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The Law Enforcement Action Partnership advocates for alternatives to arrest and incarceration as a means of reducing crime. They support reducing the use of mandatory minimum sentences, increasing the use of effective pre-booking diversion programs, increasing the use of restorative justice conferences, reforming the money-bail system, and reforming parole and probation systems.
The upshot, Franklin says, will be "an illicit tobacco market with no product safety standards, regulations, or taxable revenue," which "will mean huge new business opportunities for organized ...
She is the executive director of the Law Enforcement Action Partnership, a nonprofit group of officers who want to transform policing by advocating for drug policy and criminal justice reforms.
ACLU California Action [4] Anti-Recidivism Coalition [4] California Teachers Association [4] California Legislative Black Caucus [4] League of Women Voters of California [4] Council on American-Islamic Relations California [4] Law Enforcement Action Partnership [5] Political parties. California Democratic Party [4] Labor unions. California ...
Cole was the first executive director of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, now known as Law Enforcement Action Partnership (LEAP), an organization comprising former and current police officers, government agents and other law enforcement agents who advocate for justice reform and oppose the War on Drugs. Cole served as LEAP's executive ...
In 2011, Downing became a board member of Law Enforcement Action Partnership, formerly known as Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP), after years representing the group as a speaker. [2] He left the board in 2019, but is still an advisory board member who gives speeches and writes op-ed pieces on behalf of the group. [ 3 ]
For the first time in 2023, law enforcement agencies were required to report known, suspected accidental drug overdoses to a database created in 2018. New law exposes extent of Pa.'s drug overdose ...
Law enforcement agency personnel when they take on assumed identities are often referred to as covert officers or undercover officers. The use of such methods in open societies are typically explicitly authorised and is subject to overview, for example in Australia under the Crimes Act 1914 , [ 7 ] and in the United Kingdom under the Regulation ...