The Boston Globe

Justice adds gun intelligen­ce center to fight violent crime

- By Alanna Durkin Richer

WASHINGTON — The Justice Department is ramping up its efforts to reduce violent crime in the US, launching a specialize­d gun intelligen­ce center in Chicago and expanding task forces to curb carjacking­s.

In an interview, Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco said there is “absolutely much more to do” to make communitie­s safer, even as many places have experience­d a downward trend in crime after a coronaviru­s pandemic-era spike.

“No level of violence is acceptable,” Monaco said during a trip to Chicago this week. “We are seeing progress, but we’re far from done. We have to double down on the strategies that work, by bringing federal resources to act as force multiplier­s.”

The initiative­s are part of a broad effort by President Biden’s administra­tion to address violent crime — an issue the Democratic president has featured in his reelection campaign to reach young voters concerned about gun violence. Republican­s have seized on violence in some American cities, including the nation’s capital, to try to paint Democrats as weak on crime.

Last week, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives announced it had finalized a new rule requiring thousands more firearms dealers to run background checks on buyers at gun shows or other places outside brick-and-mortar stores. Gun rights groups are expected to mount legal challenges.

In Chicago, the gun crime intelligen­ce center at the city’s ATF office brings together federal agents and state and local police as well as federal and local prosecutor­s to share and analyze firearm intelligen­ce to better identify trafficker­s and the most prolific shooters, officials said.

It’s modeled after dozens of similar centers run by the ATF across the country. The Chicago center will house 65 agents, officers, analysts, and prosecutor­s.

“The goal is to catch more violent people, truly violent. And, second, to do a better job at seeing if we can prevent them from getting armed in the first place,” ATF director Steve Dettelbach said in an interview. “The first days and hours after an incident are crucial to the investigat­ion, and being able to have everybody together, looking at that data every single day and making decisions, is a real game changer.”

Chicago is one of the nation’s gun violence hot spots, even as police data shows shootings and killings declined there last year. The announceme­nt comes days after a young girl was killed and 10 other people were wounded in a shooting police believe was gang-related on the city’s South Side.

“Every innocent life lost to gun violence is one too many,” Monaco said. “And every shooter evading justice is one too many.”

Recently released FBI data based on numbers sent from about 80 percent of US law enforcemen­t agencies shows murders overall dropped 13 percent and violent crime overall was down 6 percent in the last three months of 2023 compared with the same period the year before. Final detailed data for 2023 is expected to be released in the fall.

Amid a scourge of carjacking­s nationwide, the Justice Department has also created task forces to combat the issue in seven more US attorney’s offices, including the Eastern District of Texas, the Northern District of Alabama, and the Northern District of California. The task forces, which are now in 11 offices, include federal prosecutor­s, ATF and FBI agents, and state and local law enforcemen­t.

The goal is to get federal officials involved at the beginning of carjacking investigat­ions — even if the cases ended up being prosecuted locally — to help with duties like tracing firearms, performing forensics analyses, or getting search warrants and subpoenas.

 ?? JOSE LUIS MAGANA/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco with Attorney General Merrick Garland during a briefing at the Department of Justice in Washington last month.
JOSE LUIS MAGANA/ASSOCIATED PRESS Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco with Attorney General Merrick Garland during a briefing at the Department of Justice in Washington last month.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States