Organization of the Houston Police Department Budget & Finance Joseph A. Fenninger Deputy Director Legal Services C. E. Ferrell Deputy Director CHIEF OF POLICE CHARLES A. McCLELLAND‚ JR. Chief of Staff M. D. Slinkard Captain Public Affairs Regina Woolfolk Deputy Director Strategic Operations M. A. Dirden Executive Asst. Chief Investigative Operations M. I. Montalvo Executive Asst. Chief Field Operations K. A. Munden Executive Asst. Chief Technology Services D. J. Morgan
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Critical Issues in Policing Critical Issues in Policing Brian Riley CJA/214 May 31‚ 2012 Bobby Sheppard Police Agencies in modern society are a part of the American fabric to serve and protect the American public. The United States currently have more than 15‚000 police agencies‚ (Walker & Katz‚ 2011). Police Departments across the United States face similar critical issues policing. All police officers face dangers in the job of policing the dangers can
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provide for them and their families. They put up this wall and lose insight on the purpose of the officers and focus more on the threat of the officers. Community Policing starts with children and thus gaining respect from adults. Many times an offender
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Pillar four consists of community policing and crime reduction. The main focus of this pillar is to focus on community policing. Its very important for police to interact with the community in order for the community to interact with you positively. Community policing is basically working with residence in neighborhoods to consult public safety. Agencies should work with residents throughout different communities to share problems and collaborate on ways to create solutions to produce results that
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Policing In American Society CJA/214 Policing In American Society The United States government and the police must have a relationship because the laws and how the American criminal justice system is set up and ran. The rights of the people are established by the government and in most cases have to be carried out and enforced by local police. The local police vary from size throughout the United States. As the government set out to make new laws‚ it is the police who have to make sure
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University of Phoenix Material Appendix E Part I Define the following terms: |Term |Definition | |Racial formation |Is defined as the process where individuals are categorized and divided by mutable rules into | | |different racial group. | |Segregation
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Influence One area that seems to be heavily involved or intertwined with the Model Minority Myth is parenting. More recently Asian American parenting has garnered much more attention in recent times thanks to people like Amy Chua and the idea of “Tiger Moms”. Which although a more recent label the notion of fierce Asian parents or parenting style is not a new development. The main connection here to the Model Minority is that Asian Americans obtain such high achievement in part due to the parenting
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Critical Issues in Policing CJA/214 June 10‚ 2013 Ken Rosa Critical Issues in Policing Many people count the possibility of getting shot as the most significant danger a police officer faces. Officer-involved shootings appear to be on the rise‚ and there is no shortage of video footage on television or online showing shootouts between officers and criminals. Today’s law enforcement officers face a multitude of dangers during everyday duties that rival the threat of
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Is Minorities Overrepresented In the Criminal Justice System? Now you just ask me if I feel that minorities are overrepresented in the criminal justice system because of prejudices within the system‚ once I finish writing this paper you will have your answer. This question has been studied and debated for decades and still people in higher power are afraid to come to a conclusion because of certain circumstances. Yet‚ like racial differences in our society in general‚ the problem persists‚ and
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Corine Lightner POL 140 Essay #1 (Ch. 3 & 4) Dominant-Minority Relations In the early years of the United States‚ dominant-minority relations were shaped by the agrarian technology and the economic need to control land and labor. The agrarian era ended in the 1800s‚ and the U.S. has gone through two major transformations in subsistence technology since‚ each of which has transformed dominant-minority relations and required the creation of new structures and processes to maintain racial stratification
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