成人X站

MYNORTHWEST NEWS

Seattle LEAD program wants to expand beyond referrals from police

Jul 17, 2020, 12:16 PM

LEAD...

Jesse Benet, deputy director of the Public Defender Association, speaks to a colleague while working at his desk in the Co-LEAD program offices in Seattle. Co-LEAD grew from the Law Enforcement Assisted Diversion (LEAD) program to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic. (Photo by David Ryder/Getty Images)

(Photo by David Ryder/Getty Images)

It鈥檚 not a divorce from police, it鈥檚 like an open marriage — that鈥檚 how LEAD co-founder Lisa Daugaard describes a change to King County’s Law Enforcement Assisted Diversion program currently, being discussed by the city council. She says she also has the support of SPD Chief Carmen Best, to create a new option for referring people to LEAD that doesn鈥檛 involve police.

LEAD program expands north of Seattle to Snohomish County

鈥淲e have reached the point, and this is a natural evolution and one, that we predicted 10 years ago might happen, where the police role in responding to public order issues involving people with behavioral health problems has been reduced,鈥 Daugaard said.

The LEAD program allows police to divert low-level offenders who are either already in or out of custody to services, rather than having them face charges and prosecution. This is designed to keep them out of the revolving door of the criminal justice system.

For multiple reasons, including staffing issues under current at SPD assignment levels and new limits due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Daugaard says officers have not been able to engage with as many people who might be good candidates for the program lately.

鈥淲e’ve just found that referrals that used to be coming in at a much higher level from police aren’t, so in order to respond to problems that are real and people in need, we need another door besides just police referring those in or out of custody,鈥 Daugaard explained.

That third door involves allowing community referrals.

鈥淓verybody from the Downtown Seattle Association to the fire department, to a prosecutor who prosecuted someone, they’re about to get out of custody, and the prosecutor knows that the person is going to struggle and commit additional crimes,鈥 Daugaard said, noting community organizations would also be able to make referrals.

Daugaard says only being able to accept referrals from police has gotten in the way of getting people the help they need quickly. That forces them to take extra days when someone in need is brought to their attention from someone in the community, to then go and present the situation to police and ask them to make a referral.

This change is currently front and center in discussions about transforming police duties at the city council level, but Daugaard says it is not because the LEAD program asked for it. She鈥檚 also quick to point out that there are experts leading the conversation on other reforms. LEAD operates as an existing resource that can be part of the solution.

Lawmakers, cops expand LEAD program across Washington state

Daugaard says they鈥檙e encouraging other jurisdictions they work with to embrace this third door option, and allow community referrals to the diversion program.

However, Daugaard stresses this is in no way means they鈥檙e looking to cut ties with police, who she says must still be able to make these referrals when they encounter a potential LEAD candidate in need.

鈥淭hat is our core mission: Make sure that people in need who (police) do encounter, who need to not go to jail, don’t have to, but creating that option so that if officers aren’t involved and don’t think that they should be involved or can’t be involved, there can still be a response,鈥 she explained.

Follow 成人X站 Radio’s Hanna Scott on or email her here.听

MyNorthwest News

tacoma power outage...

Julia Dallas

Power outage affecting over 10,000 customers in the Tacoma area

A Tacoma power outage impacts more than 10,000 customers, as reported by Tacoma Public Utilities on Wednesday.

1 hour ago

Hood Canal Bridge...

Chris Sullivan

WSDOT ‘left with a mystery’ after Hood Canal Bridge’s emergency closure

A full inspection of the Hood Canal Bridge on State Route 104 in Poulsbo gave WSDOT engineers nothing to explain Monday's extended closure.

1 hour ago

Trump UW anti-Semitic violence...

Jonah Oaklief

Trump launches task force following alleged anti-semitic violence at UW

The Trump administration announced on Tuesday that it has created a task force to investigate alleged acts of antisemitic violence at the University of Washington (UW) and its affiliated institutions.

2 hours ago

child offenders wa operation...

Frank Sumrall

7 WA residents arrested as part of operation capturing 205 child offenders

More than 200 child sex offenders were arrested in the nationwide crackdown called "Operation Restore Justice."

4 hours ago

13-year-old Everett boy...

Shaun Garrett, 成人X站 7 News

Braided cable kills 13-year-old Everett boy riding electric scooter through grass

A 13-year-old Everett boy who was critically injured after hitting a braided cable while riding his electric scooter has died from his injuries, according to Everett Police.

6 hours ago

uw pro-Palestinian...

Frank Sumrall

More than $1M in damages suffered from UW pro-Palestinian protest, takeover

The University of Washington (UW) reported that the pro-Palestinian protesters caused more than $1 million in damages when they held a takeover of the university鈥檚 new Interdisciplinary Engineering Building聽Monday night.

7 hours ago

Seattle LEAD program wants to expand beyond referrals from police