Expressing condemnation for police brutality wherever in the world it occurs.
Sponsored By: Representative Omar
Introduced
Summary
End police brutality and impunity worldwide. This resolution would condemn excessive force, extrajudicial killings, arbitrary detention, torture, and the misuse of lethal and less‑lethal crowd‑control weapons, while urging U.S. policy changes to reduce militarized policing and hold officers and governments accountable.
Show full summary
- Communities and vulnerable groups: Recognizes that police brutality disproportionately harms racial, ethnic, and religious minorities, women, migrants, people with disabilities, and LGBTQIA+ people. It cites an estimate of about 19,000 people killed by police worldwide each year.
- Foreign partners and companies: Would prohibit U.S. sales of arms, ammunition, and less‑lethal policing equipment and bar police training and other security assistance to countries with demonstrated patterns of human rights violations or impunity. It also calls on U.S. firms that sell policing gear to adopt strict protocols forbidding such sales.
- U.S. policing, protesters, and funding priorities: Calls for ending the use of militarized equipment and tactics in policing domestically and abroad, stands with peaceful protesters, and urges shifting funding toward peacebuilding, job training, counseling, mental health, and violence‑prevention programs.
Your PRIA Score
Personalized for You
How does this bill affect your finances?
Sign up for a PRIA Policy Scan to see your personalized alignment score for this bill and every other piece of legislation we track. We analyze your financial profile against policy provisions to show you exactly what matters to your wallet.
Bill Overview
Analyzed Economic Effects
3 provisions identified: 2 benefits, 0 costs, 1 mixed.
Calls to end police brutality
If adopted, this resolution would condemn police brutality wherever it occurs. It would call on the U.S. government and law enforcement to take immediate steps to eliminate police brutality and impunity in the United States. It would recognize that vulnerable groups are disproportionately harmed. This is a policy statement and would not itself create new laws or funding.
Ban police arms and training exports
If adopted, this resolution would call on the U.S. government to prohibit export sales of arms, ammunition, and less-lethal policing equipment to countries with patterns of security-force human rights abuses or impunity. It would also call for a ban on other security assistance, including police training, to those countries and urge U.S. sellers to adopt strict sale protocols. It would ask to end militarized policing tactics at home and abroad. The resolution would not itself change export laws or funding rules.
More funding for jobs and peace
If adopted, this resolution would ask the U.S. government to shift money, at home and abroad, toward peacebuilding, job training, counseling, mental health, and violence-prevention programs. It would not set dollar amounts or force Congress to make specific appropriations.
Sponsors & CoSponsors
Sponsor
Omar
MN • D
Cosponsors
There are no cosponsors for this bill.
Roll Call Votes
No roll call votes available for this bill.
View on Congress.govTake It Personal
Get Your Personalized Policy View
Start a Free Government Policy Watch to see how policy affects your household, then upgrade to PRIA Full Coverage for year-round monitoring.
Already have an account? Sign in