Mayor Freddie O’Connell ‘Committed’ to Implementing City Review Board

Nashville’s new mayor said he is committed to implementing the new City Review Board despite controversy surrounding the body.

“Civilian oversight is important, and I am committed to getting our Civilian Review Board up and running as quickly as possible, Mayor Freddie O’Connell said Tuesday. “I have also confirmed that our human resources department will work with current employees who are in the unfortunate state-mandated position of having uncertainty surrounding how they are employed.”

In 2018, Nashvillians voted in favor of an amendment to the city’s charter that allowed the city to establish a Community Oversight Board.

Subsequently, the city established the board, which allowed appointed citizens to investigate allegations of police misconduct.

According to the city’s website:

The Board shall have the power to investigate allegations that Metro Nashville Police Department officers have committed misconduct against members of the public, as well as issue policy advisory and resolution reports assessing allegations of misconduct by the Metro Nashville Police Department, recommendations to agencies involved in public safety and the administration of justice, and have the option of establishing a monitoring program that provides an ongoing review or audit of the complaint process administered by the Police Department Office of Professional Accountability or equivalent internal affairs program in the Police Department.

However, earlier this year, the General Assembly passed a law banning such boards, which was later signed into law by Gov. Bill Lee (R).

That law mandated that Community Oversight Boards be abolished entirely, or required to follow a specific set of new standards.

Yes, Every Kid

“Under the law, each board must consist of seven members – all of which are to be appointed by the city’s mayor,” The Tennessee Star reported in May. “In addition, instead of investigating allegations of police misconduct and passing recommendations onto the police department, the new law directs the committee to forward complaints to police internal affairs. Then, police will investigate the claims brought forth by the board before forwarding their findings once the investigation is closed.”

The city’s legal director did not fight the state on the matter.

“When the legislature passed the new law requiring all police oversight boards to comply with new restrictions and requirements, we advised the COB leadership that Metro would not file a lawsuit challenging the law because we did not have legal claim [sic] we could file in good faith,” Legal Director Wally Dietz said Tuesday.

“Unlike other legislation that targeted solely Metro Nashville (Council size, Airport Authority, Fairgrounds renovations) the [Community Oversight Board] legislation affected police oversight boards in four cities: Nashville, Memphis, Chattanooga, and Knoxville. Also, the law applies prospectively to all local governments. That means the legislation did not violate the Home Rule Amendment of the Tennessee Constitution. We do not file lawsuits as a form of protest. We file only when we have solid grounds to do so.”

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Pete D’Abrosca is a reporter at The Tennessee Star and The Star News Network. Follow Pete on X / Twitter.
Photo “Freddie O’Connell” by Freddie O’Connell for Mayor. Background Photo “Metro Nashville Police Car” by Josh Beasley. CC BY 2.0.

 

 

 

 

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4 Thoughts to “Mayor Freddie O’Connell ‘Committed’ to Implementing City Review Board”

  1. mikey whipwreck

    freddie no doubt is part of the defund crowd even if he wouldn’t admit it in public. gonna be crime time in Nashville for four years!

  2. Joe Blow

    I was elated as I started reading the article headline

    Mayor Freddie O’Connell ‘Committed’

    Then I realized that he was not in a mental institution.

  3. VOTING IS TERM LIMITS

    Who the hell would want to work as a Police Officer in Nashville with such an anti-police environment? Certainly not professionals who want to protect citizens & property.
    Are the COB Menbers paid or volunteers?
    How are they trained & certified? Will they be attending Police training? Will they be required to do ride alongs at every shift every month? Will they be trained on the laws? What are their goals & objectives? Policies & Procedures? Qualifications? Can they be held liable? Don’t think any volunteer would go through that hell with no pay? Is their an agenda?
    Well Nashville, you got what you voted for.
    Is this Mayor going to request the Council to make Nashville a Sanctuary City next?
    Don’t look to the suburbs for relief. The suburbs are already trashed.
    BTW your elected Council has no power to stop the Executive Branch bc the Voters voted to put Mandatory Term Limits on the Council (our Legislative Branch aka the Peoples Voice).
    This action shifted all the Power to the Executive Branch (aka Mayor). You get what you vote for. When you have had enough Progressive B S. You will put it to a vote on the Ballot to
    UNDO MANDATORY TERM LIMITS.
    VOTING IS TERM LIMITS
    If you don’t, our once great place to raise a family, will be more like Chicago, with flash mobs destroying & stealing from businesses we depend on for survival.
    We will ne putting illegal aliens in our schools, hotels, & hospitals, and your taxes will increase to.pay for it.
    TAKE YOUR BLINDERS OFF!

  4. Joan

    Freddie is now the chief engineer of a huge train that he’ll wreck over the next four years. Under his mismanagement, Nashville will descend to the dismal depths of all the other formerly great cities led by “woke” progressives. Then we can say that Nashville has truly become a Big City!

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