After the state House of Representatives refused to move on police pursuit reform by the Wednesday cutoff to get a bill out of its chamber of origin, effectively dooming its chances, the Senate acted …
Unlock unlimited access for just $1 for your first month
Please log in to continue |
After the state House of Representatives refused to move on police pursuit reform by the Wednesday cutoff to get a bill out of its chamber of origin, effectively dooming its chances, the Senate acted on legislation that had been bottled up in committee and thus believed dead.
The state Senate surprised many observers by opting to relieve the Law and Justice Committee of further consideration of Senate Bill 5352 Wednesday and passing it by a narrow vote of 26-23.
Several amendments offered by Republicans were defeated. One amendment offered by Sen. Manka Dhingra, D-Redmond, the chair of the committee who had kept the bill bottled up, was adopted.
The amendment’s stated effects say that the bill now:
Sen. Mark Mullet, D-Issaquah, praised the Senate’s action. While admitting “This bill isn’t perfect,” he called it “an important part of our public safety mission this year, along with reforming our drug possession laws, passing legislation on gun violence prevention, and a whole host of other good bills.”
Mullet said in a statement that he wants to “see it move through the rest of the process and get to the governor’s desk to be signed into law.”
Senate Republican Leader John Braun of Centralia ultimately voted against it, after pushing for police pursuit reform.
Braun had told The Center Square that he and fellow Republicans would push to amend the legislation to allow Washington police officers to chase car thieves, and they attempted to do just that.
One amendment whose stated effect would allow “an officer to engage in a vehicle pursuit if the officer has reasonable suspicion a person inside the vehicle has committed or is committing theft of a motor vehicle” was rejected.