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- How Some Cities Are Helping Drug Offenders Instead of Arresting Them - VICE
Baltimore, Chicago, Houston, New Orleans, San Francisco, and others are considering LEAD, too, suggesting a genuine alternative to some of the worst policies of the war on drugs is
- Offering treatment to drug users instead of arresting them reduces . . .
In Tucson, instead of arresting people for illicit drug use or related crimes such as trespassing, officers may encourage those people to enroll in substance abuse treatment and give them rides
- Law Enforcement Assisted Diversion (LEAD): Reducing the Role of . . .
Many U S cities are taking steps to reduce the role of criminalization in their local drug policies Seattle, Washington has been at the forefront of this effort, pioneering a novel pre-booking diversion program for minor drug law violations known as Law Enforcement Assisted Diversion (LEAD)
- Diverting Low-Level Criminals to Drug-Treatment Programs Instead of . . .
Adults accused of minor, drug-use related crimes are eligible for tailored treatment, counseling, peer support and recovery services in lieu of arrest or prosecution Criminal charges are put on hold during treatment and wiped out for participants who complete the six-month program
- 12 Ways Cities are Stepping Up in the Fight Against Opioids
Cities have been calling for direct funding for treatment centers and increasing the availability of the lifesaving drug naloxone, which is used to stop opiate overdoses
- We Can’t Arrest Our Way Out of the Drug Problem
This, along with legal challenges to racially disproportionate arrest rates, is why Pugel and a consortium of community groups started a program known as Law Enforcement Assisted Diversion, or LEAD, which offers treatment instead of jail time to drug users at the point of arrest
- Offering treatment to drug users instead of arresting them . . . - Yahoo
Police diversion programs for drug users shift officers’ focus from criminalization to treatment
- New on the Conversation: Offering treatment to drug users instead of . . .
When police get suspected drug abusers treatment rather than arresting them, those people are less likely to abuse drugs or commit drug-related crimes in the future, new, limited research finds This kind of police intervention can help reduce opioid abuse
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