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Biden Set to Issue Policing Order on Anniversary of Floyd Killing

TOKYO — President Biden on Wednesday is expected to issue an executive order aimed at overhauling policing on the second anniversary of the murder of George Floyd, who died after being handcuffed and pinned to the ground by a Minneapolis police officer, people familiar with the matter said.

Mr. Biden will direct federal law enforcement agencies to revise their use-of-force policies and to restrict tactics like chokeholds and no-knock warrants, while using grant incentives to encourage state and local agencies to adopt the same standards.

His order will also create a national registry of officers fired for misconduct and restrict the transfer of most military equipment to police, the people familiar with the order said. They asked for anonymity to discuss details of the order before it is announced.

The order is expected to be more limited than an earlier, draft version, which infuriated the nation’s largest policing groups when it leaked in January. Since then, the White House has worked more closely with police and Justice Department officials and elevated a more centrist position on criminal justice.

The executive order is just the latest example of the balancing act the president is trying to navigate on policing. While the death of Mr. Floyd and the national protest movement it inspired helped drastically shift public opinion on matters of race and policing in summer 2020, Republicans have also attacked Democrats as the enemies of law enforcement.

Efforts to strike a bipartisan compromise on a policing overhaul, most notably whether to change criminal and civil penalties to make it easier to punish police officers for misconduct, have failed in the Senate. Mr. Biden cannot enact some of the measures in the legislation on his own.

“We know full well that an executive order cannot address America’s policing crisis the same way Congress has the ability to, but we’ve got to do everything we can,” said Derrick Johnson, the president of the N.A.A.C.P. “There’s no better way to honor George Floyd’s legacy than for President Biden to take action by signing a police reform executive order.”

The order is unlikely to please either side entirely — many progressive activists still want stronger limits and accountability measures for the police even as a rise in violent crime in some cities has become a Republican attack line heading into the midterm elections.

But officials believe the order, whose final text has been closely held, will get some support from both activists and police.

Mr. Biden plans to sign the new executive order alongside relatives of Mr. Floyd and police officials when he returns from a diplomatic trip to South Korea and Japan this week.

Police groups had been particularly upset by several items in the earlier 18-page draft order, and they said the White House had given them only a perfunctory chance at input. They threatened to pull their support, leading to a major reset in the process by the White House’s domestic policy council, led by Susan Rice.

“The White House did significant outreach with us and tried to listen to our concerns,” said Chuck Wexler, executive director of the Police Executive Research Forum, a bipartisan think tank that focuses on police practices. “This final executive order is substantively different from the original version, and that’s made a big difference to many of us in law enforcement.”

Mr. Biden has repeatedly emphasized a message of investing in, rather than defunding, the police — wading into a national debate about whether the government should give police departments more resources or spend the money on mental health care and other social services instead.

One of the changes reflected in the executive order, according to the people familiar with the final version, centered on what it would say about standards for using force.

The draft order had allowed law enforcement to use deadly force “as a last resort when there is no reasonable alternative, in other words only when necessary to prevent imminent and serious bodily injury or death,” the people familiar with the document said.

That wording, however, was removed after law enforcement officials complained that the standard would allow second-guessing in hindsight of decisions by officers in exigent circumstances.

Instead, the final order refers to a Justice Department policy issued this week that says officers may use their weapons “when necessary, that is, when the officer has a reasonable belief that the subject of such force poses an imminent danger of death or serious physical injury to the officer or to another person.”

Jim Pasco, the executive director of the Fraternal Order of Police, said he thought new use-of-force language would “bring more clarity and better guidance to officers” but without causing them to become so risk-averse that they fail to protect themselves and others when necessary.

“It’s not a question of stricter or less strict,” Mr. Pasco said. “It’s a question of better framed. And a better-constructed definition of the use of force.”

He added: “It’s not a sea change.”

Udi Ofer, the deputy national political director of the American Civil Liberties Union, offered cautious support for the Justice Department policy, saying much would depend on how it was carried out.

“Correct implementation of this standard will be pivotal for its success,” he said. “We have seen jurisdictions with strong standards where officers still resort to the use of deadly force, so just having these words on paper will not be enough. The entire culture and mentality needs to change to bring these words to life, and to save lives.”

The administration will also include guidance on screening inherent bias among the rank and file, including those potentially harboring white supremacist views, according to people familiar with the matter.

Some provisions in the order would build off previous efforts by the Justice Department, including mandating that federal law enforcement agents wear body cameras. The order would also direct the government to expand data collection, including use-of-force incidents across the country, and would attempt to standardize and improve credentialing of police agencies.

Katie Benner contributed reporting from Washington.