inside this week
Historic Roxbury clock back in service pg 3
A&E
business news
MASS POETRY INSTALLS LATEST SIDEWALK POEMS pg 19
Roxbury couple launches ‘by local, for local’ marketplace pg 16
plus Roxbury Int’l Film Festival opens June 22 pg 19 International artists create political dialogue pg 20 ‘It Comes at Night’ pg 21 Thursday, June 8, 2017 • FREE • GREATER BOSTON’S URBAN NEWS SOURCE SINCE 1965 • CELEBRATING 50 YEARS
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Mayor to revamp police bd. COOP board to receive new members, expanded caseload By YAWU MILLER PHOTO: MAYOR’S OFFICE PHOTO BY DAN HARNEY
Mayor Martin Walsh cuts the ribbon on the Dorchester Day parade as elected officials look on.
Campaigns in full swing at Dorchester Day parade Pols appeal for votes in city’s biggest neighborhood By YAWU MILLER
For at-large City Councilor Anissa Essaibi George, Dorchester Day has been a part of her life since she first watched the parade from her family home at the corner of Dorchester Avenue and Taft Street. Later, she marched in the parade as the member of a color guard squad, spent 20 years on the parade committee, served as a commentator for Boston
Neighborhood News and ran the Little Miss Dot contest. Now, as an elected official, Essaibi-George marches in parades in every neighborhood — First Night, St. Patrick’s Day, Pride, Bunker Hill, the Caribbean Carnival and the Roslindale parade — but Dorchester’s event is still paramount. “Even though I represent the whole city, marching in my neighborhood’s parade is really the best thing,” she said, surrounded by a team of volunteers.
Neighborhood sentiments aside, the parade serves another important function for any candidate who represents the whole city: It’s the unofficial kickoff of the political season. “Papers are in,” Essaibi-George said. “Everyone’s declared.” Of the four candidates declared for mayor, two had the resources to show up with brigades of T-shirt-wearing supporters, signage and swag: Dorchester resident
See DOT DAY, page 8
For the last 27 years, civil rights activists, attorneys and black elected officials have called on city officials to create an independent civilian review board with the power to investigate allegations of police abuse and misconduct. For 22 of those years, the city has instead maintained a Civilian Ombudsman Oversight Panel board, a three-person group charged with reviewing a random sample of the cases handled by the Police Department’s Internal Affairs Division as well as those referred to it by civilian complainants to assess the fairness and thoroughness of IAD investigations. This week Mayor Martin Walsh announced changes to the COOP board he said would strengthen its ability to monitor Internal Affairs investigations — increasing the number of panel members from three to five and increasing the share of IAD complaints the board handles. Walsh said the changes to the COOP board and a declining number of civilian complaints
mean there’s little need for civilian oversight of police in Boston. “I want to get these cases to zero,” Walsh said of civilian complaints. “That’s our goal. Our goal is to have complete trust and a great working relationship between the community and the officers.” But civil rights attorneys said anything short of an independent civilian review committee with the power to conduct its own investigations means those who suffer from abuse at the hands of police have little chance of obtaining justice. “It sounds like they’re tinkering around the edges,” said attorney Howard Freidman, who often represents clients in police misconduct cases. In 2015, after the mayor pledged to reform the COOP board, the three-member body proposed the creation of an independent civilian body with sufficient staff and resources to investigate allegations of police misconduct. COOP board members envisioned a civilian-run Office of Police Accountability with an executive director,
See COOP BOARD, page 6
State hears justice reform advocates Proposed bills affect sentencing, records By JULE PATTISON-GORDON
State legislators, activists, affected individuals and criminal justice professionals came before the state’s Joint Committee on the Judiciary on Monday to testify on an array criminal justice reform proposals. Among those giving testimony were Sen. Sonia Chang-Diaz and Rep. Mary Keefe, who called for passage of an omnibus bill whose elements would repeal mandatory minimum sentencing for
nonviolent drug offenses, reduce some felonies to misdemeanors, raise the felony threshold for larceny, create a medical parole pathway for inmates who are terminally ill or dying and implement CORI reforms. Any criminal justice system savings would go into a fund for investment into education and workforce development programs. Chang-Diaz argued that the state has stalled in analysis for several years and said enacting the full reform package is critical to making a real difference.
“Our state is wasting precious resources on a system that isn’t just and doesn’t work,” ChangDiaz said. “We need to stop doing harm to the very communities we say we are trying to protect.”
Mandatory minimums
Supporters of mandatory minimum sentencing repeal say that while such laws may have been intended to prevent inequities in the criminal justice system, they now are creating it. For instance, offenses that carry mandatory minimums
See CRIMINAL JUSTICE, page 24
BANNER PHOTO
Sen. Sonia Chang-Diaz gave testimony on criminal justice reforms, accompanied by Rep. Mary Keefe. Ben Forman of MassINC stands in back.