The U.S. Justice Department
released the below information:
Today, Attorney General Jeff
Sessions announced several steps in support of President Trump’s plan to
prevent violence in schools. Through
these efforts, the Department of Justice is taking immediate action to protect
our schools, better enforce our gun laws, support law enforcement, strengthen
the firearms background check system, and improve federal law enforcement’s
response to tips. In making the
announcement, Attorney General Sessions said:
"No child should have to
fear going to school or walking the streets of their neighborhood. Today, I am directing the Department of
Justice to take a number of new steps that will help make schools and the American
people safer from the threat of gun violence.”
“We are increasing the number
of school resource officers, improving background checks and more aggressively
prosecuting those who illegally attempt to purchase a firearm, and reviewing
and enhancing the way our law enforcement agencies respond to tips from the
public. Under my tenure as Attorney
General, we have already increased federal gun prosecutions to a 10-year
high—and we are just getting started.
With these new measures in place, we are better positioned to disarm
criminals and protect the law-abiding people of this country."
The Attorney General
announced the following actions:
Improvements to School Safety
Hire More School Resource
Officers. The Department will help
state, local and tribal law enforcement agencies hire more School Resource
Officers (SROs). The COPS Hiring
Program—a competitive grant that helps states and local communities hire more
police officers—will prioritize applicants who intend to use the grants for
SROs.
Provide Support For Firearms
and Situational Awareness Training to School and Law Enforcement
Personnel. By leveraging existing
assistance programs, the Department will be able to empower state and local
firearms and situational awareness training for school personnel. The Department will continue to provide
emergency and crisis training to state, local, and tribal law enforcement
through its National Training and Technical Assistance Center and VALOR
initiative.
Fully Participate in the
Federal Commission on School Safety. The Department of Justice is committed to
working with our federal partners to study, evaluate, and make recommendations
on how we can improve school safety.
Aggressively Prosecuting
Federal Gun Laws
Swift and aggressive
“Lie-and-Try” Prosecutions. Attorney
General Sessions has ordered federal prosecutors to swiftly and aggressively
prosecute appropriate cases against people who are prohibited from having
firearms, and who lie in an attempt to thwart the federal background check
system.
Continue to Increase Violent
Crime Prosecutions. In 2017 the Department made some great strides under
Attorney General Sessions' leadership, including the launch of the enhanced
Project Safe Neighborhoods initiative, which brings together all levels of law
enforcement and the communities they serve to develop effective, locally based
strategies to reduce violent crime.
Under this direction, the Department prosecuted more defendants on
federal firearms charges than we have in a decade, and more defendants for
violent crime than we have in over 25 years – since the Department started
tracking a “violent crime” category.
Attorney General Sessions is dedicated to ensuring even more violent
crime prosecutions, including firearms prosecutions, in 2018.
Supporting Law Enforcement
Providing Emergency Funding
for the Costs of Parkland, Florida Law Enforcement Response. The Department of Justice will provide $1
million in emergency grant funding to the State of Florida to pass through to
Broward County and other responding jurisdictions’ law enforcement
components. The emergency funding is
intended to defray the law enforcement overtime costs related to the response
and subsequent crime scene investigation of the tragic shooting at Marjory
Stoneman Douglas High School.
Improving Information
Available for Firearm Background Checks
Strengthening Partnerships
with State and Local Law Enforcement.
The Attorney General is calling on governors and state Attorneys General
to improve the reporting of state and local criminal justice data, and other
information accessed by the firearms background check system. Because the FBI
has identified “missing dispositions” – or arrest records that lack a final
disposition – as a significant issue, the Attorney General will provide every
state with their respective level of disposition completion with the goal of
urging those states who do not have an adequate level of reporting to focus on
this issue and improve their reporting.
Attorney General Sessions has
also directed the FBI to identify local jurisdictions that are not reporting
arrests to their state repositories as well as jurisdictions that are not providing
all of their records identifying persons prohibited from possessing firearms
for mental health reasons.
Improving Access to State
Mental Health and Domestic Violence Records.
Through the National Criminal History Improvement Program (NCHIP) and
NICS Act Records Improvement Program (NARIP) grants, the Department will help
states provide more complete, timely, and accurate information to databases
accessed by the firearms background check system. The Attorney General has ordered that
priority be given to projects that improve accessibility of criminal history
records, domestic violence convictions, and information on persons who are
prohibited from possessing firearms for mental-health related reasons.
Enhancements to Department
Response to Public Information
Reviewing and reforming the
process for handling tips. Attorney
General Sessions has ordered an immediate review of the Department’s handling
of tips from the public so that they receive prompt and effective responses,
especially when doing so could prevent violence.
Technical Assistance to
States
Extreme Risk Protection
Orders. The Department stands ready to
assist States, at their request, on establishing and implementing extreme risk
protection orders.
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