Department of Justice, Local Leaders Announce Agreement to Combat Violent Crime in West Tennessee

The Department of Justice (DOJ) and local leaders in West Tennessee are working together in order to reduce violent crime, according to a release from the DOJ.

United States Attorney Joseph C. Murphy Jr., joined by nonprofit organizations, clergy leaders, and other community leaders, announced a new “Better Community Summit” effort to tackle the crimes.

The meeting, which will take place on June 4, will discuss domestic violence prevention, gang talk, community conflict resolution, and de-escalation training.

“To achieve this goal, the Department has directed every U.S. Attorney’s Office to formulate a strategic plan designed to reduce violent crime. To that end, our office convened meetings with over 40 clergy leaders across the greater Memphis area to discuss violent crime and recommend possible solutions,” the press release explained.

The summits will continue quarterly and be held in the areas of Whitehaven/Westwood and Hickory Hill/East Memphis.

“This is not political, it’s biblical,” said Pastor Ricky Foy at a press conference. “This is a unified group of people who are really concerned about our community.”

The planned summit in Memphis is one of several programs launched by the Department of Justice in recent weeks to address violent crime.

For example, in Minnesota, violent crime continues to impact the Twin Cities. Therefore, the DOJ pledged to hire more prosecutors and allow all existing prosecutors to take on violent crime cases.

“This new strategy is designed to bring swift justice to our communities and to the victims of violent crimes. But it is also designed as a signal to violent offenders to stop. This violence cannot continue – it is causing far too much fear, too much pain and too much heartbreak for families and our community,” said U.S. Attorney Andrew Luger.

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Cooper Moran is a reporter for The Tennessee Star and The Star News Network. Email tips to [email protected].
Photo “Joseph C. Murphy Jr.” by United States Department of Justice. Background Photo “U.S. Department of Justice” by Coolcaesar. CC BY-SA 3.0.

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5 Thoughts to “Department of Justice, Local Leaders Announce Agreement to Combat Violent Crime in West Tennessee”

  1. Jay

    All urban areas have the same problem. Progressive leaders. They refuse to be hard on crime. You reap what you sow.

  2. 83ragtop50

    Will Arkansas please annex Memphis?

  3. Il Professore

    Hiring more prosecutors isn’t the answer. Having the existing prosecutors fully prosecute crimes and with court handing out appropriate sentences will reduce crime. Prosecutors during these woke times have positioned to being crime lenient. The consequence to offenders is too frequently light or none at all. Perhaps the State Attorney General needs to have more say in the prosecutorial practices for statewide consistency.

  4. Randy

    You have a lot of single parent(Mothers) having children at a very young age. These women are not mature enough to raise these children. The mothers and fathers behave like kids and therefore their children grow up in that atmosphere and behave the same way. A lot of young men join gangs for a sense of belonging because the parents aren’t raising them, They are on the street staring at 12-14yrs old.

  5. nicky wicks

    uh…you mean memphis. not west TN. take memphis out and the crime rate would probably be very low.

    dem-run = crime-run

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