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The need to increase trust & the daunting task ahead for a new Cleveland Community Police Commission

Michelle Bell, Marquis Wise, and Chrishawndra Matthews
Ryan Loew
/
海角破解版
Michelle Bell, Marquis Wise, and Chrishawndra Matthews

Three Clevelanders discuss the ways they've interacted with law enforcement and the ways policing in the city could be improved under a new Community Police Commission.

鈥淚'm not in a high-power position, you don't care if you solve my son's case. That's what you showed me in so many ways. But we have to change that.鈥
Michelle Bell

Michelle Bell runs an outreach and violence prevention group in Cleveland called M-PAC, started after her son, Andr茅 Brown, was killed in 2019. The case remains open.

鈥淲hen word got out my son was killed, they loved him in the neighborhood. Everybody was saying the same thing,鈥 Bell said. 鈥淏ut I'm sitting there thinking, 鈥榃hy don't you all say something?鈥 It brings up so many emotions, but today it's a little easier to talk about than it was yesterday.鈥

Bell chalks up the reluctance to speak to a fear of retribution and to a mistrust of police.

Michelle Bell started the support group M-PAC Cleveland after her son Andre Brown was killed in 2019.
Ryan Loew
/
海角破解版
Michelle Bell started the support group M-PAC Cleveland after her son Andre Brown was killed in 2019.

She believes someone on the block where Brown was killed, where she owned a house and lived before moving away for work, knows what happened. But, she says, no one believes police will protect them if they come forward.

鈥溾業 may have the answer, I may know, I may have seen it, a perfect eye witness, but I'm not gonna say anything,鈥欌 Bell explains, 鈥溾榖ecause my life is in jeopardy now.鈥欌

She also looks around at all the family members of victims of gun violence, whose cases often go unsolved. She says it鈥檚 another point of distrust of the police.

鈥淵ou don鈥檛 see the effort of getting these individuals, bringing them to justice, so people just don鈥檛 have the trust. They don鈥檛 have the confidence,鈥 Bell said.

鈥淚 think police need mandatory counseling because they do deal with a lot. They do see a lot of trauma. It is times where they鈥檙e going to see dead bodies, and they gotta deal with that.鈥
Marquis Wise

In the Kinsman neighborhood on Cleveland鈥檚 East Side, 50-year-old Marquis Wise spent years in prison when he was younger, but now he's a father and a community activist who works with neighborhood kids.

He sees police who look at his criminal record from decades ago and, he says, it affects how they approach him to this day.

Marquis Wise is a former felon who's now a community activist.
Ryan Loew
/
海角破解版
Marquis Wise is a former felon who's now a community activist.

He says Cleveland officers need better training.

鈥淚 think they need cultural training, I think they need to stop being taught to not see color because when you don't see color, you don't see culture,鈥 Wise said. 鈥淵ou can't treat me as if I'm white, or [as] if I'm Chinese or Puerto Rican. I'm a Black man.鈥

Wise wants to see officers trained in interacting with former felons, with people who have mental health and addiction problems, 鈥溾檆ause you can鈥檛 deal with someone that鈥檚 smoking crack the same way as you deal with someone that recovered from crack.

鈥淵ou can鈥檛 deal with a person that got a gun on them the same way you deal with someone that carried guns 20 years ago,鈥 he said.

At the same time, he's also sympathetic to the trauma officers encounter as part of their job.

鈥淚t is times where they鈥檙e going to see dead bodies. And they gotta deal with that,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 think they need counseling at least once a week.鈥

鈥淚n the inner city you don't meet the police until something happens and they get called to your house or until y'all get pulled over.鈥
Chrishawndra Matthews

Chrishawndra Matthews, who runs a local nonprofit called Literacy in the Hood, can often be found traveling around in the city in a book mobile.

She echoes Wise鈥檚 criticism of the way Cleveland police interact with many residents. Without a residency requirement for city employees, she says, officers aren鈥檛 familiar with the communities where they work.

鈥淪o, you dropping them in here and they're scared, they think they in baby Baghdad,鈥 Matthews said.

鈥淣ow they're going out to work every day, but they got a 鈥業鈥檓 gonna return home safe鈥 mentality, and then they got a mentality towards the people in the streets like the enemy, and it shouldn't be like that if they were hired to protect and serve,鈥 Matthews said.

Chrishawndra Matthews is the founder of Literacy in the Hood
Ryan Loew
/
海角破解版
Chrishawndra Matthews is the founder of Literacy in the Hood.

In 2006, the Ohio Legislature passed a law that ended residency requirements for municipal employees.

Better policing, Matthews says, begins with officers spending much more time interacting with and getting to know residents.

Last November, Issue 24 passed by nearly 60% of the vote. The charter amendment creates a new Community Police Commission with sweeping powers over department policies and officer discipline.

The mayor鈥檚 office is currently reviewing applications for 10 spots on the CPC. A five-person panel appointed by Mayor Justin Bibb to interview 27 finalists is expected to make its recommendations by the end of the month. Those names will be forwarded to council for its approval.

City council will name the remaining three members.

Matthew Richmond is a reporter/producer focused on criminal justice issues at 海角破解版.