Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. attorney office in state to add lawyer

Aim is paring violent crime in district that includes LR

- RYAN TARINELLI

The U.S. attorney’s office in Little Rock will receive a new federal prosecutor under a federal initiative aimed at reducing violent crime, authoritie­s announced this week.

A total of 40 new federal prosecutor­s will be added to 27 districts across the country under the Project Safe Neighborho­ods, a federal program that U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions said in October he would reinvigora­te.

The federal program, introduced in 2001, “strives to identify the most violent locations in the district and the individual­s who drive the gun and gang violence in our cities,” according to the U.S. attorney’s office in the Eastern District of Arkansas.

Cody Hiland, U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Arkansas, praised the decision to add an additional position to the office and said Sessions has made curbing violent crime a focus during his time in office.

“Violent crime, especially gun crimes, continues to be a plague on our communitie­s,” Hiland said in a news release sent Thursday. The office has not yet hired an attorney for the new position.

The news release said Hiland in the coming weeks will be announcing new initiative­s and programs aimed at addressing violent crime in the district, particular­ly in Little Rock. The district encompasse­s 41 counties, including Pulaski County.

Little Rock saw an upswing of violent crime in 2017. The city had 55 killings in 2017 — the highest yearly total in a decade and the third-highest since 1993, when the city had a record 76 homicides.

In July, Little Rock attracted national attention after a shooting injured 25

people in a downtown nightclub. Three additional people were injured as they fled that shooting. The shooting, which authoritie­s said was gang-related, sparked the creation of an FBI-led task force to focus on gangs and violent crime in Little Rock.

In an interview Wednesday, Little Rock Police Chief Kenton Buckner credited the task force with the arrests of several key individual­s, and said support from state and federal partners helped local police get a better handle on last summer’s crime in the city.

Buckner did not elaborate on any of the task force’s arrests.

“There’s still a number of ongoing investigat­ions that we have that we hope to be able to bring to a closure sometime here in the early spring,” Buckner said. He said authoritie­s expect some “significan­t indictment­s” as a result of the task force and the continued efforts with federal partners.

The investigat­ion into the nightclub shooting is still open, but Buckner said investigat­ors are pleased with the progress so far and the arrests they have made.

Adding a new position to the U.S. attorney’s office in Little Rock is rare and underscore­s violent crime problems within the district and in Little Rock, said Assistant U.S. Attorney Chris Givens. The new position will be the 23rd criminal attorney in the office, he said.

Givens said the position must be advertised for a certain period of time.

Little Rock, along with West Memphis, also remain part of the Public Safety Partnershi­p, a federal program that supports local law enforcemen­t officials and prosecutor­s in investigat­ing, prosecutin­g and deterring violent crime.

According to the Department of Justice, the Public Safety Partnershi­p “builds on lessons” learned from the Violence Reduction Network, in which both cities also participat­ed.

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