Experts say the vast majority of the 800,000 men and women employed as police officers in the U.S. today are committed to protecting all members of the communities they serve—regardless of race. The problem, these experts say, is the racist policies of many police departments. These policies include how officers are trained and how frequently they are tasked with jobs they haven’t been taught how to handle.
Still, many Black Americans say what happened to Floyd is reflective of the violence and racism they face every day at the hands of law enforcement. Studies show that for similar offenses, Black people are more likely than white people to be arrested—as well as found guilty and given longer prison sentences. And according to data compiled by The Washington Post, Black Americans are about 2.5 times as likely as white Americans to be killed by the police.
Floyd’s death has sparked renewed cries for justice for other Black Americans killed by police in recent years. In 2019, Elijah McClain, a massage therapist, died after police restrained him in a chokehold while he was walking home from a convenience store in Aurora, Colorado. And in March of this year, Breonna Taylor, an emergency room technician, was killed after police shot her eight times in her home in Louisville, Kentucky.
Outrage over these and other deaths has millions of Americans demanding significant changes to eliminate racial bias and brutality in policing.
Among other things, many people are calling for new law enforcement training methods and better systems to hold officers accountable for wrongdoing. Some people also want to reduce the estimated $100 billion in government funding that police departments receive each year—and give those savings to different programs that can help protect communities. Still others propose dismantling and rebuilding entire police departments from the ground up.
Such reforms are critical to creating new and better ways of policing, explains Tracie Keesee, a retired police captain. She is the co-founder of the Center for Policing Equity, an organization that works with police across the U.S. to help them improve their relationships with local communities.
“We are in a moment of change,” Keesee says. “Real change is going to be everyone’s responsibility going forward.”