Media MonitorSUBSCRIBE 95706 total results. Showing results 40921 to 40940 «204320442045204620472048204920502051Next ›Last » Police Operation to prevent firearms-related violence continues NEW ZEALAND:A national operation launched by Police to prevent firearms-related violence by criminal gangs and organised crime groups has been extended until 30 June 2022. New Zealand Police 7/3/2022 News How two offenders escaped a youth justice residence – and a response from Oranga Tamariki NEW ZEALAND: A report obtained by RNZ has laid bare a litany of failures during the escape of two offenders from a youth justice residence in 2020. RNZ (Radio New Zealand) 7/3/2022 News A frontline hybrid NEW ZEALAND: Police is about to start operational testing of a hybrid frontline car as a step toward reducing the organisation’s carbon footprint. [VIDEO] New Zealand Police 7/3/2022 News Preventing male violence in policing (Ep3): Insight into police perpetrators PolicingTV 7/3/2022 Feature, Interview, Opinion, Video Perceptions of Police Misconduct in Taiwan: Does Procedural Justice Matter? Police misconduct erodes police-citizen relations, which in turn, discourages people from cooperating with police. While a substantial volume of research has focused on how citizens’ demographics, media trust, and neighborhood context can exert an influence on perceptions of police misconduct, very little research has explored the impact of procedural justice in this regard. To fill in the gaps in this literature, the present study utilizes Structural Equation Modeling (SEM) to examine factors affecting citizens’ perceptions of police misconduct in Taiwan. Data were obtained from a CATI telephone survey of 1,806 residents in Metropolitan Taipei in 2014. It was found that citizens’ primary concerns of police misconduct include the covering-up of misconduct on the part of powerful suspects/celebrities, followed by the abuse of power by legal authorities, and the discriminatory enforcement of regulations, respectively. The results revealed importantly that procedural justice, perceptions of crime prevalence, and gender had significant direct influences, whereas media trust, victimization, and involuntary contact with police only had indirect effects on citizens’ perceptions of police misconduct. Procedural justice was the most robust variable in predicting citizens’ perceptions of police misconduct. Journal of Crime and Justice - Registration at source 7/3/2022 Research article Home Secretary wants clarity on operational independence in policing The Home Secretary wants clarification on her role in operational issues as part of the review of PCC's. Police Oracle - Subscription at source 7/3/2022 News ACC Dave Long to retire from MDP The Ministry of Defence Police (MDP) has announced the retirement of one of its longest-serving officers after more than 37 years with the force. Police Professional 7/3/2022 News Promotional Score Changes Across Three Test Administrations: Preliminary Evidence for Construct Relevant Change Guidelines encourage organizations to have policies that permit opportunities for retesting in selection. However, the implications of retesting have only been explored in limited contexts. The current study investigated promotional assessment scores across three repeated administrations at a highway patrol agency. Within-person analyses indicated that scores on the promotional assessment increased both from the first to the second administration and from the second to the third administration of the promotional assessment. Between-person analyses indicated that, whereas test-wiseness was higher for those who had been previously administered the in-basket simulation, other construct irrelevant factors did not differ for those who had and had not been administered the assessments previously. We assert that this provides preliminary evidence of construct relevant score change, as scores increased with more time on the job, allowing for more time to learn relevant knowledge, skills, and abilities. Results are discussed in terms of practical implications for retesting policies. Journal of Police and Criminal Psychology - Registration at source 7/3/2022 Research article Police dismissals (Home Office forces) Numbers of Barred list between 1 April 2020 – 31 March 2021 College of Policing 7/3/2022 Report Here’s how much officers in Surrey’s new municipal police force will be paid CANADA: The union representing officers of the new Surrey Police Service signed its first contract with the city's police board last week, and the terms of the agreement will see officers paid as much as or more than Vancouver police officers over the next three years. CTV News (Canada) 7/3/2022 News Latest police barred list released Figures made publicly available as part of our commitment to transparency College of Policing 7/3/2022 News Montreal police to install playground cameras, blindsiding local community groups CANADA: Ousseynou Ndiaye was shocked to learn Montreal police would not only be installing a public camera in his neighbourhood, but would be installing it in a children's playground. CBC News (Canada) 7/3/2022 News Police board considers hiring expert panel in Thunder Bay, Ont., to address complaints, investigations CANADA: Members of the Thunder Bay Police Services Board are set to consider the creation of an expert panel to provide advice and recommendations as they navigate mounting external investigations and human rights complaints. CBC News (Canada) 7/3/2022 News Letter from Cressida Dick, Metropolitan Police Service, dated 27 January 2022 CORRESPONDENCE: As you know, the Daniel Morgan Independent Panel (DMIP) published their report last June. Since then the Met has made significant progress and I wanted to take this opportunity to provide you with an interim update ahead of a more significant report expected in March 2022. Home Office 7/3/2022 Report ‘Bureaucracy gone out of control’ REPUBLIC OF IRELAND: Anger and frustration were vented by members at last Friday’s meeting of Tipperary Joint Policing Committee over the ongoing delay in rolling out planned CCTV projects in five locations across the county, including Burgess, Birdhill, Borrisokane and Roscrea. The Nenagh Guardian (Republic of Ireland) 7/3/2022 News Brazen ATM gang wreaked havoc across northeast REPUBLIC OF IRELAND: The criminal gang behind a series of ATM robberies in the northeast caused devastation and destruction but ultimately their brazen activity was disrupted by gardaÃ. RTÉ (Republic of Ireland) 7/3/2022 News How Police Abuse Phone Data to Persecute LGBTQ People In many parts of the world, law enforcement uses WhatsApp chats, text messages, and photos from confiscated phones as "evidence" against persecuted groups. Wired 7/3/2022 Feature Almost 30 gardaà have resigned while on suspension in the past decade REPUBLIC OF IRELAND: Twenty-nine gardaà have resigned from service while on suspension in the past decade — with more than half of those leaving the force in the past two years. Irish Examiner (Republic of Ireland) 7/3/2022 News Ian Broughton: ‘We have to do something about encrypted communication’ In the latest in a series of interviews with leading figures involved in the research and investigation of organised crime, Policing Insight’s Chris Allen spoke to Ian Broughton, a former detective sergeant and specialist drug advisor with London’s Metropolitan Police and now a drugs expert witness and trainer, about targeting drug gangs, deterring criminals, and the challenges police face with encryption. Policing Insight - Subscription at source 7/3/2022 Feature, Interview, Opinion Long-Term Partners – Reflections on the Shifts in Partnership Responses to Domestic Violence Whilst pioneering partnership work first took place in the battered women’s or refuge movement in England and Wales, the response that came to dominate in the 1990s and 2000s mirrored that associated with crime prevention more generally and Home Office crime prevention in particular. This reflected the increasing positioning of domestic violence as ‘real crime’ and the moves at this time to view domestic violence through a ‘crime lens’. In the last 10 years or so, there has been a clear shift, with the prevailing approach now dominated by initiatives such as Multi-Agency Risk Assessment Conferences, Independent Domestic Violence Advisors and Specialist Domestic Violence Courts. These initiatives have achieved considerable success in reducing risks to high-risk victims. Yet, in doing so, they establish a very particular framework for responding to domestic violence, positioning and promoting it as high-risk victimisation and moving to see it through an ‘exceptional risk’ lens. This paper examines shifts in the partnership response to domestic violence in England and Wales. It argues that, not only are the vast majority of lower risk women excluded from the prevailing framework but, in focusing on high-risk reduction, intervention within this framework fails to address women’s complicated and often contradictory needs in relation to abuse. International Review of Victimology 7/3/2022 Research article «204320442045204620472048204920502051Next ›Last » Upcoming events View all events