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La. House votes to bolster police training after Alton Sterling death

The bill calls for officers to receive at least 400 hours of basic training and learn more about de-escalation practices, recognizing biases and handling in-custody deaths

Associated Press

BATON ROUGE, La. — Louisiana lawmakers are moving forward with a proposal to increase police officers’ training requirements nearly a year after police fatally shot a black man outside a Baton Rouge convenience store.

The House voted 82-5 Thursday in favor of Rep. Ted James’ bill, which calls for officers to receive at least 400 hours of basic training and learn more about de-escalation practices, recognizing biases and handling in-custody deaths.

James says many departments already exceed 400 training hours, but he wants a statewide minimum.

The measure heads to the Senate for consideration.

James, a Baton Rouge Democrat, says the proposal was prompted by the July death of Alton Sterling, who was killed during a struggle with two white officers. The officers are on leave pending an investigation.