BEWARE: Obama boosts recruitment of 'national police force'
Started by Robert M
Back in 2008, Barack Obama, then a presidential candidate, called for a “civilian national security force.”
And now it looks like he's stepping up recruitment efforts, and police departments across the country are rapidly being sucked into the scheme ...
And now it looks like he's stepping up recruitment efforts, and police departments across the country are rapidly being sucked into the scheme ...
White House: 53 departments sign on to federal oversight
Cheryl Chumley WND
Cheryl K. Chumley is a staff writer for WND and author of "The Devil in DC." and "Police State USA: How Orwell's Nightmare is Becoming our Reality."
Police around the nation are joining on to Obama’s plan
Announced
Friday, 53 police departments around the country have signed on so far
to the White House-pressed Police Data Initiative, a plan by Obama to
make crime-fighting more technology-driven and accountable to
higher-ups, but that is seen by critics as a not-so-subtle federal
takeover of community policing.
The
program, which comes by way of a recommendation from the Task Force on
21st Century Policing that Obama launched in December – which was
created by the White House in response to widely reported instances of
police-community clashes and alleged cop discrimination against
minorities – is aimed at enhancing “data transparency and analysis”
among police departments around the nation.
In White House jargon,
according to a May 2015 “Launching the Police Data Initiative” press
release: “Through the initiative, key stakeholders are establishing a
community of practice that will allow for knowledge sharing,
community-sourced problem solving and the establishment of documented
best practices that can serve as examples for police departments
nationwide.”
The ultimate goal?
“Increased trust and impact,” the White House reported.
The
initiative in 2015 kicked off in Camden, New Jersey, a “predominantly
black city” that’s “one of America’s most violent and also among its
poorest,” NewsOne reported.
Then, 20 other communities joined on to the program as well, which
included training from federal authorities on how to gather and use data
to “increase transparency, build community trust and support
innovation,” the White House reported.
But it’s grown. Now, the number of participating police departments has jumped to 53.
And
critics say it’s little more than a federalization of local police
because it puts the White House at the helm of deciding such matters as
cameras on cop uniforms and whether or not local jurisdictions accept
equipment from the military.
Critics
also say the data that’s being gathered at the local levels will lead
to a massive federal database, overseen by federal authorities, who will
then decide whether the individual police department is pursuing
crime-fighting techniques in a manner that doesn’t discriminate against
minorities.
As the New American put
it back in March of 2015: “The plan ... will use U.S. taxpayer dollars
to deploy ‘experts’ and ‘researchers’ charged with training officers to
act in a manner that the [Department of Justice] deems just – in essence
doing the bidding of the Obama administration. Officially, the Justice
Department will be helping local officials ‘fight crime’ under the
scheme.”
And as the Blaze reported in August of 2015: “Barack Obama’s administration has begun the second phase in federalizing the police.”
Attorney
General Loretta Lynch underscored in October 2015 the need for the
federal government to collect data from local police departments, in
order to “improve the accuracy and consistency” of how cops conduct
their business.
“The
[DOJ’s] position and the administration’s position has consistently
been that we need to have national, consistent data,” she said, in a statement on the Justice Department website.
“This information is useful because it helps us see trends, it helps us
promote accountability and transparency. We’re also going further in
developing standards for publishing information about deaths in custody
as well, because transparency and accountability are helped by this kind
of national data.”
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