The Washington State Liquor and Cannabis Board Thursday canceled an upcoming use-of-force training for its enforcement officers, after learning a former Minnesota police officer who shot and killed Daunte Wright in 2021 was contracted to lead it.
The agency had contracted with Kim Potter to have her “tell her story” and train its officers on the ramifications of using force, along with ways to avoid it, said spokesperson Brian Smith. The officers are responsible for enforcing liquor, cannabis and tobacco laws at businesses licensed to sell those products.
Potter — who shot Wright, an unarmed Black man, after mistaking her gun for her Taser — served 16 months in prison for second-degree manslaughter before she was released in 2023.
Why would physical or deadly force be used in these enforcements? Why is this the police’s job at all and not the licensing board?
It’s the same way with Fish & Wildlife in Washington. A subset of the Washington State Liquor and Cannabis Board is its enforcement division, which are cops, with many of the usual cop powers, but they enforce specifically laws relating to regulating sales. Believe it or not, just like game wardens dealing with people fishing too much or trafficking animals or killing wolves; liquor stores, tobacco shops, and cannabis stores can get in shady deals, and while it’s totally overkill, I agree, they approach it the way any cop would. They’re just operating under the State Liquor and Cannabis Board just like the game wardens are at Fish & Wildlife. In Olympia, Fish & Wildlife is even located in the same building as a bunch of other environmental governance with no police powers like the Department of Natural Resources. But the bottom half of the DNR building is swarming with Fish & Wildlife Officers.
So, if I haven’t overexplained this, the licensing board are the police. It feels overkill for them to be armed officers, but I guess they justify it or whatever. Maybe there’s more shady liquor, tobacco, and cannabis businesses than I expect and when they’re busted they’re more violent than I expect but I doubt it.
https://lcb.wa.gov/enforcement/enforcement-and-education
I think it’s standard throughout the US that game wardens are also police officers.