Grits for Breakfast: Deep in the Weeds: Sandra-Bland data provides first-ever detail on scope of arrests, searches at Texas traffic stops
— Read on gritsforbreakfast.blogspot.com/2021/02/deep-in-weeds-sandra-bland-data.html
Category: CRJ101 Intro CJ
Ohio Collaborative Community-Police Advisory Board
This has examples of police policies and standards. Spend some time to examine the different resources that are available on the website.
Ohio Collaborative
— Read on www.ocjs.ohio.gov/ohiocollaborative/standards.html
Traffic Without the Police by Jordan Blair Woods :: SSRN
This is part of an agenda drive movement to eliminate the police. Very dangerous thinking! There is no circumstance where citizens would be safer without police. Here is the other side. Choose for yourself.
We are at a watershed moment in which growing national protest and public outcry over police injustice and brutality, especially against people of color, are an
— Read on papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm
Death by the State – Police Killings and Jail Deaths in St. Louis
This report has an interesting format from how other reports of this type are published.
ArchCity Defenders identified at least 179 people who were killed by police or who died in jail custody between 2009 to 2019 in the St. Louis Region.
Get the report HERE
Forensic Science
REPORT TO THE PRESIDENT Forensic Science in Criminal Courts: Ensuring Scientific Validity of Feature-Comparison Methods
“Forensic science” has been defined as the application of scientific or technical practices to the recognition, collection, analysis, and interpretation of evidence for criminal and civil law or regulatory issues. Developments over the past two decades—including the exoneration of defendants who had been wrongfully convicted based in part on forensic-science evidence, a variety of studies of the scientific underpinnings of the forensic disciplines, reviews of expert testimony based on forensic findings, and scandals in state crime laboratories—have called increasing attention to the question of the validity and reliability of some important forms of forensic evidence and of testimony based upon them. Get a copy of the report HERE
Strengthening Forensic Science in the United States: A Path Forward
The Senate Report also sets forth the charge to the Forensic Science Committee, instructing it to:
- assess the present and future resource needs of the forensic science community, to include State and local crime labs, medical examin-ers, and coroners;
- make recommendations for maximizing the use of forensic tech-nologies and techniques to solve crimes, investigate deaths, and protect the public;
- identify potential scientific advances that may assist law enforce-ment in using forensic technologies and techniques to protect the public;
- make recommendations for programs that will increase the number of qualified forensic scientists and medical examiners available to work in public crime laboratories;
- disseminate best practices and guidelines concerning the collection and analysis of forensic evidence to help ensure quality and con-sistency in the use of forensic technologies and techniques to solve crimes, investigate deaths, and protect the public;
- examine the role of the forensic community in the homeland secu-rity mission;
- [examine] interoperability of Automated Fingerprint Information Systems [AFIS]; and
- examine additional issues pertaining to forensic science as deter-mined by the Committee.
Get the Senate report HERE
Consent Decree Monitoring Team for Baltimore City
The Baltimore Police Monitoring Team oversees the implementation of a Consent Decree—a judicially-enforceable agreement—between the City of Baltimore and the United States. The Consent Decree requires the Baltimore City Police Department to adopt a number of specific reforms aimed at ensuring effective, safe, and constitutional policing.
Access it HERE
Prioritizing Equity video series: Police Brutality & COVID-19 | American Medical Association
I am shocked by the position that the AMA has taken on policing. I hope they cite some of the sources they get their information from because listening to the discussion in the video it is obviously agenda driven and not evidence based.
The latest Prioritizing Equity video series examines police brutality and racism, discussing how physicians and others can address root causes of inequity by naming racism.
— Read on www.ama-assn.org/delivering-care/health-equity/prioritizing-equity-video-series-police-brutality-covid-19
Perspectives on Policing and Protests Six Years After Ferguson | John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Perspectives on Policing and Protests Six Years After Ferguson | John Jay College of Criminal Justice
— Read on www.jjay.cuny.edu/news/perspectives-policing-and-protests-six-years-after-ferguson
Reinventing American Policing: Blueprint for the 21st Century | Vera Institute
A video with Cynthia Lum and Daniel Nagin
— Read on www.vera.org/events/neil-a-weiner-research-speaker-series/reinventing-american-policing
A cop shoots a Black man and a city resumes battle with police union
This is a several part series.
A cop in upstate New York shot Silvon Simmons three times from behind. The shooting and its aftermath illustrate policing practices that fueled U.S. protests.
— Read on www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/usa-police-rochester-shooting/