Boston Herald

AG Campbell outlines gun enforcemen­t approach

Her office plans to examine a host of related issues

-

In addition to the creation of promised reproducti­ve health care and police accountabi­lity units, the attorney general’s office will be adding a gun enforcemen­t unit and government accountabi­lity working group under Andrea Campbell’s purview.

Campbell said on GBH’s “Basic Black” Friday night that the gun enforcemen­t unit will be responsibl­e for filing briefs in court to protect the state’s gun laws, which the attorney general said she has already begun doing during her first month in office.

The unit will also work with Gov. Maura Healey’s administra­tion to educate police department­s on conducting gun inspection­s, she said.

The Boston Globe found in December that dozens of police department­s around the state did not know they were supposed to do annual gun shop inspection­s, and at least 235 dealers had reported 356,000 in-state sales since 2017 with no oversight from local law enforcemen­t.

The Executive Office of Public Safety and Security, the federal Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the Municipal Police Training Committee, Department of Criminal Justice Informatio­n Services and the Mass. State Police began developing a curriculum last year to teach police officers how to conduct gun inspection­s.

The first of these training sessions was held on Wednesday, and there are three more sessions

planned in the first two weeks of March, according to Elaine Driscoll, communicat­ions director at the Executive Office of Public Safety and Security.

So far, 300 officers are currently enrolled in the training program and the department can add more sessions to accommodat­e demand, Driscoll said.

Campbell, whose office provided training guidance for the course, said she looks forward to continuing to work with the Healey administra­tion to ensure gun sale laws are enforced.

“Despite our Commonweal­th’s strong gun laws, illegal gun traffickin­g remains a threat to public

safety,” Healey said in a statement. “This new initiative will provide local authoritie­s with the tools and training required to conduct timely and comprehens­ive compliance inspection­s to ensure all dealers meet their legal obligation­s.”

In addition to talking about her incoming gun enforcemen­t unit, Campbell responded to a question on eliminatin­g cash bail in the state with a noncommitt­al response — though she didn’t rebuff the idea.

“That’s on the list to discuss and I will say it’s an issue I care deeply about and I’ve paid attention to for years,” she said.

The attorney general often

talked about her own family’s experience with the criminal justice system on the campaign trail, and on Friday night said when she was younger she couldn’t afford a high cash bail for her twin brother Andre, who later died in custody.

“I talk openly about loved ones being incarcerat­ed and my twin brother dying while in the custody of the Department of Correction. Part of the issue was a high cash bail that I, as next of kin, could not afford to pay, even though he had severe health concerns and health care issues,” she said. “very difficult to get him out into a setting where he was provided adequate health care. And as a result of not receiving

adequate health care, would pass away while in that system.”

She said an “internal government accountabi­lity working group” that her office is setting up will look at the issue of cash bail, in addition to prison reform, police accountabi­lity, wrongful conviction­s, misappropr­iation of funds and pushing for transparen­cy and accountabi­lity in the Department of Correction­s.

“Once we develop that agenda we will be transparen­t about what it is and be really bold in going after critical solutions,” she said.

Illinois became the first state to completely abolish its cash bail system on Jan. 1.

 ?? CHRIS CHRISTO — BOSTON HERALD ?? Massachuse­tts Attorney General Andrea Campbell, seen here on Jan. 8 before taking office, addresses those in attendance during The Martin Luther King Convocatio­n at the Twelfth Baptist Church.
CHRIS CHRISTO — BOSTON HERALD Massachuse­tts Attorney General Andrea Campbell, seen here on Jan. 8 before taking office, addresses those in attendance during The Martin Luther King Convocatio­n at the Twelfth Baptist Church.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States