For Immediate Release:
Wednesday, May 22, 2024
Contact: Nazneen Ahmed
919-716-0060
(RALEIGH) Attorney General Josh Stein today joined law enforcement leaders to highlight public safety efforts and initiatives to make North Carolina communities safer. He discussed his office’s efforts to protect North Carolinians by recruiting and retaining law enforcement officers, solving cold case sexual assaults, and addressing the fentanyl crisis.
“Keeping people safe is job one for the state,” said Attorney General Josh Stein. “I will continue to fight to protect children and families, including advocating for more law enforcement resources. Law enforcement go straight into danger to protect us all – we must put our money where our mouths are and do more to support them. That includes more resources for solving cases, fighting against fentanyl, and recruiting and retaining law enforcement officers.”
“Our state has ended the sexual assault kit backlog,” continued Attorney General Josh Stein. “But there is more work to do. All these new hits to the database can breathe new life into cold cases – as long as there is someone to work them. That’s why I’m advocating for a cold case unit to support our under-resourced and over-burdened local law enforcement agencies.”
“Fentanyl is a scourge that is killing nine people in North Carolina each day,” said Attorney General Josh Stein. “Dealers and traffickers are getting rich peddling poison. I am advocating for more prosecutors for a Fentanyl Control Unit so that my office can help local district attorneys prosecute these complex and often cross-jurisdictional cases.”
“DCSO is committed to improving safety in all of our communities; those efforts include aggressively going after heigh-level drug dealers who are flooding our streets with fentanyl,” said Durham County Sheriff Clarence Birkhead. “With the support of AG Stein, along with our federal and local partnerships, we can continue this life saving work.”
“Someone is going to wear the badge, and we want it to be the best and brightest,” said Orange County Sheriff Charles Blackwood. “Recruitment and retention of quality employees is not an issue unique to law enforcement. I think every facet of America’s workforce would agree that the times we live in have changed, so too must the way we recruit and retain our respective employees.”
“Our commitment to fighting the fentanyl crisis and solving cold case sexual assaults is stronger than ever; thanks to advances in technology, we are much better leveraged to support that commitment,” said Mebane Police Chief Mitch Mckinney. “Supporting public safety is a noble profession that remains the keystone of our community’s safety and justice for victims, where recruiting and retaining dedicated individuals is critical to ensuring we can still do the work.”
“The nation is suffering from a shortage of people wanting to do this job,” said Apex Police Chief Jason Armstrong. “North Carolina has a chance to send a message to future police officers that our state is the place you want to be in law enforcement.”
Attorney General Stein is focused on public safety. His public safety package includes strategies for addressing the law enforcement officer shortages impacting agencies across our state, combatting the fentanyl crisis, solving cold case sexual assaults and more. More information about that is available here.
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