- (a) This section shall be known as the Maryland Use of Force Statute.
(b)
- (1) In this section the following words have the meanings indicated.
- (2) “Law enforcement agency” has the meaning stated in § 3-201 of this title.
(3) “Police officer” means:
- (i) a police officer as defined in § 3-201 of this title; or
- (ii) a special police officer as defined in § 3-301 of this title.
- (4) “Serious physical injury” has the meaning stated in § 3-201 of the Criminal Law Article.
- (c) Each police officer shall sign an affirmative written sanctity of life pledge to respect every human life and act with compassion toward others.
(d)
(1) A police officer may not use force against a person unless, under the totality of the circumstances, the force is necessary and proportional to:
- (i) prevent an imminent threat of physical injury to a person; or
- (ii) effectuate a legitimate law enforcement objective.
(2) A police officer shall cease the use of force as soon as:
(i) the person on whom the force is used:
- 1. is under the police officer's control; or
- 2. no longer poses an imminent threat of physical injury or death to the police officer or to another person; or
- (ii) the police officer determines that force will no longer accomplish a legitimate law enforcement objective.
(e) A police officer shall:
- (1) when time, circumstances, and safety allow, take steps to gain compliance and de-escalate conflict without using physical force;
- (2) intervene to prevent or terminate the use of force by another police officer beyond what is authorized under subsection (d) of this section;
- (3) render basic first aid to a person injured as a result of police action and promptly request appropriate medical assistance; and
- (4) fully document all use of force incidents that the officer observed or was involved in.
(f) A police supervisor shall:
- (1) respond to the scene of any incident during which a police officer used physical force and caused serious physical injury; and
- (2) gather and review all known video recordings of a use of force incident.
(g) A law enforcement agency shall:
- (1) have a written de-escalation of force policy; and
- (2) adopt a written policy requiring supervisory and command-level review of all use of force incidents.
(h) A police officer shall:
- (1) undergo training on when a police officer may or may not draw a firearm or point a firearm at a person and enforcement options that are less likely to cause death or serious physical injury, including scenario-based training, de-escalation tactics and techniques, and reasonable alternatives to decrease physical injury; and
- (2) sign a training completion document stating that the officer understands and shall comply with the Maryland Use of Force Statute.
(i)
- (1) A police officer may not intentionally violate subsection (d) of this section, resulting in serious physical injury or death to a person.
- (2) A police officer who violates paragraph (1) of this subsection is guilty of a misdemeanor and on conviction is subject to imprisonment not exceeding 10 years.
- (3) A sentence imposed under this subsection may be separate from and consecutive to or concurrent with a sentence for any crime based on the act establishing a violation of this subsection.
Added by Acts 2021, c. 60, § 1, eff. July 1, 2022.