Highlights
In 2023:
The rate of homicide victimization was 5.9 per 100,000 persons. This marks a decrease from the rate of 6.7 per 100,000 in 2022.
The male homicide victimization rate (9.3 per 100,000 persons) was 3.5 times greater than the homicide victimization rate for females (2.6 per 100,000).
The homicide victimization rate for black persons (21.3 per 100,000 persons) was more than 6 times the rate for white persons (3.2 per 100,000).
The largest percentage of homicide victimizations (39%) was committed by someone outside the family but known to the victim.— Read on bjs.ojp.gov/library/publications/homicide-victimization-united-states-2023
Highway Closures & Police Perspective on Riots & Lawlessness
The testimony of the Minneapolis Officers on the riots and lawlessness begins at the 1 hour 18 minute mark.
In the continuing investigation of the rioting and lawlessness following the death of George Floyd, the oversight committee reviews the highway protests and closures and hears from Minneapolis Police and Peace Officers Association.
2024 Police Violence Report
Comprehensive review of killings by police in 2024.
— Read on policeviolencereport.org/
New York City Health Justice Network Recidivism Evaluation Study
AP PHOTOS: Looking back at 10 days in 2020 of fervent non-stop protests for George Floyd | AP News
As cellphone video documenting the last breaths of George Floyd spread across the internet, so did the collective outrage.
— Read on apnews.com/article/george-floyd-photo-gallery-dd52c4c5ca834e3e39d53276745082b0
Five Years After George Floyd: Lessons For Future Movements
The question now is not whether George Floyd’s death changed anything—it did. The question is: Who has the power to shape what comes next?
— Read on newsone.com/6174511/five-years-after-george-floyd-lessons-for-future-movements/
POLICY PLATFORMS – M4BL
Black life and dignity require Black political will and power. Despite constant exploitation and perpetual oppression, Black people have bravely and brilliantly been a driving force pushing toward collective liberation. In recent years, we have taken to the streets, launched massive campaigns, and impacted elections, but our elected leaders have failed to address the legitimate demands of our Movement. We can no longer wait.
In response to the sustained and increasingly visible violence against Black communities in the U.S. and globally, a collective of more than 50 organizations representing thousands of Black people from across the country came together in 2015 with renewed energy and purpose to articulate a common vision and agenda. We are a collective that centers, and is led by and rooted in, Black communities. And we recognize our shared struggle with all oppressed people: collective liberation will be a product of all of our work.
— Read on m4bl.org/policy-platforms/
DOJ Right to Dismiss Lawsuits Against Police Departments
The move reflects the Trump administration’s rejection of the “disparate impact” theory of liability.
— Read on www.city-journal.org/article/doj-disparate-impact-theory-biden-civil-rights-law-enforcement-policing
ACLU and Community Groups Launch Campaign to Demand Justice and Transparency as Trump DOJ Abandons Federal Police Oversight | American Civil Liberties Union
Commentary: 2 key concepts about policing that are important to understand.
The first is policing is local. Police in California and New York are similar but they are also different. If a police department in California does something improper that is not an indication that the police in New York are doing the same improper act. This leads to the second point, Governmental Home Rule. This means that each municipality is it’s own government. This allows the local city, town, or village (c-t-v) to have dominion over it’s municipal agencies. This allows each local government to control it’s police department. Therefor each municipal government, if it chooses, can MANDATE police reform of it’s local police department.
The bottom line is that the DOJ is not needed to initiate police reform. The Governments in Memphis, TN, Louisville, KY, Lexington, MS, Phoenix, AZ, Minneapolis, MN, Mount Vernon, NY, and Worcester, MA, can force their local police department to initiate or continue reforms suggested from the DOJ investigations.
When police department reform is initiated at the local level it works better. The Mayor or Supervisor of a C-T-V calls for police reform, the Council or Trustees support it (at least through a budget line), the Chief or Commissioner of the police department makes the change. If the Chief/Commissioner doesn’t follow through with the reform that can be fired. If the Council or Trustees don’t support the reform efforts they can be voted out of office. The same with the Mayor or Supervisor if they don’t mandate police reform they can be voted out of office. Now the citizens have a voice, if they think reform is not needed they can use their voices and votes to make changes. The same if a large enough group is calling for reform they can pressure their local government to make changes.
This is much better that having the secret DOJ control local police reform. The C-T-V elected officials have no voice, only to agree with the DOJ’s findings. The community can’t pressure anyone because the DOJ is not elected by the community.
The ACLU Press Release
The Seven States Safety Campaign targets police departments where the Biden DOJ found rampant police brutality and racial targeting
— Read on www.aclu.org/press-releases/aclu-and-community-groups-demand-justice-and-transparency-as-trump-doj-abandons-federal-police-oversight
Let’s Empower Jurors to Halt an Injustice | Cato Institute
But that could just as easily have come from President Donald Trump. Through a series of flagrantly unconstitutional executive orders, Trump has sought to silence the opposition. This culminated with an executive order demanding that the Departments of Justice and Homeland Security investigate former administration officials who pushed back against Trump’s frivolous claims that the 2020 election was stolen.
The Framers understood the danger of a despotic regime and regarded the criminal jury trial as a key procedural safeguard to help ensure that only those acts and individuals society deemed truly culpable result in criminal punishment. This is of particular importance today — in a nation plagued by rampant overcriminalization and coercive plea bargaining — where often all that stands between us and a criminal record is a prosecutor’s decision to charge.
— Read on www.cato.org/commentary/lets-empower-jurors-halt-injustice