Legal Technology Jumps Into Police Reform

Kira Systems joins with Campaign Zero to provide critical insights into police union contracts.

(Image via Getty)

The tragedy of the killings of Breonna Taylor and George Floyd is that they weren’t particularly unique. Innocent, unarmed Black Americans are regularly killed by police across the United States and the justice system rarely ends up doing anything about it. As Judge Carlton Reeves poignantly noted, the doctrine of qualified immunity is responsible for a lot of the system’s lack of accountability, but it gets a tremendous boost from police unions whose contracts regularly set up roadblocks to gathering information about police abuse that renders future efforts to pierce immunity next to impossible.

Police reform organization Campaign Zero is working to spread awareness of common collective bargaining provisions that undermine public safety and accountability.

But what can legal tech do about a problem like this? It turns out it can do a lot.

Kira Systems, the machine learning-based contract analysis tool, provides exactly the sort of product that can sift through hundreds of lengthy police union agreements to identify key language and that’s why the company announced that it has partnered with Campaign Zero on the “Nix the 6” initiative focusing on six particularly troubling provisions that routinely appear in union deals. Earlier Campaign Zero efforts gleaned valuable insights from a number of contracts covering America’s largest cities, but as part of this new project, Campaign Zero has collected over 600 police union contracts and Law Enforcement Officers’ Bill of Rights across 20 states, which Kira will be hosting in a smart database to provide reporters with access to them in order to inform their reporting. API integrations will be built into the website for the purpose of sharing information with other interested parties. It’s the sort of supercharged contract analysis that Kira was built for.

Kira Systems founder and CEO Noah Waisberg explained, “We believe people make better decisions when they understand what’s in their contracts. That applies in the policy realm as well as the business world. This is an area where we, as a society, really need to make better decisions.”

While organized labor has taken a vicious beating at the hands of the Supreme Court, police unions emerged relatively unscathed from the turmoil. And even though it’s nice that the right of law enforcement workers to negotiate fair wages remains largely intact, fair pay ends up a small part of police union deals bogged down by procedural perks that tend to backdoor substantive criminal justice policy into the system under the guise of collective bargaining. One might not think of erasing misconduct records as a matter for negotiation but it’s a ubiquitous provision across the country.

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Campaign Zero co-founder DeRay McKesson explains:

There is a hidden system of protections that almost guarantee that policing will not change and that officers will not be held accountable for their behavior. Nix the 6’ is about breaking down the legal structures that enable police violence. Thanks to Kira’s machine-learning software, we can systematically evaluate and dismantle these contracts that stifle reform, thus making it easier to pursue fundamental change.

The six planks identified by Nix the 6 are:

  • Short expiration dates on complaints
  • Limited oversight and discipline of officers
  • Erased misconduct records
  • Police misconduct cases and consequences paid for with public funds
  • Preferential access to evidence for implicated officers
  • Unfair interrogation procedures

Kira can run through the documents and extract the varied language that fits these concepts. For example drawing out and color-coding all language related to delaying interrogations for easy review.

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That can then get fed into an interface like this one that displays when the contract is up, who to contact about it, and which of the six provisions are featured. All of which are easily clickable to provide the exact language identified for these provisions.

Sometimes our corner of the tech sector can feel a little niche, oriented toward parochial needs like billing and relationship management that only really matter to the professional model we’ve built for ourselves. But the law still forms the fabric of American life and even if our tools are just about helping lawyers do their jobs day to day, legal tech has a role to play in advancing justice. What Kira’s done is take a massive, multijurisdictional, multiparty contract issue and leverage their AI contract tools to untangle it for scrutiny. Just another reminder that legal technology is doing a public service at heart.


HeadshotJoe Patrice is a senior editor at Above the Law and co-host of Thinking Like A Lawyer. Feel free to email any tips, questions, or comments. Follow him on Twitter if you’re interested in law, politics, and a healthy dose of college sports news. Joe also serves as a Managing Director at RPN Executive Search.

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