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Law Enforcement and Corrections

University of Georgia School of Law

Police violence

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Full-Text Articles in Law

The Grand Jury: A Shield Of A Different Sort, R. M. Cassidy, Julian A. Cook Iii Jan 2017

The Grand Jury: A Shield Of A Different Sort, R. M. Cassidy, Julian A. Cook Iii

Georgia Law Review

According to the Washington Post, 991 people were shot to
death by police officers in the United States during calendar year
2015, and 957 people were fatally shot in 2016. A
disproportionate percentage of the citizens killed in these police-
civilian encounters were black. Events in Ferguson, Missouri;
Chicago, Illinois; Charlotte, North Carolina; Baton Rouge,
Louisiana; and Staten Island, New York-to name but a few
affected cities-have now exposed deep distrust between
communities of color and law enforcement. Greater transparency
is necessary to begin to heal this culture of distrust and to inform
the debate going forward about police practices …


Youth-Police Encounters On Chicago's South Side: Acknowledging The Realities, Craig Futterman, Chaclyn Hunt, Jamie Kalven Jan 2017

Youth-Police Encounters On Chicago's South Side: Acknowledging The Realities, Craig Futterman, Chaclyn Hunt, Jamie Kalven

Georgia Law Review

We write from Chicago, a city in upheaval following revelations
about the police shooting of seventeen-year-old Laquan McDonald.
In a matter of days, public debate about patterns of police abuse
and impunity, a discourse extending back to the 1960s and beyond,
has undergone a Copernican revolution. A set of propositions about
the nature of the problem, fiercely resisted for decades by public
and private interests, has been embraced by officials and the
media as axiomatic.
Perhaps the most striking expression of this sea change was the
speech Mayor Rahm Emanuel gave to the Chicago City Council on
December 9, 2015. …


The Problematic Prosecution Of An Asian American Police Officer: Notes From A Participant In People V. Peter Liang, Gabriel J. Chin Jan 2017

The Problematic Prosecution Of An Asian American Police Officer: Notes From A Participant In People V. Peter Liang, Gabriel J. Chin

Georgia Law Review

Peter Liang is a former New York City Police Officer convicted
of accidentally killing a twenty-eight-year-old African-American
man, Akai Gurley in the stairwell of a Brooklyn housing project.
On the evening of Thursday, November 20, 2014, Mr. Liang was a
rookie officer, 11 months out of the police academy. He and his
partner Shaun Landau, also a rookie, were on patrol in the Louis
Pink Houses, a public housing project built by Robert Moses in
East New York, Brooklyn. They were pulling, a mandatory
overtime shift ordered because of recent shootings in the Pink

Houses. This was only their second …


Commodifying Policing: A Recipe For Community-Police Tensions, Nora V. Demleitner Jan 2017

Commodifying Policing: A Recipe For Community-Police Tensions, Nora V. Demleitner

Georgia Law Review

Deadly police-citizen encounters do not occur in a vacuum.
They reflect our times and our society. Since the fatal shooting of
Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, the nation's attention has
been riveted on police killings. In small towns and large cities,
virtually all of the victims have been African-American. In some
cases, the fatal encounters led to riots. Large-scale investigations
by the Department of Justice's Civil Rights Division have provided
insight into some of the incidents.
Deadly police actions against citizens can be viewed as an
internal police problem,' as a symbol of larger societal challenges,
especially racism, or as …


Urban Policing And Public Policy-The Prosecutor's Role, Bruce Green Jan 2017

Urban Policing And Public Policy-The Prosecutor's Role, Bruce Green

Georgia Law Review

No abstract provided.