Introducing 

Prezi AI.

Your new presentation assistant.

Refine, enhance, and tailor your content, source relevant images, and edit visuals quicker than ever before.

Loading…
Transcript

Connections

Central Argument

Police come together to think of better strategies to handle different level situations. The whole book was logos, everything was based off of facts.

People argue that police profession has entered a new , intelligence-led, anti terrorism era.

Other Arguments

1) Let the police do their job

2) Not all police are bad

3) Its not only white cops who do this, all cops do it.

4) [ Inserts victoms name] was no angel

George L. Kelling

An american criminologist, a professor emeritus in the school of Criminal Justice at Rutgers University.

Not Privilaged

I'd like the book to have mini situations or examples of crimes that happened.

Some Repetition.

Didn't appeal to my age.

Broken Window Policing

A model of policing that focuses on the importance of the disorder, a broken window is a misdemeanor arrest. Its not serious enough to be a felony but is usually or can be punished by a fine or a jail term of up to a year.

Citations

http://www.manhattan-institute.org/expert/george-l-kelling

Conclusion

Police Brutality

Impact on me

with these strategies it helps show that police really are trying to get unexperienced officers more training to not only help the community but help the officers. I thought that because officers do their job wrong they should be fired.

I see videos of innocent people getting beat on all over social media such as facebook, and i believe communities are just trying to spread the message of what goes on.

In conclusion this book was a bit confusing but very informational

Michael J. Jenkins and John De Carlo

Kelly Thomas was a homeless man diagnosed with schizophrenia. He lived on the streets of Fullerton California. He was beaten to death by two officers who got a call from a store owner who assumed he vandilized the side of his store.

Michael is an Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice at The University of Scranton.

John is an Associate Professor of Law and Police Science at John Jay College.

Police Leaders In The New Community Problem Solving Era

Learn more about creating dynamic, engaging presentations with Prezi