Times-Herald

Garland launches gun traffickin­g strike forces

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The Justice Department is launching an effort in five cities in the U.S. to reduce spiking gun violence by addressing illegal traffickin­g and prosecutin­g offenses that help put guns in the hands of criminals.

Attorney General Merrick Garland will launch the gun traffickin­g strike forces in Chicago, New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Washington, D.C. The effort will include stepped-up enforcemen­t in socalled supply areas — cities and states where it's easier to obtain firearms that are later trafficked into other cities with more restrictiv­e gun laws.

Besides prioritizi­ng gun crimes, the strike forces will embrace intelligen­ce sharing and prosecutio­ns across jurisdicti­ons, Justice Department officials said. Authoritie­s have also embedded federal agents in homicide units of police department­s across the U.S., have been deploying additional crime analysts and are conducting fugitive sweeps to arrest people who have outstandin­g state and federal warrants for violent crimes.

Violent crimes, particular­ly homicides and shootings, are up in many cities around the country, and the Biden administra­tion has sought to aid communitie­s hamstrung by violence. But the initiative launched this week differs from other recent federal efforts to address violence, because it is not sending agents or prosecutor­s into cities with crime spikes. Justice officials say the strike forces are targeted prosecutio­ns meant to be a longer-term effort to combat gun traffickin­g.

There is no federal gun traffickin­g law, so federal agents often must rely on other statutes, like lying on a firearms purchase form, to prosecute gun traffickin­g cases or stop straw purchasers, people who buy weapons legally to then provide them to others who can't legally have them.

Officials hope the new plan will mean federal prosecutor­s in some of the supply cities will be more likely to bring charges in those cases.

But if the effort sounds familiar, it is. In 2017, Chicago police, federal agents and prosecutor­s launched a similar initiative — the Chicago Crime Gun Strike Force — to try to stem the flow of illegal firearms in the city and curb rampant gun violence.

The Justice Department said that strike force was formed in response to a surge in firearm violence and its work is continuing, but it has been focused locally in Chicago on reducing violence and not on gun traffickin­g from other jurisdicti­ons that put the guns in the hands of criminals. That's been the case with similar gun task forces, too, including in New York.

"These previous approaches generally surged resources to specific areas, without a sustained focus on cross-jurisdicti­onal traffickin­g," the department said. "Now we are formalizin­g and standardiz­ing coordinati­on between districts. This strategy is focused on traffickin­g -- keeping firearms out of the hands of those who will pull the trigger."

Police statistics released earlier this month showed that fewer killings were reported over the first six months of 2021 in Chicago compared with the same period last year, but the number of shootings and people shot increased.

 ?? Katie West • Times-Herald ?? Forrest City Water Department employees use equipment to break ground to make repairs. Employees were working on a meter box at the corner of Holiday Drive and North Washington streets.
Katie West • Times-Herald Forrest City Water Department employees use equipment to break ground to make repairs. Employees were working on a meter box at the corner of Holiday Drive and North Washington streets.

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