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Partner Event

Crime and Policing—A Conversation Determined by You (SoCal Solutions)

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Partner Event

Crime and Policing—A Conversation Determined by You (SoCal Solutions)

About the Event

FREE

KPCC In Person is talking law enforcement, and you picked the topic.

We started by inviting your questions on crime and public safety. We narrowed them to three, and you let us know what matters most by voting for the question you wanted as the focus of our conversation. The responses have been tallied, and the top vote-getter is focused on transparency in law enforcement.

KPCC correspondent Frank Stoltze and special guests will discuss how recent changes in state law and local policy are opening up previously secret police records to public scrutiny. How will that affect the way law enforcement does its job? How will it affect the relationship between the police and the community?

Join KPCC In Person and JANM’s National Center for the Preservation of Democracy for a conversation that was determined by you. Guests include Arif Alikhan, director of constitutional policing and policy at LAPD; Peter Bibring, director of police practices for ACLU of Southern California; and Connie Rice, civil rights activist, lawyer, and co-founder of Advancement Project (CA). Additional guests to be announced. A post-event reception will follow the program so that we may continue the conversation.

This program is free, but RSVPs are recommended using the link below.

In the Tateuchi Democracy Forum

Wednesday, May 22, 2019

7:00 PM PDT

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About the Event

FREE

KPCC In Person is talking law enforcement, and you picked the topic.

We started by inviting your questions on crime and public safety. We narrowed them to three, and you let us know what matters most by voting for the question you wanted as the focus of our conversation. The responses have been tallied, and the top vote-getter is focused on transparency in law enforcement.

KPCC correspondent Frank Stoltze and special guests will discuss how recent changes in state law and local policy are opening up previously secret police records to public scrutiny. How will that affect the way law enforcement does its job? How will it affect the relationship between the police and the community?

Join KPCC In Person and JANM’s National Center for the Preservation of Democracy for a conversation that was determined by you. Guests include Arif Alikhan, director of constitutional policing and policy at LAPD; Peter Bibring, director of police practices for ACLU of Southern California; and Connie Rice, civil rights activist, lawyer, and co-founder of Advancement Project (CA). Additional guests to be announced. A post-event reception will follow the program so that we may continue the conversation.

This program is free, but RSVPs are recommended using the link below.

In the Tateuchi Democracy Forum

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