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Cleveland police officers in neighborhood districts will spend 20 percent of their time engaging with the community under a new plan submitted for a federal judge’s approval this week. That requirement is just one element of the city’s new community policing plan. The monitor of the city’s consent decree asked Judge Solomon Oliver on Thursday to sign off on the proposal, along with plans for recruitment and neighborhood policing committees.
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Here are your morning headlines for Friday, May 18:Cuyahoga Falls sues contractors who replaced utility meters;Hiram College considers eliminating majors,…
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Here are your morning headlines for Tuesday, Feb. 13:Cleveland will hire consultant to clear police complaint backlog;Trump administration's budget…
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The federal monitoring team overseeing the police consent decree in Cleveland released its fourth progress report today.The city’s accomplishments include…
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Cleveland’s police union says it will fight today’s firing of a 21-year patrol veteran who shot an unarmed teenager to death nearly three years ago. The…
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Here are your morning headlines for Wednesday, November 22nd:Wes Goodman's extramarital gay sexual encounters were no secret from conservative GOP…
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Morning Headlines: Cleveland Police Near End of Use-of-Force Training; Aleris Corp Acquisition FailsHere are your morning headlines for Tuesday, November 14th:Love triangle ends in fatal parking lot shooting;Nearly all Cleveland police have completed…
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A family who settled a lawsuit with Cleveland police a year ago has filed a new complaint, accusing the city of sitting on information about the…
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The ACLU of Ohio is asking Cleveland to recommit to the promises made in a 2015 consent decree to reform the Police Department. This Friday marks two…
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Cleveland’s agreement with the Justice Department to reform the city’s police force is one of 14 across the country U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions…