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The "bad apple" theory of police killings is that they tend to be the work of a small core of cops, who have been the subject of many prior complaints.
Initially based on a 1982 article by James Q. Wilson and George L. Kelling, the broken-windows theory of police enforcement holds, in rough terms, that aggressive pursuit of minor crimes will lead to a reduction of major crimes.
"Guys with beards… ANNALS OF LAW about the Canadian obscenity laws, especially the impact of a case called R. v. Butler and a gay-and-lesbian bookstore in Toronto called… How O. J. Simpson's defense team mounted a theory of police conspiracy — and turned his case into a civil-rights melodrama.
At the same time, the "broken window" theory of police enforcement took hold.
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Letitia James, New York's public advocate, partly blames the "broken windows" theory of policing for Mr Garner's death.
The NYPD's "broken windows" theory of policing vigorously focuses on small crimes, theoretically preventing larger ones like assault.
The police commissioner, William J. Bratton, has been a proponent of the "broken windows" theory of policing, which holds that arrests for small violations help prevent larger crimes.
Their feelings may be related to the so-called broken windows theory of policing, pioneered in the early 1980's by James Q. Wilson and George Kelling. Wilson and George Kelling
The chief, who pioneered the "Broken Windows" theory of policing in New York City as police commissioner from 1994 to 1996, used a computer system called CompStat to map crimes and to allocate police accordingly.
An obituary on Saturday about James Q . Wilson whose "broken windows" theory of policing laid the groundwork for crime reduction programs in New York, Los Angeles and other cities, misstated the name of the university he attended.
He is a believer in the "broken windows" theory of policing and put it into practice in New York by focusing on small infractions that might lead to more serious crimes.
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