Attorney General Jeff Sessions today announced grant awards
to Public Safety Partnership member sites as part of $10 million in funding to
support state, local and tribal law enforcement departments and agencies and
their partners who are fighting violent crime in jurisdictions across the
United States.
The Office of Justice Programs’ Bureau of Justice
Assistance, in partnership with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and
Explosives, is awarding $5 million under the Local Law Enforcement Crime Gun
Intelligence Center Integration Initiative to encourage local jurisdictions to
use intelligence, technology and community engagement to identify unlawfully
used firearms and to prosecute those who commit violent crimes.
Grant recipients include the PSP cities of Indianapolis,
Indiana, $798, 866; Memphis, Tennessee, $714,055; Tulsa, Oklahoma, $800,000 and
Baton Rouge, Louisiana, $634,971. Other locations include Detroit, Michigan,
$800,000; the Albuquerque, New Mexico, Police Department, $452,108, and the
City/County of San Francisco, California, $800,000. The jurisdictions will use
these awards to hire personnel to utilize the National Integrated Ballistic
Information Network (NIBIN), to purchase technology required to operate a Crime
Gun Intelligence Center and ammunition for ballistic tests of recovered
weapons.
The Attorney General also announced awards for BJA’s
Technology Innovation for Public Safety (TIPS): Addressing Precipitous
Increases in Crime program.
This program supports the Department’s priorities of
reducing violent crime and supporting law enforcement officers, including
prosecutors. While many jurisdictions are making significant progress
implementing justice information sharing solutions to address critical gaps in
crime prevention and response activities across organizations and
jurisdictions, there remain challenges for the criminal justice system to
respond to threats to public safety. This is especially true for efforts
addressing significant increases in crime.
Justice information sharing technology refers to any
hardware and software, hosted residentially or remotely, that plays a role in
the collection, storage, sharing and analysis of criminal justice data. Funding
under this program is provided to help state, local, territorial, and tribal
jurisdictions use innovative technological solutions to enhance their justice
information-sharing capacity.
Grant recipients include the PSP cities of Memphis,
Tennessee, $417,224; Toledo, Ohio, $492,553; Flint, Michigan, $499,694 and
Houston, Texas, $500,000. Other locations include Arizona Criminal Justice
Commission, $317,834; City of Boynton Beach, Florida, $465,860; Clark County
Social Service, Nevada, $500,000; New Mexico Second Judicial District Attorney,
$500,000; State of Connecticut Department of Emergency Services and Public
Protection; $419,804; Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office, New Jersey, $500,000;
and Georgia Bureau of Investigation, $499,339. Additional information on the
grant awards can be found at: www.bja.gov
Attorney General Jeff Sessions made the announcement during
today’s National Public Safety Partnership Symposium on Violent Crime in
Birmingham, Alabama. The National Public Safety Partnership is a DOJ-wide
initiative that enables cities to consult with and receive a coordinated array of resources from DOJ’s programmatic
and law enforcement components: the Bureau of Justice Assistance; United States
Attorneys’ Offices; the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives;
the Federal Bureau of Investigation; the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration;
the U.S. Marshals Service; the Office on Violence Against Women; the Office of
Justice Programs; the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services; and other
federal agencies in order to improve local violence reduction strategies.
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