City Cast Nashville logo

Alisha Haddock on Community Oversight and Police Accountability

Posted on June 25, 2024   |   Updated on September 30, 2025
Margaret Kingsbury

Margaret Kingsbury

A headshot of Alisha Haddock, a Black woman with short wavy black hair, black glasses, hoop earrings, and a black blouse with white trim.

Nashville is a safer place thanks to Alisha Haddock and the other members of the Community Review Board. (Courtesy of Alisha Haddock)

The MNPD has been in the news a lot lately. Recently, retired Lt. Garet Davidson released a 61-page complaint outlining alleged MNPD abuses, including how high-ranking officers intentionally sought to dismantle the Community Oversight Board (COB), now known as the Community Review Board after state Republicans abolished the COB in 2023.

The City Cast Nashville podcast had the opportunity to interview Community Review Board chair Alisha Haddock about police accountability, the importance of community oversight, how the Community Review Board works, and the recent allegations concerning police misconduct and their efforts to undermine the COB.

City Cast

Did the Cops Kill Community Oversight?

00:00:00

This interview was edited for length and clarity.

Why was the Community Oversight Board created initially?

"It was originally created because an MNPD officer shot and killed a young man named Jocques Clemmons. That was in 2017. A few months later, there was another police shooting, of Daniel Hambrick.

Community oversight in Nashville had been in the works for decades. These deaths propelled us to go through the measures to establish a board. Signatures were gathered, it was on the ballot, and the people spoke: Over 134,000 people voted for the amendment, over 60 percent of Davidson County voters. Their votes sent a clear message that the COB was needed and something people wanted. And so we were able to get that oversight in Nashville, and we've been the better for it since then."

How is the Community Review Board different from the COB?

"Before we had investigative power, we could make disciplinary recommendations for officers. We would investigate a problem and recommend the disciplinary action so it wasn't the police policing themselves.

The investigations were fair, honest, transparent. And now that has been taken away from the board.

We still take complaints like we normally do, but the work has stalled because we cannot review the cases in their totality because the MNPD is holding records. It is causing a backlog in our work."

Why is having community-led police oversight so vital?

"Everybody across the world saw what happened to George Floyd. It's etched in our memories. You can see that scene on that curb of George Floyd dying because an officer had his knee on his neck, and he said that he could not breathe.

We cannot have that in Nashville. With oversight, and the type of oversight we built, we can deter some of these egregious actions and help spark good behavior from MNPD officers. There are some good officers out there.

We serve the residents of Nashville. It does not matter what color you are, your religion, where you live, or even whether you’re a police officer. We want to address all complaints in the most confidential manner possible because of the history of retaliatory behavior behind the blue wall.

Every citizen has a right to be safe in their neighborhoods, communities, and in public. The culture behind that thin blue wall has to change."

🎧 Listen here.

Share article

Hey Nashville

Stay connected to City Cast Nashville and get ready to join the local conversation.

Can't subscribe? Turn off your ad blocker and try again.

3 Questions With

See All
3 Questions WithMay 12

How Nashville Could Be More Accessible With Former Team USA Paralympian Joseph Gray

Former Team USA Paralympian Joseph Gray chats about growing up blind in Nashville, and how the city can improve.

A man in a black tracksuit and ball cap stands on a track in front of kids dressed in blue and red track suits.
3 Questions WithMay 6

The Local Documentary Asking Tough Questions About Gun Violence

“Louder Than Guns” was created in the aftermath of The Covenant School shooting, with the goal of making space for important conversation...

Two white men on a stage. One wears a black tee and is smiling at the second, who has a guitar and is speaking into a mic. He's wearing a tan button-up and a tan cowboy hat.
3 Questions WithMay 4

Parenting That Works: Nashville’s Free Parenting Program

Learn more about this free program helping Nashville parents.

A gray building with flower beds in front of it. A gray sign says: Regional Intervention Program: Parenting That Works!
3 Questions WithApril 20

Run for a Cause With the St. Jude Rock ‘n’ Roll Running Series

The St. Jude Rock ‘n’ Roll Running Series is returning to Nashville this weekend, on April 25 and 26. Here's more about the annual event.

A large crowd of runners in downtown Nashville.
3 Questions WithApril 13

Celebrate the Earth at Nashville’s Greenest Festival

Learn more about the history and event schedule of this year's Nashville Earth Day celebration.

Head to Centennial Park on April 18 for Nashville Earth Day. (Courtesy of Nashville Earth Day)
3 Questions WithFebruary 9

Lunar New Year in Nashville With Master of the Guzheng Wu Fei

Classical Chinese musician Wu Fei discusses Lunar New Year and Nashville's impact on her music ahead of a free performance.

A Chinese American woman wearing a long sequined dress holds a tall stringed instrument in a field, in front of a chain link fence. The photo is black and white.
3 Questions WithOctober 20, 2025

Capturing a Road’s Character: 3 Questions With Artist Wendy Murray

Australian artist Wendy Murray is working on an ambitious project: To draw every building on Gallatin Pike. City Cast Nashville recently...

You can spot Wendy drawing along Gallatin Pike. (Courtesy of Jim Herrington)
3 Questions WithJuly 29, 2025

Nashville’s Longest Running Home Music Venue Closes With One Last Festival

After 12 years, The Mouthhole is closing, but not before one last music festival.

Three white men sitting in a blue booth with exasperated looks.