A duty to intervene, rules governing use of force, reporting force, predictive data, transparent police records, banning chokeholds, reforming no-knock warrants / police raids, and a stronger U.S. DOJ investigative force could improve policing
Police unions, LEOBR laws, and qualified immunity could prevent reform and disciplinary actions within police departments
Complaints against police officers could result in reform, disciplinary actions, a national misconduct registry, and effective training
Citizens could give feedback about public safety organizations online
Police agencies could have more training and investigation on sexual misconduct
Towns and cities could have civilian / independent police oversight committees
Police departments could be performance audited
Sexual assault victim advocates could work alongside police
Government agencies, schools, hospitals, police, universities, foundations, prisons, workplaces, elections, judiciary systems, and nonprofits could collect, publicize, and use citizen feedback
Independent prosecutors could handle cases of police misconduct