28 THE QUEENS COURIER • MAY 27, 2021  FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM 
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 Story: Jackson Heights City Council candidate calls for  
 bilingual education in public schools 
 Summary: In a neighborhood celebrated as one of the  
 most diverse in the nation, where nearly 180 foreign  
 languages are spoken, one City Council candidate  
 presented his case for bilingual education in every  
 public school in Jackson Heights and Elmhurst. 
 Reach: 1,547 (as of 05/24/2021) 
 Discretion and valor 
 New Yorkers are returning to the streets  
 for protests and vigils marking the oneyear  
 anniversary of the murder of George  
 Floyd at the hands of police offi  cers  in  
 Minnesota. 
 In the weeks aft er  that  horrifi c  event,  
 New York saw a wave of new legislation  
 passed and signed into law to better  
 “police the police,” from outlawing the use  
 of chokeholds to making police offi  cer disciplinary  
 records open to the public in the  
 name of accountability. 
 With  the  fi rst anniversary of Floyd’s  
 murder  approaching,  state  Attorney  
 General Letitia James introduced on May  
 21 another reform measure: the Police  
 Accountability Act. If passed and signed  
 into law, it would redefi ne the state’s law  
 protecting an offi  cer’s use of force. 
 Th  e bill would reclassify police use of  
 force against an individual “from one of  
 simple necessity to one of absolute last  
 resort,” according to James’ offi  ce. Offi  cers  
 would be required, by law, to implement  
 other means fi rst in subduing an individual, 
  including verbal warnings, de-escalation  
 tactics and lower levels of physical  
 force.  
 Essentially, it clears the way for prosecutors  
 across  the  state  to  potentially  
 prosecute an offi  cer accused of wrongfully  
 assaulting or killing an individual.  
 According to James’ offi  ce, the current law  
 permits the lethal use of force by an offi  - 
 cer based largely on the offi  cer’s reasonable  
 belief that someone committed a crime —  
 and that oft en acts as a barrier preventing  
 prosecutors and grand juries from indicting  
 an offi  cer for wrongdoing. 
 But what exactly will this bill change?  
 NYPD offi  cers are already trained to  
 use other tactics to de-escalate situations.  
 We’ve written plenty of stories of police  
 shootings in which offi  cers,  while  guns  
 drawn, directed an individual to drop their  
 weapon — only to fi re when the suspect  
 refused to do so or even pulled the trigger. 
 Even more so, prosecutors and grand  
 juries  exercise  discretion  when  considering  
 a case and the law; they’re not  
 required to indict anyone unless there’s  
 proof  beyond  reasonable  doubt  that  a  
 crime occurred. 
 We can’t accept a climate in which an  
 offi  cer is permitted to get away with acting  
 as judge, jury and executioner — but  
 we also can’t accept a climate in which an  
 offi  cer winds up being restricted or unfairly  
 punished for using force when absolutely  
 necessary.  
 It’s diffi  cult to legislate discretion —  
 which is why lawmakers must be careful  
 to allow prosecutors to seek justice against  
 offi  cers who break the law while simultaneously  
 protecting good cops as they  
 enforce it. 
 REUTERS fi le photo by Lucas Jackson 
 New York State Attorney General Letitia James introduced the Police Accountability Act. If passed  
 and signed into law, it would redefi ne the state’s law protecting an offi  cer’s use of force. 
 
				
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