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Robert Tufano, a spokesperson for the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department, told The Intercept in an email that “the practice of ‘kettling’ is prohibited under the department’s standard operation procedures.” Tufano added that the practice was “not specifically banned” before June 2, 2020, but the guidelines on civil emergency standard operating procedures were since updated to include the ban. Still, the prohibition on kettling is not written into any of the department’s publicly available policies. When asked for clarification, Tufano shared internal guidelines stating that riot control agents, like tear gas, “will not be used to intentionally corral or contain crowds.”
“When a dispersal order is given, the dispersal order and egress routes will be audibly communicated repeatedly, loudly and clearly to the crowd and over the police radio,” Tufano added, citing the new policy. “Designated egress routes will not be intentionally blocked by RCAs or phys
By Cherranda Smith
Jan 8, 2021
North Carolina became the last state in the nation to provide domestic violence protections to LGBTQ people after making such protections mandatory in a new ruling from the state’s Court of Appeals.
“We know intimate partner violence doesn’t discriminate, and neither should state laws protecting people from that violence,”
Irena Como, a senior staff attorney with the ACLU of North Carolina told WRAL.com.
Como represented the woman who challenged the law that had prohibited people in same-sex relationships from receiving intimate partner violence protections under the law.
The state law, 50B protective orders, limited protection to “persons of opposite sex who live together or have lived together” or “persons of the opposite sex who are in a dating relationship or have been in a dating relationship.” Protections under 50B also extended to people who have a child together or share a household.