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Janey signs ban on police chemical, projectile weapons

Janey signs ban on police chemical, projectile weapons By Milton J. Valencia Globe Staff,Updated May 13, 2021, 6:19 p.m. Email to a Friend Acting Mayor Kim Janey.Nicolaus Czarnecki/Pool Acting Mayor Kim Janey on Thursday signed an ordinance restricting police use of chemical agents and projectiles as crowd control measures, officially enacting a law that she supported last year as a city councilor but that has encountered strong resistance from police. The council had passed the ordinance last year, with Janey serving as its president, but former mayor Martin J. Walsh vetoed it amid opposition from former police commissioner William Gross, who called it “highly inflexible.” With Walsh now the nation’s labor secretary, and Janey serving as acting mayor in his stead, the measure narrowly passed again on a 7-5 vote in April.

Lawsuit Seeks to Know Whether Trump ICE Director Threatened to Prosecute Sanctuary City Judges who Let Wanted Immigrants Escape

Lawsuit Seeks to Know Whether Trump ICE Director Threatened to Prosecute Sanctuary City Judges who Let Wanted Immigrants Escape Jerry Lambe © Provided by Law & Crime Image of Tom Homan. An open records lawsuit filed Monday seeks to determine whether the director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) under former President Donald Trump leveraged federal criminal charges against a state judge in Massachusetts in an effort to compel them to assist ICE in federal immigration enforcement cases at state courthouses. The suit stems from the 2019 federal indictments of Judge Shelley Richmond Joseph and Court Officer Wesley MacGregor for allowing a defendant wanted by ICE to surreptitiously exit a courthouse located in a sanctuary city.  The wanted suspect departed through a rear exit while immigration officials waited to arrest him at the front exit. Joseph and MacGregor were later charged federally with conspiracy to obstruct justice, obstruction

Massachusetts Homes in on Facial Recognition Accountability

Massachusetts Homes in on Facial Recognition Accountability According to a recently proposed Massachusetts bill, companies could soon face penalties for misusing facial recognition technology, causing them to pay hefty fines or go to court. May 07, 2021 •  bill that would penalize companies that misuse such tech via hefty fines and sanctions enforced by the state attorney general’s office. The bill, according to Rep. Dylan Fernandes, would prevent companies from sharing customers’ data without their consent as a way to protect individuals from financial, physical or reputational harm. Examples of actions that the legislation would punish include selling customer data to third parties, scanning data to discriminate against customers or using data in a way that would legally impact a customer’s financial status, housing or employment situation.

Massachusetts Pioneers Rules For Police Use Of Facial Recognition Tech

Surveillance cameras, like the one here in Boston, are used throughout Massachusetts. The state now regulates how police use facial recognition technology. Massachusetts lawmakers passed one of the first state-wide restrictions of facial recognition as part of a sweeping police reform law. The new law sets limits on how police use the technology in criminal investigations. It s one of the first attempts to find middle ground when regulating this technology, but not all privacy advocates agree that regulation is the right step. Democratic state Sen. Sonia Chang-Díaz was one of the leaders behind this push for criminal justice reform.

Massachusetts Passes One Of The First State-Wide Laws On Facial Recognition : NPR

Steven Senne/AP toggle caption Steven Senne/AP Surveillance cameras, like the one here in Boston, are used throughout Massachusetts. The state now regulates how police use facial recognition technology. Steven Senne/AP Massachusetts lawmakers passed one of the first state-wide restrictions of facial recognition as part of a sweeping police reform law. The new law sets limits on how police use the technology in criminal investigations. It s one of the first attempts to find middle ground when regulating this technology, but not all privacy advocates agree that regulation is the right step. Democratic state Sen. Sonia Chang-Díaz was one of the leaders behind this push for criminal justice reform.

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