A. | Concerns both criminal and civil caseloads for the courts |
B. | Both police and civil libertarians oppose this, but for different ideological reasons. |
C. | Parties agree to negotiate with the aid of an impartial person who facilitates the settlement negotiations. |
D. | Helps foster an open, professional relationship between the police and the media in which both sides know and understand their responsibilities |
E. | Creates an inaccurate expectation in the minds of jurors regarding the power and use of forensic evidence. |
F. | A means of unifying agencies and achieving cost savings. |
G. | An alternative dispute resolution similar to a trial but less formal. |
H. | Rests on the proposition that a law enforcement error, no matter how technical, can be used to throw an entire case out of court. |
I. | Focuses on the jury predictability, case development, and other fieldwork. |
J. | Coordinates all response and counter-terrorism elements within a community or metropolitan area |
K. | Provides a continuous process for leadership development and organizational change. |
L. | Represents a burgeoning area of use of force and violence both against and by the police. |
M. | Assumes that a relatively small number of people were responsible for a comparatively large percentage of crimes |
N. | Employing security procedures with the understanding of the current situation and types and targets of violence. |
O. | Gunfire that spreads among officers who believe that they, or their colleagues, are facing a threat. |