Vanita Gupta
Vanita Gupta, the former head of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division, criticized the work of the current attorney general during an interview this week.

WASHINGTON (Diya TV) — Vanita Gupta, the former head of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division under President Barack Obama, criticized Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ memorandum this week ordering a sweeping review of police reform activities of the Obama era.

Gupta expressed her disappointment during an interview with BuzzFeed News, and said that she was “not entirely surprised” by the decision.

Monday, attorney general Jeff Sessions called for an internal review of all investigations and consent decrees with troubled police departments initiated under Obama administration. He cited the federal government’s responsibility to manage the nation’s police departments as the reason. Gupta said that “the individual misdeeds of bad actors should not impugn” the work police officers perform “in keeping American communities safe.” The memo also mentions Sessions’ past comments including softening of the DOJ’s approach towards reform.

Gupta said that Sessions’ comments on the issue “pit civil rights against crime fighting” and expressed her concern about Baltimore and Chicago – where the negotiations between police and the Department of Justice are ongoing.

“It is the responsibility of the federal government to enforce civil rights laws,” Gupta said, adding that the reviews by the civil rights division are “not about looking at bad actors, it’s about identifying systematic problems.” According to the report, Baltimore Police Commissioner on Tuesday called the DOJ’s move as unnecessary and “without a whole lot of justification.”

“The AG talks about local control, and wanting to defer to local control, you have to wonder why there wasn’t an engagement with the commissioner in Baltimore,” Gupta said.

“In Chicago, where we spoke to hundreds of police, thousands of residents, and looked through hundreds of thousands of documents, if that does not yield a change, I think it will be incredibly disruptive,” she added.