“Regardless of where you are in the city and the makeup of drivers on the road, Black drivers are always a higher proportion of those that are stopped,” the study’s lead author said.
— Read on blockclubchicago.org/2024/06/10/black-drivers-in-chicago-more-likely-to-be-stopped-by-police-than-ticketed-by-camera-study-finds/
Category: CRJ101 Intro CJ
Minnesota Statewide Racial Profiling Report: All Participating Jurisdictions.
Report to the Minnesota Legislature September 22nd, 2003
See the report here:
The California School Safety Study: School and Community Contexts that Contribute to Root Causes and Prevention of Violence in California
See the report here:
De-escalation Training: What Works, Implementation Lessons, and Taking It to Scale; Plenary at the 2023 NIJ Research Conference
There is a video of the panel discussion at the website below.
Police use of force, while infrequently used, is a tremendous concern to public safety in the United States when officers employ it excessively or inappropriately, causing injury or death and eroding public trust in law enforcement. This plenary from the 2023 NIJ Research Conference describes the Integrating, Communications, Assessment, and Tactics (ICAT) de-escalation training program developed by the Police Executive Research Forum to guide officers in defusing critical incidents. A rigorous evaluation of ICAT found it reduced overall use of force as well as injuries to both officers and members of the public. Panelists will describe how research evidence was used to develop the training curriculum; discuss strategies to ensure training implementation fidelity and secure the buy-in of all ranks; describe preliminary findings from complementary NIJ-sponsored replication evaluations; and explore strategies to take ICAT to scale. Led by Karhlton Moore, director of the Bureau of Justice Assistance, the plenary was a discussion among Robin Engel, Ph.D., Senior Vice President, National Policing Institute Maris Herold, Chief, Boulder Police Department, Colorado Chuck Wexler, Executive Director, Police Executive Research Forum (PERF) Justin Witt, Sergeant, Louisville Metro Police Department, Kentucky
— Read on nij.ojp.gov/multimedia/de-escalation-training
NYPD monitor tracking stop and frisk abuses has cost $36 million | News | flcourier.com
NEW YORK — The New York Police Department monitor, in place more than a decade after a federal judge said officers abused the stop and frisk tactic, violating the constitutional
— Read on www.flcourier.com/news/nypd-monitor-tracking-stop-and-frisk-abuses-has-cost-36-million/article_d44c7062-24ce-11ef-abb0-43172fb12a19.html
Louisiana’s New 25-Foot Buffer for Police Threatens Accountability
A new law will make it much harder to film law enforcement officers in their public duties. Does that violate the First Amendment?
— Read on reason.com/2024/06/07/louisianas-new-25-foot-legal-forcefield-for-police-threatens-accountability-and-civil-liberties/
Do digital technologies reduce racially biased reporting? Evidence from NYPD administrative data | PNAS
Recent work has emphasized the disproportionate bias faced by minorities when interacting with law enforcement. However, research on the topic has been hampered by biased sampling in administrative data, namely that records of police interactions with citizens only reflect information on the civilians that police elect to investigate, and not civilians that police observe but do not investigate. In this work, we address a related bias in administrative police data which has received less empirical attention, namely reporting biases around investigations that have taken place. Further, we investigate whether digital monitoring tools help mitigate this reporting bias. To do so, we examine changes in reports of interactions between law enforcement and citizens in the wake of the New York City Police Department’s replacement of analog memo books with mobile smartphones. Results from a staggered difference in differences estimation indicate a significant increase in reports of citizen stops once the new smartphones are deployed.
— Read on www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2402375121
Police can’t get tough on crime until we help them fix a crisis of their own | Fox News
Policing in the US is bad and isn’t getting better. The left demonizes the officers and departments are heavily understaffed. Don’t look for a return to Broken Windows policing soon.
— Read on www.foxnews.com/opinion/police-cant-get-tough-crime-until-help-them-fix-crisis-own
Vital City | Crime on the New York City Subway: How Rare Is it Really?
This is the first report of a 3 part series.
What the numbers tell us and what to do about it — the first in a series
— Read on www.vitalcitynyc.org/articles/how-rare-is-crime-on-the-subway
When California schools summon police | EdSource
EdSource investigation describes the vast police presence in K-12 schools across California.
— Read on edsource.org/2024/when-california-schools-summon-police/713079