Latest Guides

Government

Council to Consider ‘Military Equipment’ Use Policy Ordinance

Published on Monday, May 23, 2022 | 5:00 am
 

The City Council will conduct a full discussion on a policy that requires local police to disclose and obtain approvals from the City Council before obtaining military equipment.

California state law AB 481 requires the policy be submitted to the City Council and posted on the City’s website 30 days.

The council discussed the item one month ago, and on Monday will consider the policy before the first reading of the ordinance so that the City Council can have a full discussion on the matter.

The policy takes into account some of the unique events which leads to the need for some items that other cities may not have. The city works with Homeland Security and the FBI during the Rose Parade and the Rose Bowl Game.

State law requires an annual review of the city’s policy. The policy also went before the city’s Police Oversight Commission.

The city’s inventory includes a robot used to help de-escalate situations and determine if a suspect is armed, a drone, an armored Bearcat vehicle, a mobile command post, lock-defeating rounds that allow quick access during active shooter and hostage situations, .50 caliber precision rifle and ammunition, flashbang devices, tear gas and other chemical agents, barricade penetrating rounds, foam rounds, pepperball launcher, 40mm less-lethal rounds.

Only three items were obtained from the military — Bell OH-58 helicopters — all other equipment in PPD’s inventory has been sourced through direct purchases and seizures.

None of the military items were deployed during recent protests.

In June, the City Council approved the purchase of a $1.8 million Mobile Command Center truck that will replace the department’s obsolete command vehicle that’s been in service for more than 20 years.

Local critics opposed the expenditure, claiming the vehicle will be used to conduct surveillance.

The unit is designed to operate as a mobile police station. Local police officials told Pasadena Now emphatically that the vehicle is not an armored or Bearcat vehicle.

In 2014, the department returned a Mine-Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP), an armored personnel carrier vehicle, after the Pasadena Weekly reported police had acquired two of the vehicles.

The city obtained the MRAP vehicle through the U.S. Department of Defense’s Excess Property Program, also known as Program 1033, which allows police departments to obtain military equipment.

The program came under fire after the riots in Ferguson, Missouri in 2014 which were sparked by the officer-involved shooting death of unarmed teenager Michael Brown.

During the riots, Ferguson police responded by using MRAPs and military-grade weapons against protesters.

President Barack Obama established limitations on the program, but those limitations were rolled back by President Donald Trump in 2017.

At that time, the City Council knew the department had one vehicle and began to ask questions about the second one after the Weekly story appeared. After council members saw the second vehicle, the police department was told to return it.

Get our daily Pasadena newspaper in your email box. Free.

Get all the latest Pasadena news, more than 10 fresh stories daily, 7 days a week at 7 a.m.

Make a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

One thought on “Council to Consider ‘Military Equipment’ Use Policy Ordinance

  • Even as a moderate Dem this decision really boils my blood. Let me get this right. We live near Villa Park, scene of many violent actions recently and home to the Villa Boys. Latin Kings, Bloods, MS 13, and other criminal groups are active around here, as evidenced by their monikers plastered in the park and on sidewalks and buildings. Let me see if I’ve got this right. The police can’t choose vehicles that enhance their ability to protect the public and themselves from heavily-armed criminals to protect the rights of armed dangerous criminal gang members and wanna-be hangers-on? That’s so lame it defies reason.

 

 

 

 

buy ivermectin online
buy modafinil online
buy clomid online
buy ivermectin online