The BREATHE Act is an omnibus bill that addresses police brutality and racial injustice by advocating for numerous reforms. The legislation is divided into 4 sections, which call for the following: •
Section 1: Divesting federal resources from incarceration and policing and ending criminal legal system harms •
Section 2: Investing in new approaches to community safety utilizing funding incentives •
Section 3: Allocating new money to build healthy, sustainable and equitable communities for all people •
Section 4: Holding political leaders accountable and enhancing self-determination of Black communities The bill, in part, would "divest" federal resources from incarceration and policing, institute changes to pretrial detention, sentencing and prosecution, and also reduce the
Department of Defense budget. It would establish a neighborhood demilitarization program that would collect and destroy military-grade equipment held by law enforcement agencies such as armored vehicles. The bill also would end life sentences, abolish mandatory minimum sentencing laws and create a specific timeline to close federal prisons and immigration detention centers. Some of the proposals in the bill, such as the plan to abolish
ICE, piggyback on similar calls dating back to 2018. For example, the BREATHE Act would repeal the "
three-strikes law", which, when it passed in 1994, was seen as a rule that would deter repeat criminal activity, and prohibit use of the modern
taser, which was developed in the 1990s by a private company and subsequently marketed as a way to prevent police killings as an alternative to firearms. The bill's supporters argue that these practices and policies have been harmful and dangerous. ==References==