Obama bans some military-style equipment provided to police
The announcement is a surprise coming nine months after police in full body armor with armored trucks dispelled last summer’s racially charged protests in Ferguson, Missouri. The White House suggested last year that Obama would maintain programs that provide the equipment because of their broader contribution to public safety.
But an interagency group found “substantial risk of misusing or overusing” items like tracked armored vehicles, high-powered firearms and camouflage. The task force also created new controls for a longer list of weapons and gear the federal government provides to police.
The announcements come as Obama is visiting Camden, New Jersey, one of the country’s most violent and poorest cities.
Camden is one such county that has benefited from the 1033 Program. There, the sheriff’s department has received five military rifles under the program, valued at $2,500, according to a Freedom of Information request. All equipment comes free, minus shipping costs.
In all, law enforcement departments across the state of New Jersey have received 987 pieces of equipment, from flashlights and radios to laser-sight weapons and tank-like vehicles.
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama is banning the federal government from providing some military-style equipment to local police.<script height="542px" width="963px" src="http://player.ooyala.com/iframe.js#ec=Q3M3M1dTpIrICR_BTt7TsVjWZhRBpT4a&pbid=9ae34776f76145da969becdeb205e6a5"></script>
The announcement is a surprise coming nine months after police in full body armor with armored trucks dispelled last summer’s racially charged protests in Ferguson, Missouri. The White House suggested last year that Obama would maintain programs that provide the equipment because of their broader contribution to public safety.
But an interagency group found “substantial risk of misusing or overusing” items like tracked armored vehicles, high-powered firearms and camouflage. The task force also created new controls for a longer list of weapons and gear the federal government provides to police.
The announcements come as Obama is visiting Camden, New Jersey, one of the country’s most violent and poorest cities.
Camden is one such county that has benefited from the 1033 Program. There, the sheriff’s department has received five military rifles under the program, valued at $2,500, according to a Freedom of Information request. All equipment comes free, minus shipping costs.
In all, law enforcement departments across the state of New Jersey have received 987 pieces of equipment, from flashlights and radios to laser-sight weapons and tank-like vehicles.