WASHINGTON -- Attorney General Loretta Lynch plans to visit six cities in the coming months to highlight police departments she sees as role models for law enforcement.
The locations were chosen because they embody a particular trait of successful policing, such as effective use of data, strong community relationships or a commitment to officer safety, Lynch said Monday.
The first visit is planned for Thursday and Friday to Miami-Dade County in Florida, where Lynch is scheduled to recognize the Doral Police Department for its work building community trust.
She also will host a youth town hall and a community-policing discussion in Miami, among other events.
The other locations are Portland, Oregon; Indianapolis; Fayetteville, North Carolina; Phoenix; and Los Angeles.
"It really is our hope to highlight the areas where police and community members are sitting down together and figuring out, 'How do we all make this work?'" she said.
The visits represent the second phase of a community-policing tour Lynch, a former federal prosecutor in New York, began last year after being sworn in as the nation's top law-enforcement official.
In that first phase, she visited cities where police forces were taking steps to overcome difficult relationships with their communities.
Now, the focus turns to departments that are seen as successful in implementing "pillars" of policing identified in a White House report in May.
Each city on the tour represents a different pillar -- or subject area -- including building community trust, community policing, crime reduction and officer training and education, Lynch said.
"I'm going to jurisdictions where departments have taken those pillars, have made substantial and concrete advances toward them and where we're seeing positive results," Lynch said, adding she hopes they can be guideposts for departments looking to improve.
The initiative is part of a national discussion on police use of force and effective law-enforcement tactics, a topic that took on new urgency amid a series of high-profile police shootings of unarmed young men in places including Ferguson, Missouri; Cleveland; and North Charleston, South Carolina.
That conversation has often been challenging and "painful on many fronts," Lynch said.
But, she said, she's been encouraged by the number of police departments that are looking to evolve on training and tactics and to improve cooperation with the Justice Department, which has the authority to investigate troubled departments and press for sweeping overhauls.
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