The Police Transparency and Accountability Task Force, created by Connecticut’s 2020 police reform legislation, was tasked with a number of issues to wrestle with and submit in its final report due by the end of this year. One issue concerned the certification an officer, either state or municipal, must hold to be and remain an officer with arrest powers.

The certification is issued by a state entity, the Police Standards and Training Council. POST-C, as it’s called, can now revoke an officer’s certification in its discretion, on concluding that an officer’s behavior “undermines public confidence in law enforcement.”

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