Media MonitorSUBSCRIBE 94111 total results. Showing results 56481 to 56500 «282128222823282428252826282728282829Next ›Last » Boris Johnson urges caution as pubs reopen in ‘biggest step yet on road to recovery’ Police handed fresh powers to break up illegal raves as part of new lockdown laws i News 3/7/2020 News Leicester lockdown: ‘More police than New Year’s Eve’ on patrol Police say they are bracing themselves for a busy weekend as pubs stay closed in Leicester but reopen across the country. BBC 3/7/2020 News Police chief welcomes pubs reopening as way to combat illegal gatherings West Midlands Police's top officer has welcomed the return of pubs as a way of reducing illegal gatherings. Express & Star 3/7/2020 News Black Lives Matter: Police should not be ‘bullied’ into taking the knee, says Boris Johnson Police officers should not be “bullied” into taking the knee in solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement, Boris Johnson has said. The Times - Subscription at source 3/7/2020 News Police Strategy Development: the New Zealand Police Prevention Strategy In 2009, the New Zealand Police implemented a comprehensive program called Policing Excellence, which by 2011 became Prevention First. This strategy was designed to place victims of crime and the prevention of crime at the foreground of their service delivery, with the view that in the longer-term crime would decrease. This article reviews the influence of the strategy on crime in New Zealand for the period 2009 to 2018 and finds that although the strategy was initially successful, in later years the strategy has not been as successful. The review also finds that the effectiveness of the New Zealand Police has decreased significantly during this period and argues for a more balanced strategy that includes an improved form of response to increase public satisfaction with the organization’s service delivery. Police Practice and Research - Registration at source 3/7/2020 Research article Rapport Quality in Investigative Interviews: Effects on Open-Ended Questions and Free Recall Responses In this study, we examined investigative interviews to identify relationships between interviewer–interviewee rapport quality, interviewers’ question format, and interviewees’ free recall responses. Specifically, we studied investigative interviews conducted with children and people with disabilities – vulnerable populations who tend to be reluctant to cooperate during investigative interviews. Studies suggest improving rapport quality to improve interview outcomes, but the research remains largely theoretical and experimental. Using actual field data from transcripts of 137 investigative interviews in South Korea, we evaluated rapport quality for each interview and subsequently measured the number of open-ended questions and free recall responses. Our analysis revealed a significant relationship between the rapport quality formed in the early stages of the investigative interview, frequency of open-ended questions, and frequency of free recall responses. In legal contexts, a victim’s testimony is considered more credible when free recall responses are provided as much as possible. Therefore, this study has strong implications for efforts targeted at increasing the effectiveness of investigative interviews. Police Practice and Research - Registration at source 3/7/2020 Research article Resistance to Evidence-Based Policing: Canadian Police Executives’ Perceptions As to Which Level of Canadian Policing Is Most Resistant Despite the global growth of evidence-based policing (EBP), there remains a resistance to change within police organizations that ultimately impedes the adoption of evidence-based practices. As a means of identifying which level of policing is most resistant to EBP, the present study describes results from interviews with 38 sworn and civilian Canadian police executives on their perceptions as to which level of policing – leadership, middle management, or the frontline – is most resistant. The results indicate that although there was no consensus among our participants, the middle management level was perceived as most resistant to EBP for a wide array of reasons. Ultimately, the results have practical implications for police practice that surround the need for a greater adoption of change. Police Practice and Research - Registration at source 3/7/2020 Research article Policing Mental Health: the Composition and Perceived Challenges of Co-Response Teams and Crisis Intervention Teams in the Canadian Context Due to an increase in interactions between the police and persons with perceived mental illness (PwPMI), police services have begun deploying specialized crisis responses to more adequately address these calls. One such response is a Crisis Intervention Team (CIT) that is comprised of frontline officers who are specially trained on mental health; another is a Co-Response Team (CRT) where an officer is paired with a mental health practitioner. With police services presumably shifting scarce resources to deploy these responses, it is paramount to understand the challenges they may endure. With little Canadian research on these responses to-date, the purpose of this paper is to document which Canadian police services deploy these responses and how their composition varies by jurisdiction, as well as their perceived challenges. Through a mixed methodological approach, the results indicate that most of the participating services deploy varying compositions of a CIT and/or CRT, but are perceived to endure a variety of challenges which may impede the overall success of these responses. Police Practice and Research - Registration at source 3/7/2020 Research article Implementing An Asset-Based Approach: A Case Study of Innovative Community Policing From Hawkhill, Scotland This case study reports on a 5-year project which has been running in Hawkhill, a deprived area in central Scotland where violent crime was also of concern. It highlights the steps necessary to move from theory to implementation: the process and impact of change of a unique, innovative police/partnership policy within the framework of Scottish Policing. Through auto-ethnography it reports on utilising an asset-based approach for reducing offending, improving health, well-being and local community conditions by supporting and building on its assets, connecting people and creating conditions for respectful, meaningful, partnership working where all partners can make a valuable contribution. Police Journal 3/7/2020 Research article New study to probe illicit financial flows from intellectual property crime The independent think tank, the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI), has launched a project to examine the structure and disruption of illicit finance flows from intellectual property (IP) in the United Kingdom. Police Professional 3/7/2020 News Blue light services jointly call for respect and safety this weekend Members of the public are reminded to enjoy themselves responsibly, drink in moderation and respect blue light personnel, according to a statement issued today by representatives for the emergency services. National Police Chiefs' Council (NPCC) 3/7/2020 News Weekend opening of bars and restaurants – APCC Chair response Chair of the Association of Police & Crime Commissioners Katy Bourne OBE said: “We are now benefiting from the sacrifices we have made to curb the spread of the virus and are slowly able to return to some normality. Association of Police and Crime Commissioners (APCC) 3/7/2020 News Multi-year funding settlement needed to rescue policing The Government must consider multi-year funding deals, akin to the NHS, if it is to reverse years of damaging cuts, says the Police Federation of England as Wales – echoing the chief inspector of constabulary’s calls. Police Federation of England and Wales (PFEW) 3/7/2020 News Police and Trading Standards advise public on how to spot bogus callers Police Scotland has launched its #ShutOutScammers campaign in partnership with Trading Standards. Daily Record 3/7/2020 News Black cops say discrimination, nepotism behind U.S. police race gap Thomas Boone has spent 22 years as a police officer in Prince George’s County, Maryland, a predominantly Black suburb of Washington, proudly wearing his uniform and driving his patrol car to coach kids’ football and basketball teams. Reuters 3/7/2020 News PSNI officers of being drunk with firearm could face further charges Two police officers charged with possessing a loaded gun while drunk or on drugs may face further charges, a judge heard yesterday. Constables Samuel David Beattie (23) and Paul Coulter (24) did not appear at Lisburn Magistrates Court and none of the facts were opened in court Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) 3/7/2020 News Gallery of crime shows how police busted secret phone network to bring down Merseyside’s suspected ‘untouchables’ Significant seizures of guns, drugs and cash were secured in Everton, Anfield, Huyton, West Derby, Mossley Hill, Kirkby, Aintree and Bootle Liverpool Echo 3/7/2020 News Britain’s biggest ever crime bust 'The Wire'-style sting snares 746 kingpins and 200 gangland hits, seizes £54M in cash and two tonnes of drugs after police smash 'impenetrable' secret phone network used across the world Mail Online 3/7/2020 Analysis, Feature ’‘No one has a normal phone these days’ Police used data from an encrypted chat service to track down one of the UK’s most wanted criminals over his alleged role in a violent dispute between two crime gangs in the north of England, it has emerged. The Times - Subscription at source 3/7/2020 Analysis, Feature Ban pointed knives and the number of stabbings will fall Louis XIV would have known just what to do after the attacks in Reading and Glasgow. Seventeenth-century France was a dangerous place. It was dangerous for the same reason the rest of Europe was at the time: there was great wealth inequality, there was little in the way of policing and, the French king noted, everyone carried an offensive weapon. The Times - Subscription at source 3/7/2020 Feature, Opinion «282128222823282428252826282728282829Next ›Last » Upcoming events View all events