AlumKnights How a UCF graduate and former police officer is advocating for public service reform. BY NICOLE DUDENHOEFER ’17 hile some people say that there are bad apples in every profession, Charmin Leon ’04 says that in law enforcement there are often bad bushels — despite the belief that those who carry a gun and a badge should be held to a higher standard. Leon says she never thought she’d become a police officer, but after working in public service as an advocate for male domestic violence survivors, her perception changed — leading her to join the force in 2008. “I worked closely with a lot of wonderful officers, and that is what changed my mind to understand how much of a help policing can be,” says Leon, who majored in interdisciplinary studies and minored in legal studies. “When you think about the firepower that [criminals] … have, we have to have something in place to counter that.” For five years, she served as a patrol officer for the Cleveland Division of Police before moving up to investigate allegations of misconduct for its Office of Professional Standards. Last year, she joined the Center for Policing Equity (CPE), as an implementation specialist for its COMPSTAT for Justice initiative. The Yale-based nonprofit has partnered with more than 45 police departments across the nation to leverage data in addressing racial disparities, and Leon is charged with helping agencies make their findings public while partnering with communities to create a true public safety plan — a first-of-its-kind initiative. “I guess I always have been interested in justice — real justice for folks,” Leon says. “Just in the process of getting onto the police force, I was already aware of a lot of the issues as to why it’s so hard to transform and reform the police. But owning our mistakes and doing the hard work is necessary. Our margin of error should be as close to zero as we can get it.”
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Defund the Police?
When it comes to calls to action, like the phrase “defund the police” — which advocates restructuring how funding for police departments is allocated — Leon says that’s exactly what departments need to implement real change. “When you realize you’re not getting through to administrators in police departments and city government personnel, then you hit them in the pockets and with legislation,” Leon says. “I believe in reallocation — less than 10% of polices’ time is spent on violent crimes, so why are police departments so large? It’s because they’re supplementing social service entities that they shouldn’t be — so social ills end up being criminalized. Why not redistribute some of police departments’ budgets to other community services and departments?”
Next Steps
CPE recently developed guidelines to help police determine how departments can modify their procedures in the best interest of their communities and to decrease negative impacts on Black and minority members. The process includes determining how departments can reduce their presence in communities, what resources might replace their services and where they are most needed, measuring the response to these changes, and how to respond to violence with a lighter law enforcement footprint. “We are susceptible to causing great harm if we do not adequately hold ourselves to account and respond to the communities who say [police actions] are harming them, believe them, work with them to identify those [issues] and address them,” she says.
Owning our mistakes and doing the hard work is necessary. Our margin of error should be as close to zero as we can get it.