天美视频

Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2020

About the Author

Russell Ruderman

State Sen. Russell Ruderman represents the Puna and Kau areas on the Big island. He is the president and founder of Island Naturals Markets and the 2015 State of Hawaii SBA Businessperson of the Year.


There are two steps we can take right now to address police violence and restore people鈥檚 trust in police: Meaningful, transparent reviews of the officers with the most complaints and dismissal when appropriate; and a national registry with zero tolerance for rehiring decertified officers.

Both can begin now. Doing so will address the unrest in an immediate and lasting way.

First, for every police department a review occurs where the officers with the most complaints are reviewed by the police commission, the police chief, and the city or county that oversees that department. Public reports and dismissals where needed must follow.

Start with the top of the list and keep going. Perhaps the 5% with the most complaints, and the most complaints per year of service, get reviewed now.

HPD officers on bicycles gather before the Black Lives matter Peaceful Protest held at Ala Moana to the Duke Kahanmoku Statue. June 5, 2020
There is no better time than the present to reform Hawaii’s four county police departments. These Honolulu Police Department officers helped watch over the crowd at the Black Lives Matter peaceful protest on June 5. Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2020

The reviews must be transparent, and result in dismissal when appropriate. No officer with 15 or more serious complaints ought to be wearing a badge like Derek Chauvin was.

For now each jurisdiction must initiate its own reviews. The police chief or commission, or the local or state executive or legislature, can call for and demand it; it鈥檚 a reasonable demand in these times.

Those police forces most ready to embrace the needed changes will be most welcoming of these reviews. These will also enjoy the best community support.

Public Pressure Required

Some other jurisdictions will need to be dragged into doing so. We must do it anyway, and permanently remove the obstacles to such reform. Public pressure will go a long way if it鈥檚 needed.

Complaints are an imperfect measure, but the data is objective and available now. In some areas the names and complaints can be made public. In those areas where the names of disciplined officers are still secret, we still need a review as accountable as legally possible.

And then we will change the laws to allow the public access to this information. Transparency will lead to trust and accountability.

Police unions must now get on board and be part of the solution. Resistance to transparency will invite further calls to defund or disband the department, not good for members or unions.

For the noble rank and file, this is surely a welcome move for their pride, their reputations, and their safety. The professional police want to heal this ugly scar and get on with protecting our communities. They deserve our full support in doing so.

Secondly we need a national registry of decertified police officers who could not be hired in other jurisdictions, or in other levels of law enforcement. We can no longer simply shuffle them around.

Absent national leadership, this may have to be done by independent watchdog groups until a trustworthy national program can begin. While the registry is developed, the reviews can begin.

Share Your Ideas

Ideally, we would acknowledge a widespread problem with white nationalists in many of our police forces, and a culture of brutality in some others. And much more is needed: more and better training; less weaponry; support for those who intervene in wrongdoing; better laws and rules.

But even without these needed steps, we can move forward on this issue now.

Chris Rock said it well. In some professions, all the members have to be good. Like airline pilots. “Mostly good pilots but there are a few bad apples” would never be acceptable.

It鈥檚 the same with police and for the same reason; our lives are in their hands. These two immediately doable steps could begin tomorrow, calming the unrest and putting this intolerable part of our history behind us.


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About the Author

Russell Ruderman

State Sen. Russell Ruderman represents the Puna and Kau areas on the Big island. He is the president and founder of Island Naturals Markets and the 2015 State of Hawaii SBA Businessperson of the Year.


Latest Comments (0)

At least on Hawaii I recall the mayor had difficulty filling positions on the police commission.聽 Oahu had two people who recently resigned.聽 What review powers to our commissioners have?聽 Should they be more involved in weighing in on bad behavior?聽 聽Also, how come we have so many unfilled positions in the force.

Richard_Bidleman · 4 years ago

The article is an excellent starting point. The police are not the proper personnel to handle the homeless, the mentally ill, the drug users, or even domestic violence calls. These public safety challenges need to have specialized teams dedicated to them. Mental health issues need to be addressed with mental health professionals, not as consultants, but as part of the first response team. And with the homeless, this problem will not go away until we see a coordinated, integrated plan that acknowledges the need for housing, drug counseling, mental health care, and job training. This will require dedicated sites to act as transition facilities, and patience on our part. Moving someone from homelessness to permanent housing and a job is some heavy lifting.聽聽

TannedTom · 4 years ago

Some of the comments with respect to police reform have valid points such as the mandatory activation of body worn cameras during all encounters, stricter supervision, racial/cultural sensitivity and use of force training, creation of crisis intervention teams to respond to non-criminal matters, and the like. These are all worthy considerations, and law enforcement has no choice but continue to evolve for the better. The recent deaths of black individuals at the hands of police are a testament that reform must take place, and believe or not, the police realize it too. And while there is so much more to improve on, I am still convinced that the vast majority of officers are doing their very best to care for the communities they serve and are more than willing to accept change.

ddperry · 4 years ago

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