U.S. Attorney’s Office Concludes Investigation Into Fatal Shooting On Crittenden Street

Source: United States Department of Justice News

            WASHINGTON – The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia announced today that there is insufficient evidence to pursue federal criminal civil rights or District of Columbia charges against an officer from the Metropolitan Police Department who was involved in the April 2022 fatal shooting of Erica Graham.

            The U.S. Attorney’s Office and the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) conducted a comprehensive review of the incident. This included a review of law enforcement and civilian eyewitness accounts, physical evidence, recorded body-worn camera (BWC) footage, recorded doorbell camera footage, recorded radio communications, forensic reports, the autopsy report, and reports from the Metropolitan Police Department.

            According to the evidence, on April 23, 2022, at approximately 5:59 a.m., officers with the Metropolitan Police Department were dispatched to 830 Crittenden Street, N.W., for a report of gunshots fired. The police would learn during the events which led to the fatal shooting that Erica Graham, who was wearing a ballistic vest and brandishing a firearm, had shot a civilian just moments before the arrival of the police.

            Upon arrival on the 800 block of Crittenden Street, the first police officers on the scene observed Ms. Graham on the porch of a rowhouse holding a handgun. Throughout the incident, the officers made multiple commands for Ms. Graham to place the weapon on the ground, which she refused. Ms. Graham pointed the weapon several times at the officers and pulled the trigger, but it did not fire. The police on the scene made a request on the radio for additional units to respond because an officer needed assistance due to the presence of a person with a gun and continued in their efforts to convince Ms. Graham to place her weapon on the ground. 

            After a few minutes, Officer Simeon Crawford arrived on the scene. Ms. Graham climbed over a short railing to another porch attached to the first residence, and immediately tried to gain access to the second residence while brandishing the handgun. Ms. Graham crouched down, turned, and pointed the weapon at the police again. Officer Crawford fired two shots in reaction.  The first shot missed Ms. Graham. The second shot struck Ms. Graham in the upper torso. Ms. Graham fell to the floor of the porch. The police approached and attempted to provide medical attention as an ambulance was called to the scene. A handgun was recovered from under where Ms. Graham had fallen.      

            After a careful, thorough, and independent review of the evidence, federal prosecutors have found insufficient evidence to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Officer Crawford used excessive force under the circumstances.

Use-of-force investigations generally

            The U.S. Attorney’s Office reviews all police-involved fatalities to determine whether sufficient evidence exists to conclude that any officers violated either federal criminal civil rights laws or District of Columbia law. To prove civil rights violations, prosecutors must typically be able to prove that the involved officers willfully used more force than was reasonably necessary.  Proving “willfulness” is a heavy burden. Prosecutors must not only prove that the force used was excessive, but must also prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the officer acted with the deliberate and specific intent to do something the law forbids. 

            The U.S. Attorney’s Office remains committed to investigating allegations of excessive force by law enforcement officers and will continue to devote the resources necessary to ensure that all allegations of serious civil rights violations are investigated fully and completely. The Metropolitan Police Department’s Internal Affairs Division investigates all police-involved fatalities in the District of Columbia.

Federal Court Finds City of Miami Lieutenant Firefighter in Contempt

Source: United States Department of Justice News

On April 18, 2023, a federal court in the Southern District of Florida found Norman G. Williams Jr., a Lieutenant firefighter with the City of Miami, in contempt of court for continuing to prepare tax returns in violation of a preliminary injunction and a permanent injunction. The court ordered that he disgorge to the United States more than $40,000 in return preparer fees that he earned for tax returns prepared in violation of the injunctions.

In 2022, the court permanently enjoined Mr. Williams from preparing tax returns for others and ordered him to disgorge over $26,000 in ill-gotten gains. Despite the court’s orders prohibiting Mr. Williams from preparing or assisting in the preparation of tax returns for others, the court found that Mr. Williams continued his return preparation activities and endeavored to conceal them by preparing returns under his fiancée’s name and preparer tax identification number. The court found that Mr. Williams willfully violated the injunctions by preparing another 173 tax returns, including 36 returns for other firefighters.

Deputy Assistant Attorney General David A. Hubbert of the Justice Department’s Tax Division made the announcement.

Return preparer fraud is one of the IRS’ Dirty Dozen Tax Scams and taxpayers seeking a return preparer should remain vigilant. (More information can also be found here.) The IRS has information on its website for choosing a tax preparer, has launched a free directory of federal tax preparers, and offers information on how to avoid “ghost” tax preparers, whose refusal to sign a return should be a red flag to taxpayers. The IRS also has a checklist of things to remember when filing income tax returns in 2022.

In addition, IRS Free File, a public-private partnership, offers free online tax preparation and filing options on IRS partner websites for individuals whose adjusted gross income is under $72,000. For individuals whose income is over that threshold, IRS Free File offers electronical federal tax forms that can be filled out and filed online for free. The IRS has tips on how seniors and individuals with low to moderate income can get other help or guidance on tax return preparation, too.

In the past decade, the Tax Division has obtained injunctions against hundreds of unscrupulous tax preparers. Information about these cases is available on the Justice Department’s website. An alphabetical listing of persons enjoined from preparing returns and promoting tax schemes can be found this page. If you believe that one of the enjoined persons or businesses may be violating an injunction, please contact the Tax Division with details.

Seller Of Counterfeit Art Extradited From Germany After 13 Years As A Fugitive

Source: United States Department of Justice News

Damian Williams, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, announced today that ANGELA CATHERINE HAMBLIN, a citizen of the United Kingdom, was extradited today from Germany to the United States to serve a prison sentence for selling fake works of art through a commercial auction website and in private transactions.  After pleading guilty in 2009, HAMBLIN was sentenced to one year and one day in prison.  However, HAMBLIN failed to report to U.S. prison authorities as ordered and instead fled the United States to the United Kingdom.  She was re-arrested on May 31, 2022, while changing planes at an airport in Frankfurt, Germany.

U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said: “Hamblin went to great lengths to avoid accountability for her crimes, but this Office and the FBI have long memories and benefit greatly from our cooperation with international partners.  Despite some 13 years on the run, Hamblin was apprehended last year as she changed flights in Germany and today returns to face justice and serve her time in prison.”

As alleged in the Indictment and other documents and statements made in Court:

For about five months in 2007, HAMBLIN engaged in a fraudulent scheme to sell at least four paintings that she represented to be works of such artists as Joseph Mallord William Turner (a British watercolorist and printmaker), Milton Avery (an American abstract expressionist painter), Franz Kline (an American abstract painter), and Juan Gris (a Spanish Cubist painter and sculptor), when she knew that the paintings were not authentic works of art by these famed artists.  HAMBLIN made various claims about where she acquired the paintings, including that she or her husband had inherited the paintings from relatives and that they purchased one of the paintings from a then-deceased seller.  With respect to one of the paintings, HAMBLIN claimed that the artist had given it to George Balanchine, the choreographer, who had in turn sold it to her great-grandfather.

HAMBLIN was re-arrested on May 31, 2022, when she changed planes in Frankfurt, Germany, on a flight from Vienna, Austria, to the United Kingdom.  Following an order of extradition by German authorities, HAMBLIN was flown today from Frankfurt to New York City and transported to the custody of the U.S. Bureau of Prisons to serve her prison sentence.

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HAMBLIN, 74, of St. Boswells, Scotland, pled guilty on February 16, 2009, to two counts of mail fraud and one count of wire fraud.  She was sentenced on July 14, 2009, by United States District Judge Loretta A. Preska to one year and one day in prison. 

Mr. Williams praised the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Art Crime Team/New York Major Theft Task Force for their outstanding investigative work on HAMBLIN’s scheme to sell counterfeit art.  Mr. Williams also thanked the Justice Department’s Office of International Affairs, the U.S. Marshals Service, and German authorities for their assistance in the extradition.

This case is being handled by the Office’s Complex Frauds and Cybercrime Unit. Assistant U.S. Attorney David Raymond Lewis is in charge of the prosecution.

Associate Attorney General Vanita Gupta Delivers Remarks at the 26th Annual Liman Colloquium at Yale Law School

Source: United States Department of Justice News

Remarks as Prepared for Delivery

Thank you, Lisa [Foster], for that kind introduction and your incredible leadership on the issue of fines and fees in our justice system. And thanks to you and Judith [Resnik] for bringing us together to discuss these important issues, as well as to the many students and staff who helped organize this gathering.

I also want to thank all of you participating in this conference — from students and academics to judges, advocates, policymakers and public officials — for your interest in and commitment to finding ways to eliminate practices that far too often trap individuals and their families in a cycle of poverty and punishment that can be nearly impossible to escape.

I am thrilled to be back at Yale Law School to discuss fines and fees in our justice system and the Justice Department’s Dear Colleague Letter that we released yesterday. We have revised and updated a letter we issued in 2016 about the assessment of fines and fees against adults, as well as a 2017 advisory regarding juveniles. I want to acknowledge my dear Justice Department colleague Rachel Rossi, the head of our Office for Access to Justice, who has been a tireless partner on these issues.

Back in 2014 when President Obama appointed me to lead the Civil Rights Division, I was frankly a little shocked — I had spent my whole career suing the government. Bringing the perspective of a lifelong civil rights lawyer to the Justice Department, especially in my current role, where I oversee all our civil litigating divisions, all three grantmaking offices and more, including our newly reinvigorated Office for Access to Justice (ATJ), I am acutely aware of the ways in which advancing civil rights is part of everything we do.

It is one of the Attorney General’s three coequal priorities for the entire department. This letter and our work to help jurisdictions across the country decriminalize poverty and decrease dependence on fines and fees is an important example of that priority in action.

I started in the Civil Rights Division in October 2014, just weeks after the fatal shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, which set off nationwide protests and renewed the conversation — as it has been renewed many times since — about the relationship between law enforcement and the communities they serve.

The report we issued on Ferguson outlined the results of our investigation and exposed a system pervaded by racial bias and unduly focused on policing as a means to generate revenue, rather than prioritizing public safety. In just four years, Ferguson – a city of just 21,000 residents – issued approximately 90,000 citations for municipal violations.

We uncovered emails explicitly referencing the use of enforcement strategies “to fill the revenue pipeline” – without due consideration for whether officers could better protect the city by focusing on neighborhood policing, rather than debt collection. And we found that when people could not pay these fines and fees, they were subjected to multiple arrests, jail time and payments that far exceeded the cost of the original ticket. These practices had a devastating impact on poor residents.

We also found that the Ferguson Municipal Court was focused on compelling payment of fines and fees rather than acting as a neutral arbiter of the law. The court used arrest warrants as a routine response to missed court appearances and fine payments, issuing over 9,000 warrants in 2013 alone. As a result, violations that normally would not result in imprisonment — like parking infractions, traffic tickets or housing code violations — frequently led to jail time. We found that these practices overwhelmingly affected Black people and those living in or near poverty.

We entered a consent decree in Ferguson to curb these unconstitutional practices. And there has been real, concrete progress.

Because the court’s revenue-generating focus caused much of the police misconduct and because the court practices themselves violated due process and equal protection, our consent decree required the re-evaluation and possible dismissal of charges and reduction of fines, which substantially reduced the number of charges and resulting fines. In total, over 50,000 charges have been dismissed due to our consent decree — including 23,000 charges for Failure to Appear — helping alleviate community members’ financial burden and fear of arrest, and having a tangible impact for those who had been treated as revenue sources rather than valuable members of the community.

Our investigation in Ferguson revealed deep, systemic problems. But we also knew that Ferguson was not the only place in this country with such problems. Ferguson was a stark example, but this issue was bigger than Ferguson, and required more from the Justice Department.

Fines and fees that are assessed without consideration of ability to pay can have a devastating impact on a person’s life. Individuals who are unable to pay can become trapped in escalating and inescapable cycles of debt, extended periods of probation and parole, changes to immigration status and repeated, unnecessary incarceration. They can lose their employment, voting rights, driver’s licenses, homes or even custody of their children. These practices affect not just individuals but their families as well. And these detrimental effects fall disproportionately on low-income communities and people of color.

When fines and fees are assessed against juveniles, the consequences to youth and their families can be particularly acute, pushing young people further into the criminal justice system, driving youth and their parents into debt and putting considerable strain on familial relationships.

The harm is broader even than the individuals and families struggling to pay — local governments risk losing legitimacy and their constituents’ trust and in the end may generate little or no net revenue to show for it.

In 2016, I worked closely with Lisa, who led the department’s Office for Access to Justice, and together the Civil Rights Division and Access to Justice drafted what became the Department’s first Dear Colleague letter on fines and fees to state and local courts to help courts and judges guard against unlawful fine and fee practices. We also provided best practices for assessing fines and fees, such as considering alternatives to incarceration for indigent defendants with inescapable debts. We made clear that punishing poverty not only violates the law, it can destroy lives and tear apart families.

In 2016 we also filed a statement of interest in a case alleging that Virginia automatically suspended drivers’ licenses of people who failed to pay fines and fees, noting that “[a] driver’s license is often essential to a person’s well-being, including [the] ability to maintain a job, pursue educational opportunities, or care for children or other family,” and that penalizing people for their poverty violates the Fourteenth Amendment.

And in January 2017, the Office for Justice Programs (OJP) put out an advisory on fines and fees for juveniles, which highlighted the ways in which unaffordable fines and fees are particularly problematic and harmful for youth and their families.

We know the 2016 Dear Colleague letter had an impact on the national conversation on fines and fees and led to real change in the states. Since we issued it, 24 states and the District of Columbia have ended or significantly reformed their practice of suspending driver’s licenses for unpaid fines and fees. The wave started with Mississippi and California in 2018, and it has continued to be bipartisan.

Earlier this month, New Mexico became the 24th state to enact reforms that will restore driver’s licenses to over 300,00 people whose licenses had been suspended for unpaid fines or failure to appear. Similarly, after the January 2017 advisory on fines and fees on youth, 16 states eliminated all or some of the fines and fees imposed in the juvenile justice system. This is just a sampling of some of the significant innovations that states have been leading around the country on these issues. 

I returned to the Justice Department in 2021, and despite the significant progress, it is also clear this is still a live issue requiring the federal government’s attention. 

Last year, the Civil Rights Division and Office for Access to Justice teamed up to file a statement of interest on the issue of fines and fees.

Plaintiffs in Coleman v. Town of Brookside alleged that police officers, prosecutors and judges in Brookside, Alabama, were using aggressive enforcement of the municipal code to raise revenue. The strategy worked: According to plaintiffs, both fines and fees collection and vehicle seizures increased significantly in Brookside between 2018 and 2020. In 2018, police ordered 50 cars towed and impounded, and by 2020, the number rose to 789. Over the same period, annual traffic citations rose from 382 to over 3,000. As a result, by 2020, revenue from fines, fees and forfeitures made up almost half of Brookside’s annual revenue.

The vast majority of the revenue allegedly went to the police department, as the police force grew to a per-capita size nearly five times larger than the national average. The increase in officers accompanied more citations and arrests – and more revenue. And between 2019 and 2021, the Brookside City Council more than doubled the municipal judge’s salary and increased the annual salary of the town attorney by over $50,000.

In our statement of interest, we asserted that the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause bars significant financial and institutional conflicts of interest, including in the enforcement of municipal code fines, fees and vehicle seizures. As we said in our brief: “Courts, prosecutors, and police should be driven by justice—not revenue. . . . Criminal justice systems tainted by unreasonable incentives stand to punish the poor for their poverty and put law enforcement at odds with the communities they are meant to serve.”

Just like in 2016, this persistent problem is not isolated to Brookside, and it has been clear to me and my colleagues at the Justice Department that we needed to do more. Court leaders, court administrators, lawmakers, advocates and other stakeholders, including many of you here, urged the department to reengage and update our guidance, reflecting both the progress that has been made and the continued pervasiveness of the problem. 

I asked a cross-department team to revisit our 2016 letter on fines and fees and the January 2017 advisory on fines and fees for youth. The new letter the department announced yesterday, jointly signed by Kristen Clarke of the Civil Rights Division, Amy Solomon of the Office for Justice Programs and Rachel Rossi of the Office of Access for Justice — from whom you’ll be hearing this afternoon — revises and updates those documents for the current moment.

This letter is more comprehensive, addressing fees imposed on both adults and juveniles. We have updated the letter to reflect changes in relevant case law since 2016. And we have more clearly cautioned against racially discriminatory enforcement of fines and fees. The letter emphasizes that eliminating unjust fines and fees is one of the best ways for jurisdictions to support the success of youth and low-income individuals, reduce racial disparities in the administration of justice, and build trust between local government and the community.

We make clear in the updated letter that there are circumstances in which assessment of fines and fees may be lawful. But we also make clear that, in certain circumstances, unjust imposition and enforcement of fines and fees violate the civil rights of adults and youth accused of felonies, misdemeanors, quasi-criminal ordinance violations and civil infractions. And we acknowledge that many states, municipalities and court leaders have adopted innovative approaches to reduce their reliance on fines and fees.

We emphasize that unaffordable fines and fees often do not achieve their stated purposes, including frequently generating little or no net revenue. In many cases, they undermine rehabilitation and successful reentry and may increase recidivism. And they can and have eroded trust in the justice system.

In the letter, we lay out a framework for understanding these issues and for judges and court administrators to assess their jurisdiction’s handling of fines and fees consistent with sound public policy. The framework is composed of seven basic constitutional principles, grounded in the Sixth, Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments:

First, the Eighth Amendment prohibits the imposition of fines and fees that are grossly disproportionate to the severity of the offense.

In our letter, we outline the Supreme Court’s 2019 decision in Timbs v. Indiana, in which the Court held that the Eighth Amendment’s Excessive Fines Clause applies to the states. This means courts must consider the severity of the offense in assessing fines and fees that are punitive, even in part. Independent of legal considerations, we recommend that courts consider a person’s economic circumstances when assessing fines and fees.

Second, the Fourteenth Amendment prohibits incarceration for nonpayment of fines and fees without first conducting an ability-to-pay determination and establishing that the failure to pay is willful.  

As the Supreme Court held in Bearden v. Georgia, the Constitution prohibits “punishing a person for [their] poverty,” and equal protection and due process principles require courts to conduct a “careful inquiry” that balances an individual’s interests against the state’s interests. The key question is whether an individual has made sufficient bona fide efforts to obtain the resources to pay. We explain in the letter that the ability-to-pay analysis should not be based on how individuals spend their resources, but rather on criteria such as income and financial resources.

We also encourage jurisdictions to consider presumptions of indigency for certain classes of defendants, including juveniles, so individuals who cannot afford to pay for their basic needs are not saddled with fines and fees they will never be able to pay back.

Third, the Fourteenth Amendment requires the consideration of alternatives before incarcerating individuals who are unable to pay fines and fees.

We explain that imposing certain serious adverse consequences for failure to pay an unaffordable fine or fee, where alternative approaches could serve government interests, violates the Fourteenth Amendment. We recommend that states and localities consider requiring a factfinder to determine that alternatives are inadequate to meet the State’s interest in obtaining payment before penalizing individuals for their inability to pay. 

Fourth, the Fourteenth Amendment prohibits the imposition of fines and fees that create conflicts of interest.

We also discuss the applicable case law addressing how the imposition of fines and feeds can create conflicts of interest.

For example, we cite the Fifth Circuit’s 2019 decision in Cain v. City of New Orleans, in which the court held that parish judges were not neutral decisionmakers because they oversaw collection of fines and fees that funded a substantial portion of a judicial expense fund they administered and that supported the salaries of judicial staff and other court expenses.

Fifth, the Fourteenth Amendment also prohibits conditioning access to the judicial process on the payment of fees by individuals who are unable to pay. 

Predicating access to a hearing, to counsel or other judicial process on the payment of fees such as court costs that can deprive those without financial resources of equal access to justice and may violate their rights. 

As many of you in this room know well, fines and fees assessed by courts are often incorrectly framed as routine administrative matters. We give the example of a motorist who is arrested for driving with a suspended license, who may be told that the penalty for the citation is $300 and that a court date will be scheduled only upon the payment of $300. Not having that $300 should neither deprive the motorist of access to the justice system nor lead to an avalanche of follow-on consequences. A fine should never amount to an entry fee to the courts.

Sixth, the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments require due process protections, such as access to counsel in appropriate cases, as well as notice, when imposing and enforcing fines and fees.

We explain in the letter that if a failure to appear or pay may lead to incarceration, the Sixth Amendment entitles a person to counsel in a criminal case and the Fourteenth Amendment may impose a similar requirement in civil cases.

As to notice, we recommend that courts work to ensure individuals actually receive citations and summonses, and adequately inform individuals of the precise charges against them, the amount they owe or other possible penalties, the date of their court hearing, the availability of alternate means of payment, the rules and procedures of court, their rights as a litigant and whether they must appear in person.

Seventh, the Fourteenth Amendment prohibits the imposition of fines and fees in a manner that intentionally discriminates against a protected class.

As we saw in Ferguson, efforts to collect fines and fees that have a discriminatory effect on members of a particular race may constitute evidence that, in combination with other evidence, could support a finding of intentional discrimination.

Even in the absence of intentional discrimination, the department recommends that courts and other state actors carefully consider whether their collection of fines and fees has disproportionate effects based on race or another protected characteristic. For example, courts should consider whether certain fines and fees practices, such as debt-based driver’s license suspensions, disproportionately affect people of color.

I am thrilled to see this letter out in the world, and I hope it will be a helpful resource and a spark to further ignite change in this area. I know some of you have been asking and waiting for something like this for quite some time. I am grateful for your advocacy and your persistence, and I look forward to continuing to work on these issues together.

Beyond this letter, the Justice Department remains committed to collaborating with court leaders and stakeholders to develop and share solutions. The department is open to serving as a resource, collaborateand promote solutions, and provide grant funding and technical assistance to state, county, local and Tribal courts, including assistance to help court systems move away from an overreliance on fines and fees.

To that end, in the coming weeks the department’s Office of Justice Programs will release a solicitation entitled “The Price of Justice: Rethinking Fines and Fees,” seeking a training and technical assistance provider to work with jurisdictions interested in reforming their fines and fees policies and practices. 

The department’s Office for Access to Justice will be following up on the updated letter by building a best practices guide, highlighting innovative work by states, municipalities and court leaders in this area — work that has been bipartisan across the country.

And the Civil Rights Division is available to provide technical assistance to courts, other recipients of federal financial assistance, and stakeholders, as appropriate. The Division also has important enforcement authority it may deploy where appropriate. And, along with ATJ, the Civil Rights Division may file statements of interest in appropriate cases.

Eliminating the unjust imposition of fines and fees is one of the most effective ways for jurisdictions to support the success of youth and low-income individuals, honor constitutional and statutory obligations, and reduce racial disparities in the administration of justice. As one of my law professors and much-admired colleagues Bryan Stevenson has said, “The opposite of poverty is not wealth, the opposite of poverty is justice.” Thank you all for the work you do every day to promote justice.

Department of Justice Commemorates National Crime Victims’ Rights Week

Source: United States Department of Justice News

Memphis, TN – The Department of Justice’s Office of Victims of Crime (“OVC”) and the United States Attorney’s Office for the Western District of Tennessee, will join communities nationwide in observing National Crime Victims’ Rights Week and celebrating victims’ rights, protections, and services. This year’s observance takes place April 23-29, 2023, and features the theme, “Survivor voices: Elevate. Engage. Effect Change.”

Each year in April, the Department of Justice and United States Attorney’s Offices observe National Crime Victims’ Rights Week nationwide by taking time to honor victims of crime and those who advocate on their behalf. According to a report from the Bureau of Justice Statistics, in 2021, there were more than 4.6 million violent victimizations and 11.7 million property crimes.

The United States Department of Justice’s Office for Victims of Crime leads communities across the country in observing National Crime Victims’ Rights Week. In 1981, President Ronald Reagan proclaimed the first National Crime Victims’ Rights Week to bring greater sensitivity to the needs and right of victims of crime.

Here, in the Western District of Tennessee, we have a dedicated Victim Witness Coordinator who supports federal crime victims by providing victims with essential services, including referrals to counseling, securing temporary housing, assisting with access to victim’s compensation funds, and accompanying victims to court proceedings to provide support and guidance. These services provide victims with tools to reshape their futures.

The U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, provides innovative leadership to federal, state, local, and tribal justice systems, by disseminating state-of the art knowledge and practices across the United States, and providing grants for the implementation of these crime-fighting strategies. Because most of the responsibility for crime control and prevention falls to law enforcement officers in states, cities, and neighborhoods, the federal government can be effective in these areas only to the extent that it can enter partnerships with these officers. National Crime Victims’ Rights Week resources can be found at https://ovc.ncjrs.gov/ncvrw/.

More information about the Office of Justice Programs and its components can be found at www.ojp.gov.

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For more information, please contact Public Information Officer Cherri Green at (901) 544-4231 or cherri.green@usdoj.gov. Follow @ WDTNNews on Twitter for office news and updates.