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Firearm Injury Hospitalizations in America
Firearm Injury Hospitalizations in America
To address a gap in the available data on firearm injuries, RAND researchers have developed a longitudinal database of state-level estimates of hospitalizations due to firearm injury. Use this visualization to see rates of firearm injuries in your state from 2000 to 2016, and how trends in firearm injuries differ between states.
·rand.org·
Firearm Injury Hospitalizations in America
The Law and Social Science of Stop and Frisk
The Law and Social Science of Stop and Frisk
In 1968, almost 50 years ago, the Supreme Court validated, in a case called Terry v. Ohio (1968), a common police practice known as stop and frisk, so long as an officer could justify the action on the basis of a newly developed standard: reasonable suspicion. Today, policing agencies use stop and frisk prophylactically, stopping in some cities tens or even hundreds of thousands of people annually. These developments and the litigation around the strategy in New York City and elsewhere provide an opportunity to revisit Terry and to consider recent research in law and social science regarding stop and frisk. This review focuses on three issues: the evolution of legal doctrine pertaining to stop and frisk, arguments regarding the effectiveness of stop and frisk as a mechanism to control and reduce crime, and a delineation of the relevance of the theory of procedural justice to our understanding of the interleaving of the law and social science of stop and frisk.
·annualreviews.org·
The Law and Social Science of Stop and Frisk
Policing in a Time of Pandemic: Recommendations for Law Enforcement -Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics, Harvard Law School
Policing in a Time of Pandemic: Recommendations for Law Enforcement -Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics, Harvard Law School
This white paper notes the novel law enforcement challenges created by COVID-19 and describes the different approach police must take in light of these challenges in order to serve their traditional public safety function.
·ethics.harvard.edu·
Policing in a Time of Pandemic: Recommendations for Law Enforcement -Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics, Harvard Law School
Racial Misuse of "Criminal Profiling" by Law Enforcement: Intentions and Implications - Patrick Ibe, PhD; Charles Ochie, PhD; Evaristus Obiyan, PhD.
Racial Misuse of "Criminal Profiling" by Law Enforcement: Intentions and Implications - Patrick Ibe, PhD; Charles Ochie, PhD; Evaristus Obiyan, PhD.
This article examines critical issues regarding criminal profiling, its misuse by law enforcement, and its utility to solve serious crimes with the technique, hereinafter known and called "Criminal Profiling". The specific issue under investigation is the misuse of criminal profiling in the United States, and its impact on African Americans, and other minorities. In that realm, a discussion and analysis of the importance of criminal profiling, the development of criminal profiling and, the misuse of criminal profiling as a critical issue in the 21st century are analyzed.
·coursehero.com·
Racial Misuse of "Criminal Profiling" by Law Enforcement: Intentions and Implications - Patrick Ibe, PhD; Charles Ochie, PhD; Evaristus Obiyan, PhD.
Re-imagining Public Safety: Prevent Harm and Lead with the Truth - Phillip Atiba Gof et al.
Re-imagining Public Safety: Prevent Harm and Lead with the Truth - Phillip Atiba Gof et al.
"What follows is an articulation of the five key policies that our experience and research reveal as the most critical to advancing public safety in America. Rather than a summary or laundry list, we offer these five recommendations as the fundamental next steps. Each makes the rest of the policies we have collectively endorsed easier, more likely, and more effective. In other words, these are the five steps that we believe can do the most work towards turning a just public safety system from a goal to a reality."
·law.yale.edu·
Re-imagining Public Safety: Prevent Harm and Lead with the Truth - Phillip Atiba Gof et al.
U.S. government increases oversight of police-reform monitors
U.S. government increases oversight of police-reform monitors
The U.S. Justice Department, in the midst of investigating policing practices in three major cities, will toughen oversight of federal monitors who supervise implementation of police reforms mandated in civil consent decrees, Attorney General Merrick Garland said on Monday.
·reuters.com·
U.S. government increases oversight of police-reform monitors
U.S. bail-bond insurers spend big to keep defendants paying | Reuters
U.S. bail-bond insurers spend big to keep defendants paying | Reuters
Insurance companies have spent $17 million to defeat proposals to weaken or abolish the for-profit bail industry in the United States, a system that brings insurers $15 billion in business a year, according to a Reuters analysis of campaign contributions, company financial...
·reuters.com·
U.S. bail-bond insurers spend big to keep defendants paying | Reuters
Tool for police reform rarely used by local prosecutors
Tool for police reform rarely used by local prosecutors
SEATTLE (AP) — Isaiah Obet was behaving erratically and in mental distress in 2017 when Auburn police officer Jeff Nelson ordered his police dog to attack and then shot Obet in the torso. Obet fell to the ground and Nelson fired again, fatally shooting Obet in the head.
·apnews.com·
Tool for police reform rarely used by local prosecutors
This is how police request customer data from Amazon
This is how police request customer data from Amazon
Anyone can access portions of a web portal used by law enforcement to request customer data from Amazon, even though the portal is supposed to require a verified email address and password. Amazon’s law enforcement request portal allows police and federal agents to submit formal requests for customer data along with a legal order, like […]
·techcrunch.com·
This is how police request customer data from Amazon
Enough
Enough
The extrajudicial killings of black people must stop.
·theroot.com·
Enough
DC strikes deal to improve conditions at city's main jail
DC strikes deal to improve conditions at city's main jail
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Washington, D.C., government has struck a deal with the U.S. Marshals Service to improve the situation at the city's main jail after it came under criticism and the Justice Department announced that 400 federal prisoners would be transferred out because of substandard conditions.
·apnews.com·
DC strikes deal to improve conditions at city's main jail