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NEWS of the Day - Sept 3, 2013
on some LACP issues of interest

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NEWS of the Day
on some issues of interest to the community policing and neighborhood activist across the country

EDITOR'S NOTE: The following group of articles from local newspapers and other sources constitutes but a small percentage of the information available to the community policing and neighborhood activist public. It is by no means meant to cover every possible issue of interest, nor is it meant to convey any particular point of view ...

We present this simply as a convenience to our readership ...
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Have you 'liked' your cop today? Law enforcement gets own social media sites

by M. Alex Johnson

If you're a cop, Facebook can be a minefield. It's not a good idea to sound off about the sergeant or hash over confidential investigative techniques with your buddies — and 1.2 billion other users. But what if there were a Facebook just for cops?

It turns out there is. 20for25.com launched two weeks ago as a closed, secure social media site "for cops by cops."

"Law enforcement professionals need a place to network, share training ideas, and socialize in a medium that is safe and secure," the new site said in an announcement of its launch Aug. 19. So before law enforcement officers can complete registration, 20for25 ("10-20" is standard police code for a location report, and "10-25" is a request to meet in person) verifies their credentials with their employing agency.

20for25 isn't alone in the market. In October, former New York Police Commissioner Bill Bratton will launch BlueLine, " the secure professional network built exclusively for law enforcement."

"At a time when the growing global market for social networking solutions is transforming corporations, the public safety community — individuals with perhaps the greatest need for real-time collaboration — has been left behind with analog tools," BlueLine's parent company, Bratton Technologies, says in its funding pitch through AngelList, the Silicon Valley startup incubator that has nurtured such successes as Uber, Voxer, 500px and Disqus.

(Bratton is a law enforcement analyst for NBC News.)

BlueLine is less like Facebook than 20for25 is. It'll also provide mechanisms for the thousands of U.S. law enforcement agencies to collaborate in real time, as well as a private marketplace to buy and sell equipment.

BlueLine has been in beta testing at three California police agencies since July, including the Los Angeles Police Department. It isn't yet publicly viewable, but the Bratton technologies provided a screenshot of its implementation at the LAPD: (Screenshot on site)

Bratton Technologies

BlueLine, a closed social network for law enforcement and security officers, has been in beta testing at the Los Angeles Police Department and other agencies since July and will launch in October at the International Association of Chiefs of Police conference in Philadelphia.

Public safety officers are, by definition, public employees, answerable to the public. So why do they need a private network at all, let alone two?

After all, neither site is, or can be, completely private.

20for25 stresses that it will not "use, sell or disclose your personal information for any other purpose without your consent unless required by law ." [Emphasis added.]

Not yet having publicly launched, BlueLine doesn't have a specific policy posted. Bratton Technologies, its parent company, has a similar policy, saying it will never share information without permission — except "when we believe release is appropriate to comply with the law or to protect the rights, property, or safety of Bratton Technologies, our users, or others.

The real selling point is safety.

"The power of the Internet — social media in particular — has brought danger home to officers and their families," the FBI warned in a report in November. "They cannot shield themselves as easily from the repercussions of their jobs defending the community."

"In the past, police could to some extent protect themselves and their loved ones from threats," it said in the November issue of the FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin.

But "with increased exposure of personal information through social media, preventing these antagonists from crossing the line that separates officers' professional and personal lives is difficult," it said.

BlueLine will launch in Philadelphia in October at the annual conference of the International Associations of Chiefs of Police, which has invested heavily in law enforcement-related social media education and advocacy.

The IACP Center for Social Media is devoted primarily to helping agencies use social media to reach out to the public, but it also notes scenarios in which social media can bite back.

Public posts commenting on active cases can jeopardize investigations and even end up as grounds for successful appeals, it warns, and criminals have been documented using photos that officers have posted online to track them down.

"Postings by officers and other emergency responders continue to make headlines nationwide and very publicly cast doubt on those officers and their abilities to make good judgments," Boise, Idaho, Police Chief Michael Masterson reports in the current issue of the IACP's magazine, The Police Chief.

Cops will always vent, Masterson writes, but "a passing thought or a gripe posted on Twitter or Facebook is not kept among friends; it could essentially be available to the entire social networking universe."

"New technologies are presenting new challenges for officer safety in a huge variety of ways, and those technologies are developing at a frantic and almost overwhelming pace," he said.

http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/09/02/20295392-have-you-liked-your-cop-today-law-enforcement-gets-own-social-media-sites?lite&ocid=msnhp&pos=7

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New York

Bill Thompson Calls for ‘New Era' of Policing After 1-Year-Old's Death

by Kamelia Kilawan

A day after a baby boy was shot to death in his stroller, mayoral candidate Bill Thompson is saying enough is enough.

“There must be a new era of community policing,” Mr. Thompson declared at a press conference today, standing solemnly beside his wife, outraged community leaders and grieving residents. They were next to an abandoned lot in the Brownsville neighborhood of Brooklyn, where 1-year-old Antiq Hennis was killed.

“The community needs to step up and say we're not gonna allow this. When something like this happens, the people need to be given up quickly. And, at the same point, I've always talked about the need for a new era of community policing–officers on the ground and in neighborhoods, working closely with the residents. That's how we're going to get guns off the streets,” Mr. Thompson continued.

Mr. Thompson once took a more moderate tone on policing issues than some of his electoral rivals and has since been ramping up his rhetoric as the NYPD's stop-and-frisk policy takes center stage in the mayor's race. But Tony Herbert, the president of the Brooklyn East chapter of the National Action Network founded by Rev. Al Sharpton and a potential candidate for the State Senate next year, said he called Mr. Thompson to join him at the press conference because they were old friends, not politics.

In an interview after the event, Mr. Herbert said he had known Mr. Thompson since he was 14 years old living across the street. Now he said he often seeks the former comptroller's advice on deterring crime in Brooklyn. “We've always been able to talk to him even when he was comptroller. And he was able to lend us some guidance,” Mr. Herbert explained.

Other politicians were also present today.

Chris Banks, a candidate for City Council who founded the antipoverty group East New York United Concerned Citizens, Inc. said that he often felt immune to the constant violence in his neighborhood.

“I just wish it would stop,” he said adding, “Until we kill that mentality, we won't get anywhere.”

http://politicker.com/2013/09/bill-thompson-calls-for-new-era-of-policing-after-1-year-olds-death/

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