The Seattle police chief has basically told business owners and residents that they need to say their prayers so to speak. A letter put out yesterday according to a tweet from @Doranimated talks about how ‘City Council Ordinance 119805 Crowd Control Tool goes into effect this weekend.
This ordinance bans Seattle Police Officers from using pepper spray and other less than lethal tools to stop rioters. “For these reasons”, the letter states, “Seattle Police will have an adjusted deployment in response to any demonstrations this weekend – as I will never ask our officers to risk their personal safety to protect property without the tools to do so in a safe way.” See tweet:
The DOJ persuaded a federal judge late Friday to block Seattle’s law prohibiting police from using pepper spray, blast balls & similar weapons. | https://t.co/CGTXz4J0TJ
— Mike (@Doranimated) July 25, 2020
In another tweet by the same person, an update reads:
The DOJ persuaded a federal judge late Friday to block Seattle’s law prohibiting police from using pepper spray, blast balls & similar weapons.
From 1010WINS:
A federal judge late Friday blocked Seattle’s new law prohibiting police from using pepper spray, blast balls and similar weapons that was passed following confrontations with protesters.
The Seattle Times reports that U.S. District Judge James Robart at an emergency hearing granted a request from the federal government to block the new law, which the Seattle City Council passed unanimously last month.
The U.S. Department of Justice, citing Seattle’s longstanding police consent decree, argued that banning the use of crowd control weapons could actually lead to more police use of force, leaving them only with more deadly weapons.
Robart said the issue needed more discussion between the city and the Justice Department before the change went into effect Sunday. Ruling from the bench, just before 9 p.m., Robart said the temporary restraining order he granted would be “very temporary.”
“I urge you all to use it as an occasion to try to find out where it is we are and where it is we’re going,” Robart said. “I can’t tell you today if blast balls are a good idea or a bad idea, but I know that sometime a long time ago I approved them.”
Robart is presiding over a 2012 consent decree requiring the city to address allegations of excessive force and biased policing.
The Seattle PD hasn’t officially responded on Twitter as of yet to this breaking development.
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