Category Archive for: News & Updates

News & Updates June 6, 2017

Police speak less respectfully to black drivers, study suggests

Analyzing 183 hours' worth of body camera footage from the Oakland Police Department (OPD), a team of Stanford researchers found that police officers tended to be “less respectful, less polite, less friendly, less formal and less impartial” towards black drivers during traffic stops as compared to whites. Responding to this report, OPD Deputy Chief Leronne

News & Updates June 5, 2017

A Police Chief Reflects: ‘Handcuffs Are Not the Solution’

Former Dallas Police Chief David Brown, on how society should address crime and violence: “You have to find a way to peel back the layers, and find root causes, and mitigate the root causes where they occur, whether that’s mental illness, drug addiction, job training, opportunities in the community, or economic development. You have to

News & Updates May 31, 2017

A Haven From Trauma’s Cruel Grip

“Along with a growing number of hospital-based violence intervention programs, the new [trauma recovery] centers acknowledge the link between violence and public health, as well as the insidious ripple effects that untreated trauma can have on public safety. The likelihood of becoming a victim of violent crime — and a repeat victim — increases exponentially

News & Updates May 30, 2017

Street Stops by New York City Police Have Plummeted

In encouraging news for critics of the “stop-and-frisk” policing era presided over by former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, the racial disparity in street stops by NYPD officers narrowed between 2013 and 2015. This discovery came from a report filed in federal court by the court-appointed monitor overseeing the Police Department.

News & Updates May 16, 2017

Pittsburgh takes steps to reduce violent crime

“Pittsburgh’s newest strategy is a major recognition of what recent research seems to confirm — that violence behaves like infectious disease and is better treated when approached like an epidemic. This methodology can trace its roots to the work of David Kennedy, a criminologist at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice who laid the groundwork for