Baltimore Police Commissioner Michael Harrison, right, speaks during a news conference announcing his departure on June 8, 2023. At left is Richard Worley, deputy commissioner, who will be nominated as interim commissioner. Photo by Kaitlin Newman/The Baltinore Banner.
Baltimore Police Commissioner Michael Harrison, right, speaks during a news conference announcing his departure on June 8, 2023. At left is Richard Worley, deputy commissioner, who will be nominated as interim commissioner. Photo by Kaitlin Newman/The Baltinore Banner.

Mayor Brandon Scott appointed Richard Worley as interim Police Commissioner on Thursday when former Commissioner Michael Harrison announced he would be leaving the position early. Scott intends to make Worley Police Commissioner outright, pending approval from the City Council.

The commissioner is responsible for leading the reforms mandated by the federal consent decree and the leadership transition could be critical for keeping Baltimore on track to meet those goals, said experts.

Worley, a native Baltimorean, is a 25-year veteran of the police force and became a deputy commissioner in September 2022.

Baltimore City entered into the decree with the Department of Justice in 2017 after the DOJ found evidence that the department engaged in unconstitutional policing practices. Since that time, U.S. District Judge James K. Bredar, who oversees the decree, has determined Baltimore to be โ€œon trackโ€ towards meeting the necessary reforms. Bredar has particularly praised the leadership of Commissioner Michael Harrison.

Geoffrey Alpert, a criminologist who specializes in consent decrees at the University of South Carolina called Baltimoreโ€™s decision to promote internally โ€œan excellent choice.โ€

Alpert also monitors the consent decree in New Orleans, where Commissioner Harrison served before coming to Baltimore. He thinks that doing another nationwide search could be detrimental to the progress the department is making.

โ€œYou’re going to end up having a lot more time spent with the new boss learning what’s going on,โ€ he said. โ€œAs opposed to someoneโ€ฆ internal who’s very familiar with the ongoing relationships and the ongoing reforms.โ€

Like interim Commissioner Worley, Ray Kelly is also a Baltimore native. Kelly is a longtime police reform organizer and chair of the Community Oversight Task Force (COTF) – a civilian board mandated by the decree that recommends police accountability measures.

And though he hasnโ€™t heard of any problems with Worley, Kelly notes that Worley was with the department during the events that led the city to have a consent decree in the first place.

โ€œThe whole spirit of the consent decree was changing the culture, the BPD,โ€ said Kelly, who wants to know more about Worleyโ€™s earlier career.

Read more (and listen) at WYPR.