Tuesday, February 28, 2006

Attorney General Conzales Unveils Plan To Combat Gang Violence


On February 15, 2006 The U.S. Department of Justice issued the following press release:

Washington, DC - "Now we need to focus on giving young people, especially young men in our cities, better options than apathy, or gangs, or jail." -President George W. Bush, February 2, 2005

Gangs have become an increasingly deadly threat to the safety and security of our nation's citizens. Addressing this threat is one of the top priorities of the Department of Justice, and today Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales unveiled his plan to combat gang violence across America.

The Attorney General's strategy is twofold: First, prioritize prevention programs to provide America’s youth and offenders returning to the community with opportunities that help them resist gang involvement. Second, ensure robust enforcement policies when gang-related violence does occur.

The cornerstones of the Attorney General's program are an expansion of the successful Project Safe Neighborhoods program to include new and enhanced anti-gang efforts, and a new comprehensive anti-gang program to be rolled out later this year in six cities with significant gang problems.

Key Components of the Anti-Gang Initiative:

The Justice Department will dedicate $30 million in grant funding to support new and expanded anti-gang prevention and enforcement efforts under the Project Safe Neighborhoods (PSN) initiative. These new funds will allow local PSN task forces to combat gangs by building on the effective strategies and partnerships developed under PSN.

*Collaboration - PSN brings together federal, state and local law enforcement and communities in a unified effort to reduce gun crime across America. Each U.S. Attorney’s office has created partnerships and a strategy to prevent gun crime and to enforce the law against armed criminals.

*Increased prosecutions - Under this successful initiative, the number of federal firearms prosecutions increased 73 percent from fiscal year 2000 to fiscal year 2005. Almost all of these gun criminals are convicted and sentenced to time in prison.

Six City Comprehensive Anti-Gang Program:

Under Attorney General Gonzales’s leadership, the Justice Department will establish a comprehensive anti-gang prevention and enforcement program in six communities experiencing a significant gang problem. This program will incorporate prevention, enforcement and re-entry efforts to address gang membership and gang violence at every stage.

*Prevention - The Department will make available approximately $1 million in grants per community to support comprehensive prevention efforts such as the Gang Reduction Program, which focuses on reducing youth-gang crime and violence by addressing the full range of personal, family and community factors that contribute to juvenile delinquency and gang activity.

*Enforcement - The Department will make available approximately $1 million in grants per community to help support enforcement programs that will focus law enforcement efforts on the most significant violent gang offenders.

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