Columbus police host training on how to foster dialogue during protests
This week Columbus police (CPD) hosted a training about its new and improved strategies to respond to protests, developed through the division's dialogue team. Police say there were officers from 15 departments nationwide and even some from Canada.
Columbus residents may have seen CPD officers at a protest or community event wearing a light blue vest, which designates them as dialogue officers. Columbus Police Sgt. Kolin Straub said he is excited to hear officers' positive feedback from the training and eager to see how they implement the knowledge in their city.
One dead, one arrested after Pickerington shooting
'We're humbled that people want to come to Columbus, Ohio, and learn what we've been doing,' Straub said.
Straub said the division formed the state's first dialogue team in response to protests in the summer of 2020 centering around police brutality and reform.
'Dialogue has been our city's 'how we have moved forward from 2020, how we're trying to move forward from 2020.' We looked critically at what we did. We got a lot of feedback about what we did,' Straub said.
Straub said the team is not doing enforcement action. Instead, these officers are having genuine conversations with people at these protests.
'We hope that these officers that are working with different crowds, different protests, we stress honest dialogue requires honest intent. And they need to come into those conversations with protesters genuinely trying to facilitate their First Amendment Rights,' Straub said.
CPD said officers started by teaching the science behind why genuine communication is important, then moved to scenario-based training.
Father behind Lauren's Law in Ohio sues disability care facility after eviciton
'We just built out this program and it's done very well in the sciences, and guided us very well. And we're happy to share that knowledge,' Straub said.
Commander Lawrence Davis oversees community engagement and homeless operations for the Austin Police Department in Texas. He said he was impressed by the training.
'I think that the Columbus Division of Police has been so bold, so daring to say that not only are we going to find value in the voices of all of our community members, we're going to take it a step further,' Davis said. 'We're going to go out there, find them great and small, and we're going to give them a voice, a seat at the table. In fact, we're going to find them where they are and meet them at their level. So, that was kind of impressive to me.'
Davis said he can think of many situations in his career where this training could have bettered the situation. He said he is looking forward to exploring what he has learned and bringing this back to his department.
'I just think that having the courage to touch this thing gives us access to the very thing that communities across the country have already been asking for. And it gives the police departments a pathway to three things: public trust, public confidence and police legitimacy,' Davis said.
Straub said this team has given the division a better picture of what is actually happening during a protest. He said they better understand the dynamics and are building relationships with the crowd rather than just sitting back and watching.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBS News
2 days ago
- CBS News
5 hurt in Chicago weekends shootings, police say
At least five people were hurt in weekend shootings across Chicago as of Saturday. The ages of the victims range from 18 to 60. In the first shooting of the weekend, a 30-year-old man self-transported to St. Bernard Hospital in fair condition after being shot in the inner thigh just before 10:30 p.m. in the 300 block of West 64th Street. Officers met with the victim at the hospital, who was uncooperative with providing information about the incident. Just before midnight, CPD officers responded to a call of a person shot in the 4300 block of West Adams Street, where they found a 19-year-old woman unresponsive. The victim suffered a gunshot wound to the right cheek and to the right side of the neck and was taken to Mt Sinai Hospital in critical condition. Investigation indicated that she was shot inside a residence. Police said they've recovered a weapon, and a person of interest is in custody. In other shootings from 5 p.m. Friday to 5 a.m. Monday: Unless otherwise noted, no arrests were made in either incident. CBS News Chicago will continue to update throughout the weekend.


CBS News
3 days ago
- CBS News
Suspect in Davis Picnic Day shooting now faces federal charge
A suspect arrested in connection with a shooting on Picnic Day in Davis that left three people wounded is now facing federal charges, prosecutors announced on Friday. Federal prosecutors said a criminal complaint was unsealed on Friday, charging 19-year-old Joseph Davis with being a felon in possession of a firearm. Officials said during a search of Davis' apartment, law enforcement seized a short-barrel AR-15 style pistol. Prosecutors said he was prohibited from possessing any firearms and ammunition due to a previous conviction for a gun possession offense. The Davis Police Department announced Davis was arrested in May on charges of assault with a deadly weapon and several firearms-related charges, such as possession of an illegal assault rifle, in connection with the shooting at Community Park on April 12. He has since pleaded not guilty. The shooting left two teenagers and a 24-year-old woman with non-life-threatening injuries. The Davis Police Department has said it suspects there was more than one shooter and the suspects are believed to be outside of the Davis area. However, no other arrests have been announced. Federal prosecutors said Davis could face up to 15 years in prison if he's convicted on the charge. Davis's next scheduled appearance in Yolo County court is on Tuesday.


Chicago Tribune
6 days ago
- Chicago Tribune
CPD's second-in-command gets dramatically different responsibilities in shakeup
The second-in-command of the Chicago Police Department appears to have been stripped of virtually all of her duties related to the department's daily operations, according to a new organizational chart sent Wednesday to CPD personnel. Yolanda Talley has overseen much of the department's day-to-day operations since March 2025, when Supt. Larry Snelling promoted her to the role of first deputy more than a year into his tenure at the helm of CPD. Under the new order, released to department members in an administrative message, the first deputy's office will supervise the department's records division, which is staffed by civilians, its alternate response section, which handles 311 calls, its Office of Community Policing and the department's detached services division, which leases with other public bodies like the Office of Emergency Management and Communication. According to the most recent organizational chart on CPD's directory of general orders, the first deputy's office previously supervised the department's patrol units, detective division, bureau of counterterrorism, street deputies and prosecutorial strategies. That organization had been in effect since May 2023. Under the new general order, the bureaus of patrol, detectives and counterterrorism will report directly to Snelling. Street deputies will report to Chief of Patrol Jon Hein and prosecutorial strategies will report to the Chief of Staff for the superintendent, under Snelling's command. The new order will be read at roll calls for the next week, the message to department members said. A department representative didn't immediately respond to a request for comment. Talley, a 30-year veteran of the department, was previously the head of the bureau of internal affairs. She is the first Black woman to serve as first deputy superintendent, reporting directly to Snelling. Prior to internal affairs, Talley was commander of the Austin District (15th) on the West Side. In February 2022, Talley's personal vehicle was involved in a narcotics arrest in the Harrison District (11th). The first deputy's niece was driving the car, and a man in the passenger seat was seen by police throwing a package of heroin out the window before officers placed him under arrest. In body-worn camera footage previously obtained by the Tribune, Talley's niece told responding officers, 'Don't even worry about it cause my auntie's probably your boss.' Talley's niece was not arrested, but the man later faced narcotics charges and ultimately was sentenced to the Illinois Department of Corrections. Former CPD Superintendent David Brown later said there was 'no evidence of any misconduct by Chief Talley.' The departmental reorganization comes five years after former CPD interim superintendent Charlie Beck drastically restructured CPD operations, though many of those plans were reconsidered as the COVID-19 pandemic took hold. The changes are in keeping with Snelling's history as a hands-on chief September 2024, about a year into his tenure as superintendent, Snelling still had not yet named a first deputy superintendent — a role that typically oversees the day-to-day operations of the nation's second-largest police department. Snelling said at the time that he had assumed most of the first deputy's responsibilities with assistance from the department's chiefs. He conceded that some saw the approach as 'problematic,' and Snelling said he 'would like a break every now and again,' but the arrangement, to that point, had worked. 'I learn by diving into the deep end of the pool,' Snelling said last year. 'I want to know every aspect of every job at the command staff position because it really helps me to develop and it helps me to have a better understanding of what to expect for the next person that I'm going to put in that position.'