Email Notice to (Cable to run on City Channel)-8/12/20
• Email Notice to (Neighborhood Outreach) for email contacts for lists—8/12/20
• Add Meeting to City Web Event Calendar (with notice) 8/12/20
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
• Post Notice in City Building —City Hall 8/14/20
• Email Notice to staff of Brds/Comm (City Clerk) — 8/14/20
• Email Notice to Dept. Heads/Division Secretaries to post (City Clerk) — 8/14/20
• Email Notice to UISG (City Clerk) — 8/18/20
• dco Notice in all City Buses (28 Card Stock) — To TRM 8/18/20 internal mail
Har py y
• 1st General News Release (re: Forum) — 8/17/20 (with deadline 9/7/20 for questions)
•(Communications)Hi li its/FB/Twitter—Link to 1 st General News Release— 8/17/20.
� �
• Co of 1st Nevus Release/Notice in Council packet -- 8/20/20 (off week packet)
Copy ,
• Notice in Council packet — 8/27/20 (for 9l 1 /20 meeting)
2°a General News Release (re: Forum) — 9/14/20 (no deadline for questions)
• Copy of 2"d Release in Council packet — 9/17/20 (off week packet)
• (Communications)Hlghligjits/FB/Twitter— Link to 2nd News Release— 9/14/20
• Post Agenda &Agenda News Release — 9/10/20
Videotape of Forum
Cable to videotape and re -broadcast Forum on the City Channel for couple of months
Items for Forum:
✓ Forum Agenda copies
✓ Name Plates of Board Members/Staff
✓ Calendar Year Complaint Information copies (past three years)
✓ Sign in Sheets
✓ Brochures
✓ Complaint Applications
✓ Information Sheet copies
✓ Forum Poster Board
✓ Ink Pens/Scotch Tape
✓ Recorder
After Meeting:
- Forum Meeting Minutes (Prepared by Staff as draft)
Transcriptions of Forum
- Forum Summary Report (Prepared by Board)
Neighborhood Centers of Johnson County
P.O. Box 2491
Iowa City, IA 52244
• Email Notices to Neighborhood Ctrs (Broadway/Pheasant Ridge) - Do by 8/20/20
ncicAncic.or� (354-2886)
Shelter HousF
429 Southgate Ave
Iowa City, IA 52240
• Email Notices to Shelter House (sent to Crissy) Do by 8/20//20
cris;eiowa.org (351-0326)
The Housing Fellowship
322 E 2"d St
Iowa City, IA 52240
• Email Notices to Housing Fellowship Do by 8/20/20
Ine ifellowship.com (358-9212)
The Salvation Army
Iowa City Corps
1116 Gilbert Ct
Iowa City, IA 52240
• Email Notices to The Salvation Army - Do by 8/20/20
Qam boaten4Ca�usc salvationarmv.ora (337-3725)
11 n9i FACILITY
Crisis Center of K
1121 Gilbert Ct
Iowa City, IA 52240
• Email Notices to Crisis Center- Do by 8/20/20
adminCabiccrisiscenter.ora (351-2726)
Free Lunch Program
PO Box 2831
Iowa City, IA 52244
• Email Notices to Free Lunch Program - Do by 8/20/20
icfreelunch amail.com (337-6283)
Domestic Violence Program
PO Box3170
Iowa City, IA 52244
• Email Notices to Domestic Violence Program - Do by 8/20/20
kristie dvi iowa.or (356-9863) Kristie Dozer, Exec Director
No bulletin board, but will post info on website
National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI)
PO Box 3087
Iowa City, IA 52244
• Email Notices to NAMI — Do by 8/20/20
• maryissah0namiic.ora (337-5400)
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COMMUNITY POLICE REVIEW BOARD
410 East Washington Street
Iowa City IA 52240-1826
(319)356-5043
DATE: Month Day, Year
Dear former PCRBICPRB member,
The Community Police Review Board (CPRB) has been tasked by the City Council to generat
e
a report and recommendation regarding changes to the CPRB ordinance that enhance its abilit
y
to provide effective civilian oversight of the Iowa City Police Department (ICPD) includingbut
not limited to those that address compelling the testimony of officers, with a report to include a
summary of measures considered and rejected by the CPRB, whether it be for policy g or legal
reasons.
In preparing for this report, we are seeking the opinions of prior board members. Please spend
some time responding to the questions below:
1. During the time that you served on the CPRB, did you feel that you were able to provide
effective civilian oversight f `�
g o the ICPD.
2. Did you ever feel that the powers or functions of the CPRB were limited in a waythat
hindered our capacity to provide ?
Y p Y p e effective oversight? Yes 1 No
3. if your answer to #2 is yes, what were the limitations (please be as specific as possible
)
)
4. What changes do you feel are needed to improve the situation?
5. What other changes to the CPRB's functions would you recommend to be considered?
G. How do you think those changes would enhance the oversight capacity?
Y
7. Did you serve your full term? Yes 1 No
If not, why?
We appreciate you taking the time from your busy schedule to respond to the above questions.
our response Y p y AT DATE. to.
Please return res b WHAT ?
CPRB Or email: chris-olne iowa-cit .or
Attention: Chris Olney
410 E. Washington Street
Iowa City, Iowa 52240
Regards,
Orville Townsend Sr, Vice Chair
Community Police Review Board
From CPRB Member Amanda Nichols
CPRB Powers & Functions
Publicly published reports should identify officers involved in complaints.
All complaints filed directly through the police department should be forwarded to the CPRB.
Authority to hire an independent auditor to review the police department's internal investigation
procedures and make recommendations.
Authority to require officers to participate in mediation if the complainant desires and the CPRB
finds it appropriate to the situation. This could involve consent decrees with the Department of
Justice as in Baltimore, Maryland; Ferguson, Missouri; and New Orleans, Louisiana.
Authority to issue formal reprimands with legal standing for officer misconduct as in Newark,
New Jersey. CPRB findings/rulings should be binding --unless disputed by the Chief of Police
and they should be acted upon within fourteen days. If the Chief of Police disputes the ruling,
the dispute should go to the City Council to be settled by a public vote. If the CPRB
recommends that an officer is terminated or faces other disciplinary action, it should only be
reversible by a council vote.
Authority to initiate investigations and reviews at its sole discretion, without the necessity of a
filed complaint, and have unfettered access to relevant documents including full direct access to
witnesses and police documents, as well as mandatory cooperation of police. As with others,
these investigations should be made public.
Authority to hire/fire the chief of police as in Oakland, California.
CPRB should conduct quarterly reviews of police stops and arrests with breakdowns of the
attending demographic information including stops and arrests by race and ethnicity. These
reports should be provided by the Chief of Police.
CPRB should be provided city funding for awareness and accessibility improvements..
CPRB should be provided funding and authority to hire an advocate with trauma awareness
training to assist complainants who desire their services with maneuvering the process.
Advocates would provide assistance and support as needed in filling out and submitting
paperwork and attending meetings and interviews.
Police Policy
Implement an immediate hiring freeze of new officers. When the next ? police officers
retire from the force, they should not be replaced. The portion of the city budget allocated to
hire their replacements should instead be used to hire mental health professionals, social
workers, EMT's, nurses, homeless advocates, domestic abuse victim advocates, harm reduction
workers, and peer proffessionals. (Look up ideal ratios for populations)
911 and police dispatchers should be directed to contact emergency mental health, social work,
and/or harm reduction services first for any calls related to mental health, substance use,
homelessness, disorientation, and/or dispute resolution. Those emergency responders should
be the ones to decide whether or not they would like a police presence.
?Require reporting and CPRB review for all incidences where an officer draws a gun on a
subject or uses their firearm during precautionary positioning maneuvers, regardless of whether
or not the gun is discharged. Add these actions to the definition of Use of Force. (Look up
current policy to see if reporting is already required in these incidents)
Prohibit surveillance and targeted stops of nonviolent community organizers and activists.
Violence defined as "behavior involving physical force intended to hurt, damage, or kill
someone." This includes prohibiting the ICPD from cooperating with surveillance being
performed by other agencies.
Remove the section of General Order 99-08 that allows an officer to deactivate a recording
during a self-initated field activity when no people are present. Require body cameras to be
operational at all times and recording for the entirety of all field activity. There should be
disciplinary action any time an officer fails to follow these guidelines and termination in the
event of multiple violations.
Require regular and timely publication of the 1CPD's full budget, in clear language and with clear
details for every all line items, so that citizens can access and understand exactly how money is
being spent.
Police officers with one or more excessive force complaints should be fired and have pensions
withheld.
Reduce the police budget by 75% by the start of the next fiscal year by measures such as
immediately eliminating overtime work and overtime pay, cutting funding for public relations,
and suspending the use of paid administrative leave for officers under investigation. (This will
allow for more city funding to be applied to desperately needed social programs related to
healthcare, housing, education, childcare, food security, transportation, legal aid, mutual aid,
etc.)
Police union contract negotiations should be public and readily accessible.
Remove all military grade equipment from the ICPD arsenal, including tear gas, rubber bullets,
armor, and riot gear and end contracts with the federal government that provide access to
2
military grade equipment. An independent analysis should take place to determine what other
equipment is military grade and how to dispose of it.
Officers responding to activity without a confirmed armed suspect should not be armed.
ICPD should immediately deprioritize police activity related to drug use and paraphernalia and
end all arrests and ticketing related to paraphernalia (including syringes) and to marijuana
possession under 40 grams.
Immediately prohibit the use of tear gas, rubber bullets, pepper balls, and flashbang grenades
against protesters and other civilians.
ICPD should cease to initiate traffic stops related to traffic laws and road safety once a road
safety response team is created.
All complaints against officers should be entered into a publicly searchable database that is
readily accessible on the city government's website, browsable, and searchable by officer name.
Additional Related Discussion Items
I would like us to create a public input form to allow the community to make suggestions for our
report to city council.
I would like us to hold a forum on zoom with representatives from organizations concerned with
decreasing racial disparities and police violence and presence so that they can provide input for
our report to city council. (Iowa Harm Reduction Coalition, Iowa Freedom Riders, LEAD, Black
Voices Project, ACLU, Seeding Sovereignty, South District Neighborhood Association, etc)
Sources
https://scholarship.law.missouri.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1829&context=jdr
htt s://scho[arshi .law.missouri.edu/idr/vo12019/issl/15/
htts:lllittlevilla ema .com/w-contentlu loads/2020/O7/CRB-Research-Brief-ASJ-FINAL-CM. d
f?fbcli =1wAR oakTz D bLY9Ni I v RINS- FZVxUrX N 6N -7TY Xei I WPnnM
https:llwww.unodc org/documents/ung ass2o16/Contributions/Civil/Dru PolicyAlliance/DPA Fac
t She A r the to D riminaliz tion F b2 15 1. df
https://www.drugpolicv.org/issues/drug-decriminalization
From CPRB Member David Selmer
August 2, 2020
From: David Selmer
To: Community Police Review Board
Re: Potential proposals for amending the Community Police Review Board -
INTRO:
The following draft potential proposals are for the consideration and discussion of the
Community Police Review Board ("CPRB") in carrying out its charge by the City Council to make
recommendations for altering the CPRB that may better empower the CPRB with the carrying out of its
duties of overseeing the police department. These are meant to engage discussion on sensitive areas of
possible reform. These are ideas for compelling brainstorming, with the expectation that they will be
abandoned, revised, and/or developed further through several stages of a group process. It is important
that these potential proposals are not taken out of this context.
POTENTIAL PROPOSED CHANGE #1:
CPRB BE GIVEN POWER TO INVESTIGATE BEYOND JUST FORMAL COMPLAINTS
1. CPRB PROVIDED WITH QUARTERLY REPORTS ON DATA TOPIC FOR REVIEW:
a. The Iowa City Police Department shall be responsible for providing the following
data for the CPRB to review every quarter:
L Total number of detained individuals
ii. Demographics of the individuals detained
iii. Total number of arrests
iv. Demographics of those arrested
v. Number of occurrences where physical use of force model was used for
on an individual to the Use of Force model's level of resister.
vi. Number of occurrences where physical use of force was used on a
individual to the Use of Force model's level of assailant.
vii. Number of occurrences when weapons were drawn by police. For each
occurrence:
1. Number of individuals involved
2. Race of non -officer individuals involved
3. Whether weapon was pointed at any civilian
4. Whether weapon was discharged
S. Stated reason for discharge of weapon
f. Whether any non -officer individual had a weapon
7. Whether the non -officer individual used or tried to use the
weapon against any officer
viii. Number of occurrences where an officer or civilian was injured and for
each occurrence:
I. Who was injured
2. Whether professional medical treatment was requested
1
3. Whether professional medical treatment was provided
2. CPRB EMPOWERED TO INVSTIGATE ANY OCCURRENCE
a. The CPRB shall have the power to request the complete records and files for any
instance or occurrence, including for any instances reported in the quarterly
data for review.
The purpose of this proposed change is to allow for oversight beyond the narrow confines of the
instances where a formal complaint has been raised to the attention of the CPRB. Data records will
allow for identification of trends and more knowledge of the policing and how it is being performed on
the several important topics. The list of important topics can be altered and expounded upon.
Quarterly reports will allow for more timely responses and investigations than annual reports.
IMPLICATED EXISTING CODIFICATION:
From Bylaws: Article II Purpose:
...this Board is created to review investigations into corn laints of police misconduct to ensure that
such investigations are conducted in a matter which is fair, thorough, and accurate, and to maintain a
central registry and to provide City Council with an annual report on all such complaints.
City Code 8-8-2: INTENT, GOALS AND GUIDING PRINCIPLES: A. Investigations into claims of
inappropriate conduct by sworn police officers will be conducted in a manner which is fair, thorough,
and accurate. B. An annual reporting system regarding complaints against sworn police officers will be
established to give the city council sufficient information to assess the overall performance of the Iowa
City police department in these matters. (Ord. 13-4555, 9-17-2013)
8-8-7: DUTIES OF BOARD; COMPLAINT REVIEW AND GENERAL DUTIES:
A. Complaints:
B. Review Of Police Chief's Report Or City Manager's Report:
CITY OF IOWA CITY IOWA COMMUNITY POLICE REVIEW BOARD STANDARD OPERATING PROCEDURES
AND GUIDELINES June 16, 2015 Preface ..."evaluating the overall performance of the Police Department
by having it review the Police Department's investigation into complaints."
POTENTIAL PROPOSED CHANGE #2:
CPRB BE GIVEN POWER TO REVIEW AND REPORT ON DISCIPLINE WHEN MISCONDUCT IS FOUND .AND
TO APPEAL TO THE CITY COUNCIL FOR A HEARING ON THE DISCIPLINE ISSUED WHEN DISAGREEMENT
WITH POLICE CHIEF/CITY MANAGER.
This proposed change addresses a critical part of the oversight function that is missing:
accountability/ramifications for instances of misconduct. Presently, the board only reports whether it
finds misconduct. The value of this limited review should be restated: in most instances misconduct was
not found to be present by the CPRB, and having a panel of impartial community members review cases
and report that they concur with the findings of the police has and continues to provide reassurance
while saving large expense. However, in complaints where misconduct is found, in order to obtain
effective oversight, some authority to weigh in on the discipline of the officer must be provided.
Caution must be taken as CPRB members are not trained in human resources and/or the
disciplining of officers. Still, in the least CPRB should be informed of the disciplinary measures that were
taken, and the reasonings behind such decision. Such findings should be included in the report from the
Chief or City Manager, and should include, among other information, the history of previous allegations
of misconduct against the officer and any history of found misconduct and/or discipline.
It is further proposed, in instances where the CPRB found misconduct, they should be able to
discuss with the Chief/City Manager the recommended discipline. If the CPRB disagrees with the final
finding of discipline by the Chief, it may include such findings in its public report. At discretion of the
CPRB, by majority vote, the CPRB should be allowed to appeal the Chief s finding of discipline to the City
Council for a hearing in which the City Council would ultimately decide the discipline of the officer.
IMPLICATED EXISTING CODIFICATIONS
City Code 8-8-2: INTENT, GOALS AND GUIDING PRINCIPLES: E. The board shall have no authority over
police disciplinary matters because only the police chief or city manager may impose discipline under
Iowa law.
City Code 8-8-2: INTENT, GOALS AND GUIDING PRINCIPLES: L. Investigation of all formal complaints to
the board is a mandatory duty of the Police Chief, and a report of each complaint investigation shall be
given to the board. Such reports to the board shall include the factual findings of the Police Chief as well
as a written conclusion explaining why and the extent to which a complaint is either "sustained" or "not
sustained". However, such reports shall not include discipline or other personnel matters. If the Police
Chief and the City Manager find the police officer's actions constitute misconduct and discipline is
imposed by the Police Chief or City Manager, the internal affairs investigation may become a public
record to be released by the City Attorney to the extent provided by law, in which case the City Attorney
shall forward a copy of such internal affairs investigation report to the board. (Ord. 13-4555, 9-17-2013;
amd. Ord. 19-4783, 3-12-2019)
City Code 8-8-6: POLICE CHIEFS REPORT TO BOARD; CITY MANAGER'S REPORT TO BOARD: The Police
Chief's report to the board shall not include discipline or personnel matters.
City Code 8-8-7: DUTIES OF BOARD; COMPLAINT REVIEW AND GENERAL DUTIES: (B) 5:... In addition, the
board's public report shall not include any discipline or personnel matters, although the board may
comment generally as to whether the board believes discipline is appropriate without commenting on
the extent or form of the discipline.
City Code 8-8-8: BOARD COMPOSITION; LIMITED POWERS OF BOARD: 8. Limited Powers: The board shall
have the following limited powers: 3. The board has no power to review police officer personnel records
or disciplinary matters except to the extent such matters are made public by the City Attorney or are the
subject of an enforceable subpoena.
City Code 8-8-8: BOARD COMPOSITION; LIMITED POWERS OF BOARD: 9. Nothing in this chapter shall in
any way impede or interfere with the Police Chief's and the City Manager's lawful ability to perform
their personnel supervisory duties over sworn police officers, including the ability to impose discipline as
deemed appropriate by the Police Chief or City Manager.
POTENTIAL PROPOSED CHANGE #3
CPRB MEMBERSHIP BE EXPANDED AND CRITERIA FOR MEMBERSHIP EMPHASIZE INCLUSION OF
MINORITIES. THE CPRB BE GIVEN SOME AUTONOMY IN SELECTING MEMBERS.
1. THE BOARD SHALL BE COMPRISED OF SEVEN MEMBERS WITH AN EMPHASIS ON
REPRESENTING MINORITY GROUPS
a. The Board shall be comprised of seven members, not five.
The purpose would be to allow larger gathering of members without formulating a quorum,
allow for more discussion and representation of the community, and help share the responsibilities of
the volunteer board members among more of its members.
b. There should be a requirement that composition shall include a minimum of three
members who identify as a minority.
The call for reform to the CPRB stems from an agenda to achieve racial equality in the justice
system. objective data points to clear racial disparities in policing on a statewide and national level.
Having a minimum composition of members from minority groups for overseeing the police would help
protect minority interests in the CPRB's carrying out of its police oversight responsibilities and garner
more trust in the CPRB from minority groups.
2. THE CPRB SHOULD BE RESPONSIBLE FOR NOMINATION OF SOME OF ITS MEMBERS:
a. Two of the Seven members will be nominated by current Board members.
b. Five of the Seven members will be nominated by City Council or the Mayor.
c. City Council will confirm all nominated members.
The purpose would allow for the CPRB to have some input in its own makeup and composition.
This would allow for the CPRB to nominate candidates that may have qualifications, skills, or character
that the CPRB members believe would compliment the current composition of the CPRB so as to allow
them to be more informed, capable, and effective in carrying out its duties and/or representative of
interests in the community. Some example qualifications include report writing, community activism,
data analysis, and/or auditing. Again, deference to minority composition is recommended.
Implicated Existing Codification:
ARTICLE Ili. MEMBERSHIP: Section 1. Qualifications. The Board shall consist of five (5) members
appointed by -the City Council who shall be eligible electors of the City of Iowa City, Iowa and shall meet
the criteria contained in Chapter 8, City Code, City of Iowa City, Iowa. Appointments to the Board shall
include one current or former "peace officer" as that term is defined by state law. The City Council may
waive the residency requirement for good cause shown and may waive the requirement that the Board
include one current or former "peace officer" for good cause shown.
City Code 8-8-8: BOARD COMPOSITION; LIMITED POWERS OF BOARD: A. Board Composition: 1 . The
board shall consist of five (5) members appointed by the City Council...
4
From CPRB Member Latisha McDaniel
1. Complaints are able to be received from a wide variety of
sources —including in -person, telephonically, electronically, anonymously
and through third persons with sufficient knowledge of the underlying
circumstances
2. That the system is accessible through a variety of means (including in
person, telephone, electronically)
3. That complainants are not discouraged from filing a report and are free
from retaliation (filing anonymously)
4. Is citizen status protected when reporting police misconduct ie rights of
undocumented people?
5. Annual review/audit of complaint process.
6. Independent investigation of complaints (not through ICPD).
rMZK"Aff�
Who is the Equity Director and how are they
associated with the City and ICPD?
7. Review IA investigations (investigations that were not part of the CPRB
complaint process but involved police misconduct).
8. ICPD must ensure that body cameras are operational at all times.
Officers who fail to keep their equipment in working order must be
disciplined and/or terminated in the event of multiple violations.
9. Access to individual officer records in order to study patterns of police
misconduct of specific officers.
1
10. CPRB must be able to go beyond recommendations to the Chief and
actually be able to enforce disciplinary action in cases of police misconduct
and systemic issues within the ICPD- Examples:
Firing officers with one or more excessive force complaints
Immediate disarm of officers who use weapons in incidents that there
was no confirmed armed suspect.
Enact and enforce measurable consequences when the board
recommendations are not followed or implemented
11. An immediate review of ICPD equipment and removal of all military
grade equipment including tear gas, rubber bullets, pepper balls, and
flashbang grenades against protestors.
2
From CPRB Member Orville Townsend
Chris Olney
From: orviIle.townsend@hotmail.com
Sent: Monday, August 3, 2020 1 :52 PM
To: Chris Olney
Cc: Orville Townsend
Subject: Re: CPRB suggested changes DUE AUGUST 3
I
Chris:
My suggestions are as follows:
* Under the current system the Board sends its report to the City Council it never receives any written response
concerning any actions taken. This is especially noticeable in situations where the Police Chief reviews the information
and finds that the officer did not violate the citizen's rights, but the Board, after viewing the information finds that the
citizen's rights were violated.Under the current set up it seems that the CPRB is involved, but has no influence over the
outcome.
* The Board doesn't need officers names but in situations where discipline is necessary can actions taken be shared
with the Board?
Sent from Tohsoft.Mail for mobile
30 Jul from Chris-Olney@iowa-city.org:
This is a reminder to send your suggestions for CPRB changes to me by Monday, August 3ra
As of today, there have been none received. These suggestions will be included in the August 11th meeting packet for
all members to review prior to the meeting.
Thanks,
Chris Olney
Administrative Secretary J City of Iowa City
319-356-5043
410 E Washington St I Iowa City, IA
www.icgov.org
Disclaimer
The information contained in this communication from the sender is confidential, It is intended solely for use by the recipient and
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1
Chris Olney
From: City of Iowa City<CityoflowaCity@public.govdelivery.com>
Sent: Thursday, July 30, 2020 9:31 AM
To: Chris Olney
Subject: Iowa City announces three finalists for Police Chief position
Q SHARE Having trouble viewing this email? view it as a Web page.
City Of I pWA C I TY
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Date: 07/30/2020
Contact: Geoff Fruin, City Manager
Phone: 319-356-5013
Iowa City announces three finalists for Police Chief position
City Manager Geoff Fruin announced on Thursday, July 30, 2020, that three finalists have been
named for the Chief of Police position.
The finalist are: Jason Lando of Pittsburgh, Dustin Liston of El Paso, Texas, and Jeremy Logan of
Oelwein.
In February, then Police Chief Jody Matherly retired after a 37-year law enforcement career, serving
the last three years as Iowa City Police Chief, A national search for a replacement followed the
announcement.
Finalists have been invited to Iowa City for the next stage of the recruitment process.
Jason Lando: Commander, Pittsburgh Bureau of Police
o Served in the Pittsburgh Bureau of Police since 2000; Commander since 2014
o Graduated with a Masters of Science in Legal Studies from California University of
Pennsylvania in 2017
o Bachelors of Science in Emergency Medicine Management from University of
Pittsburgh in 2001
o Full resume
Dustin Liston: Lieutenant, El Paso Police Department
o Served in the El Paso Police Department since 1998; Lieutenant since 2014
o Graduate with a Masters of Science in Criminal Justice from Sul Ross State
University in 2016
o Bachelors of Arts in Psychology and Sociology from University of Iowa in 1997
o Full resume
• Jeremy Logan: Chief, Oelwein Police Department
o Served in Oelwein Police Department since 1993; Chief since 2002
o Currently enrolled in Criminal Justice Leadership Masters program at Waldorf
University
o Bachelors of Applied Science in Criminal Justice Administration from Waldorf
University in 2016
o Full resume
Details of the public and meet and greet event will be announced at a later date. The City will
implement CQVID-19 protocols and will broadcast content from the public event for those not able
to attend.
Feedback on the candidates is welcome anytime and can be submitted by
emailing policechiefsearch __iowa-city.or , or by submitting written feedback to the Human
Resources Administrator through the Washington Street City Hall lobby drop box or via mail to City
Hall at 410 E. Washington Street in Iowa City, 52240.
For more information about the finalists, including responses to an initial screening questionnaire,
visit icgov.org/PoliceChiefSearch,
`r N • �;
R
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Contact Us
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August 11, 2020 Mtg Packet
COMMUNITY POLICE REVIEW BOARD
COMPLAINT DEADLINES
CPRB Complaint #20-01
Filed:
06/03/20
Chiefs report due (90 days):
09/01/20
Chiefs report filed:
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
07/23/20
CPRB meeting #1 (Review):
06/09/20
CPRB meeting #2 (Review):
08/11/20
CPRB meeting #3 (Review):
»/??/20
CPRB report due (90 days): 10/21/20
CPRB Complaint #20-02
Filed:
06/04/20
Chiefs report due (90 days):
09/02/20
Chiefs report filed:
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
??/??/20
CPRB meeting #1 (Review):
??/??/20
CPRB meeting #2 (Review):
??/??/20
CPRB meeting #3 (Review):
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
??/??/20
CPRB report due (90 days):
??/??/20
CPRB Complaint ##20-03
Filed:
07/07/20
Chiefs report due (90 days):
10/05/20
Chiefs report filed:
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
?*?./??/20
CPRB meeting #1 (Review):
??/??/20
CPRB meeting #2 (Review):
7.?1??120
CPRB meeting #3 (Review):
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
??/?7/20
CPRB report due (90 days:
?.?./??/20
CPRB Complaint ##20-04
Filed:
07/27/20
Chiefs report due (90 days):
10/26/20
Chiefs report filed:
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
7.7./?7/20
CPRB meeting #1 (Review):
?.?/?7/20
CPRB meeting #2 (Review):
??/??/20
CPRB meeting #3 (Review):
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
??/?7/20
CPRB report due (90 days):
??/??/20
TENTATIVE MEETING SCHEDULE
September 8, 2020
September 21, 2020 (Community Forum)
October 13, 2020
November 10, 2020
COMMUNITY POLICE REVIEW BOARD
OFFICE CONTACTS
July 2020
Date Description
None