The document provides an overview of Dallas' community prosecution program and its growth through grant funding. It discusses the staffing model of the community prosecution team which includes community prosecutors, code officers, and fire prevention officers. It also outlines the four key principles of community prosecution: recognizing the community's role in public safety, engaging in problem solving, establishing partnerships, and evaluating outcomes. Examples are given of different types of problem properties addressed by the team through strategic problem solving and gaining voluntary compliance or legal enforcement. The role of community courts in adjudicating quality of life offenses through community service and rehabilitation programs is also summarized.
2. COMMUNITY PROSECUTION &
GRANT FUNDING:
A LOOK AT DALLAS’ GROWTH
Maureen Milligan, Chief of Community
Prosecution & Community Courts, Dallas City
Attorney’s Office
Juan “Johnny” Ramos, Community Prosecution
Code Supervisor, Dallas Department of Code
Compliance
4. DEFINITION OF COMMUNITY PROSECUTION
“Community prosecution focuses on targeted areas and involves a long
term, proactive partnership among the prosecutor’s office, law
enforcement, the community, and public and private organizations,
whereby the authority of the prosecutor’s office is used to solve
problems, improve public safety, and enhance the quality of life in
the community.”
---American Prosecutors Research Institute/Bureau of Justice Assistance
Community Prosecution Focus Group, 1995
5. FOUR KEY PRINCIPLES
OF COMMUNITY PROSECUTION
1. Recognizing the community’s role in public
safety
2. Engaging in problem solving
3. Establishing and maintaining partnerships
4. Evaluating outcomes of activities
Source: http://www.ndaa.org/nccp_home.html
6. DALLAS COMMUNITY PROSECUTION TEAM: MISSION
STATEMENT
Mission:
The mission of the Community Prosecution Team is to proactively improve public
safety and the quality of life within the City of Dallas by:
Engaging the community to identify and solve nuisance-related problems,
Strategically collaborating with other city departments and local agencies to
more effectively deploy city resources,
Seeking voluntary compliance from property owners who maintain substandard
or hazardous properties or illegal land uses, and
Using all available legal tools to gain compliance from non-compliant property
owners.
7. FIRST PRINCIPLE:
RECOGNIZING THE COMMUNITY’S ROLE IN PUBLIC
SAFETY
Proactively invite stakeholders
to express their concerns
Work together to identify and
define problems
Develop and implement
solutions
8. DECISION POINT: DEGREE OF IMMERSION
Office location
Caseload size
Size of geographic area
Team members’
experience and skill set
9. 7 target areas
15 Assistant City
Attorneys
10 Code Officers
2 Fire Prevention
Officers
12 Community
Court staff
members
COMMUNITY PROSECUTION TARGET AREAS
15. PROBLEM PROPERTIES
What do we usually do?
“It’s not my problem”
“I am only responsible for…”
“I’d like to help, but I don’t have the resources”
“It is a house at 123 Main Street. It is owned by John Smith.”
16. STRATEGIC GUIDELINES
Initial visit to property
Identify type of problem property
Identify type of owner
Develop strategy & timeline for addressing problems
Who/what is part of the problem?
Who can be part of the solution?
What needs to happen first? Next? Last?
Make personal contact with owner
Seek voluntary compliance
Enforcement
17. TYPES OF PROBLEM PROPERTIES
Active drug/prostitution house
Stash house (drugs or stolen goods)
Smokehouse
Gang hangout/Hangout for teenagers
Homeless encampment
Potential location for crime
Theft, burglary
Graffiti
Place to take a victim
Home for dogs, cats, wildlife
Substandard & dangerous
Illegal (zoning; lack of licenses/permits)
18. TYPES OF “OWNERS” OF
PROBLEM PROPERTIES
Deceased owner
No will, no identifiable heirs
No will, identifiable heirs, unwilling to care for property
Drug-addicted/mentally ill heirs
Investor
Not local, no property management or unqualified management
Local, high-volume of properties, money is sole focus
Local, no funds
Local, unmotivated
Bank-owned
Fraudulent owner
City Owned
20. WHAT WAS THE PROBLEM?
Reportedly mentally unstable occupant with an alleged history of
engaging in criminal mischief and violence
Slashed neighbors’ tires and broke windows
Racist statements
Walked through neighborhood shouting and screaming
Occupant would have remained in neighborhood and house would have
continued to deteriorate
21. HOW HAD WE PREVIOUSLY TRIED TO SOLVE THE
PROBLEM?
Code inspections
Notices of violation
Outreach by neighbors
Social Services
Referral to tax collection law firm for outstanding property taxes
But then it becomes city-owned…
22. WHAT ELSE COULD WE DO?
Solution: Writ of possession
Multi-agency operation
Sheriff’s office (execute writ)
Code inspectors (inspect premises)
Animal Control (seize animals)
Crisis Intervention (interview occupant)
DPD Mental Health Officer (mental health warrant)
Later joined by……
Fire department (make entry with power saw)
Bomb squad (inspect trip wire & evacuate neighborhood)
News station
35. WHAT WAS THE PROBLEM?
Original owner built numerous structures without any building permits;
Structures spanned two separate lots
Current owner planned to open group home and allow tenants to rent
individual shacks
Located across the street from senior day care, 3 blocks from
elementary school
36. HOW HAD WE TRIED TO SOLVE THE PROBLEM?
We hadn’t
One of the most dangerous streets in Dallas; officers wouldn’t exit their
vehicle without AR-15
Newspaper had published an article decrying the lack of zoning
enforcement in this residential neighborhood
City Attorney’s office was wary of filing lawsuits related to single-family
properties in District Court
37. WHAT ELSE COULD WE DO?
Solution:
Make contact with bank representatives
Track down new owners after the bank sold it
Document, document, document
Become a private investigator as the property kept being flipped
***New Tool: Municipal Repair Docket
46. WHAT WAS THE PROBLEM?
New business located directly across the street from elementary school
Blacked out windows, all customers had to be buzzed in
Virtually no retail products
Uncooperative business owners
47. HOW HAD WE TRIED TO SOLVE THE PROBLEM?
Visited property the day after receiving a complaint from the principal
48. WHAT ELSE COULD WE DO?
Solution:
Revisited numerous times to attempt inspection
Enforced all applicable codes
Contacted property owner and required him to attend inspections
69. COMMUNITY COURTS
The Community Court has jurisdiction to adjudicate quality of life offenses
The Community Court is a “plea court”
If a defendant pleads “Not Guilty” his case is referred to the main municipal courthouse at
2014 Main
Defendants who plead “Guilty” or “No Contest” may be ordered to:
perform community service in lieu of paying a fine
attend rehabilitative or educational programs (if necessary)
abate the violation (for code citations)
All City of Dallas citations are dismissed after successful completion of program (except for
theft & assault offenses)
70. COMMUNITY COURT LOCATIONS
South Dallas
West Dallas
South Oak Cliff
Potential community service sites:
vacant lots
landscaping/minor repair for elderly or disabled
trash pick-up after a community event
graffiti wipe-outs
71.
72.
73.
74. COMMUNITY COURT: SUCCESS STORIES
Problem: Substandard house near a convenience store. Owner, a drug addict, allowed drug
users and prostitutes to use the property.
Community Court Solution: Owner was cited for litter. He agreed to enter an inpatient
substance abuse program. He is currently clean & sober, has his own apartment and
regularly attends his sister’s church.
Problem: Substandard house occupied by a hoarder. Located across a playing field from an
elementary school.
Community Court Solution: Community Prosecutor obtained permission from the property
owner to have Community Court defendants and community volunteers clean the
property.
Problem: Widespread prostitution at truck stops near I-20.
Community Court Solution: DPD Vice Unit, Community Court and social service agencies
target truck stop prostitutes once a month through the New Life Opportunities Initiative.
75. ADDITIONAL OPPORTUNITIES
Dedicate percentage of code enforcement fines to a home repair
program
Operation Goodwill
Operation Crackdown
Landlord Hall of Shame
New/modified ordinances and laws
Food Trust
Community Toolkit
76. FUNDING YOUR PROGRAM
First Step: Identify a research partner & technical assistance provider
Local higher education institution or private research institute
Center for Community Progress—Technical Assistance Scholarship Program
National Crime Prevention Council—Crime Prevention Through Environmental
Design training
Community Development Block Grants
Objective Category: Suitable Living Environment; Outcome Category: Sustainability
Office of Justice Programs
SMART Prosecution—promote effective data-driven, research-based approaches to
prosecution
JAG Grant—specifically allows for personnel costs related to prosecution/courts &
strategic planning; funding allocation is based on statutory formula
77. BUILDING & RETAINING SUPPORT FOR YOUR PROGRAM
Celebrate small and big success
Social media
Council briefings
Presentations at neighborhood meetings
Include the community in your efforts
When possible, include community stakeholders (neighborhood &
for-profit/non-profit leaders) in the planning process
Meet regularly with all stakeholders & meet them on their own turf
Be accessible and transparent