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              For Immediate Release 
               
              For More Information contact: 
              Valerie Shaw, M.PR 
               E-Mail: litemind@pacbell.net 
            
              
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                    PRIVATE CITIZEN PASSIONATE 
                    ABOUT COMMUNITY POLICING 
                     
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            Former 
              film and television editor, Bill Murray, 49, admits that his nine-month-old 
              website, Los Angeles Community Policing at http://www.LACP.org, 
              has taken over his life. He is almost apologetic about the tremendous 
              amount of time he spends tending to the effort, which recently became 
              a California State 501(c)3 non-profit organization (as yet un-funded). 
              "I'm at this every waking moment," he says. 
               
              And no wonder. The job of keeping track of the neighborhood by neighborhood 
              public safety issues affecting all the communities in the nation's 
              second largest city is daunting, to say the least. 
               
              Bill Murray has followed the controversial selection process for 
              LA's new Police Chief, covered the affairs of the 18 divisions that 
              make up the Los Angeles Police Department (and the 18 Community 
              Police Advisory Boards associated with each division), and promoted 
              the evolution of one of Criminology's newest sciences, Community 
              Policing. 
               
              Murray admits, "The site is a far greater effort than I ever intended 
              it to be. It's growing content," he says, "is directly proportional 
              to the nearly overwhelming response I get from people who instantly 
              recognize its need and its value." 
               
              Even without promotion, the site is visited by well over 1,000 web 
              surfers weekly and attracts over 20,000 referrals every month. Depending 
              on the current issue, hundreds of loyalists spend up to three hours 
              daily on the website, reading about ever-changing Los Angeles crime 
              statistics, learning of global community policing programs that 
              work, and perusing layers of articles, studies, editorials, and 
              useful community links. There's even an interactive calendar that 
              lists upcoming events throughout the city. 
               
              "The site," says devotee Everett Littlefield, "is up to the minute, 
              not just the week or the day. It's up to the minute about almost 
              anything that happens in Los Angeles in regard to public safety." 
               
              It hasn't been easy. "Just to stay knowledgeable and be able to 
              report accurately, I've attended almost all the Police Commission 
              meetings this year, and as many Town Hall, Open House and other 
              events I can fit in," says Murray. "I've been all over town, from 
              San Pedro to the West Valley, from South Central to Northridge … 
              and some of them many times." 
               
              It's beginning to pay off as community members get to know the site 
              and are regularly contributing Letters to the Editor, writing or 
              suggesting articles and offering help in other ways. The phone keeps 
              ringing and the e-mails pour in. 
               
              "This isn't my website anymore," says Murray. "It's OUR website. 
              It's grassroots and belongs to the entire greater LA community. 
              All points of view are welcomed as part of the dialogue. We discuss 
              the problems," he continues, "not for the sake of complaining, but 
              to arrive at solutions as quickly as possible." 
               
              This may have been the longest nine months of Murray's life, for 
              he has forfeited his comfortable salary as a television and film 
              editor, his credit rating, perhaps even his small home nestled in 
              the hills of Montecito Heights, all for the dream of fighting crime 
              and improving the quality of life for all urban Americans. 
               
              "There were over 80 homicides this year in one [of the 18] divisions 
              within the LAPD. "That," says Bill Murray, community activist and 
              website producer, "is obscene." 
               
              He finds a lot of things about the way the police force is run are 
              unacceptable. "For example," he continues, "the operation of each 
              of the 18 Community Police Advisory Boards (C-PAB) is left up to 
              the discretion of the Division commanding officer, a Captain. Some 
              C-PABs are more open to the community, some memberships are appointed 
              and some are filled by application. 
               
              "If you have a Captain that welcomes community input, like we do 
              where I serve at Hollenbeck Division, the concept works and people 
              get involved in public safety issues. But," he cautions, "there 
              aren't enough Captains, like our Captain Pesqueira, who feel this 
              way. In some cases C-PAB members have been left completely out of 
              the loop, and then they're no more than mouthpieces for the Captain 
              who has appointed the members." 
               
              Murray says, "One of the things we should be looking at is a degree 
              of uniformity and support throughout the city. At the very least 
              we should be able to find and communicate with each other." 
               
              The Los Angeles Community Policing website is Murray's effort to 
              bridge the gap between law enforcement--the good and the bad--and 
              the diverse communities it serves. 
               
              Coming from a long line of volunteer firemen, peacekeepers, and 
              community volunteers, Murray, a native New Yorker, says modestly, 
              "I guess this is my calling." When he became a homeowner in Northeast 
              Los Angeles, Murray helped organize a Neighborhood Watch program. 
              Next he became an LAPD volunteer, graduating at the LA Police Academy. 
               
              But that training just peaked his interest in the community's role 
              in keeping communities safe. 
               
              It was at one particular annual C-PAB event that Murray decided 
              to get a network going of other C-PAB members. He was blocked, however, 
              by a system that insists on protecting citizen confidentiality, 
              even when it's not requested, and by some who simply had no interest 
              in a C-PAB network. 
               
              "I just wanted to create a way for the Los Angeles C-PAB members 
              to find and communicate with each other," laughs Murray. From that 
              tiny seed of an idea has grown a mighty forest of public safety, 
              crime and civil rights information--all without editorial bias--just 
              a computer click away. 
               
              "We're not in anybody's pocket, which means that we're not getting 
              funds from any special interests." Smiling, he heaves a big sigh. 
              "Sometimes I don't know where the money's coming from to keep the 
              website going, I just know that in a city of this size, where the 
              per capita police force is among the smallest anywhere, the Department 
              has to embrace its community and volunteers as a part of their crime-fighting 
              effort. 
               
              Community policing," says Bill Murray, "is an evolving science that 
              has proven effective all over the world." Two experts who agree 
              are regular contributors to the http://www.LACP.org 
              website, Dr. Arthur A. Jones and Dr. Robin Wiseman, internationally 
              recognized human rights lawyers, legal educators in the United States 
              and Europe, and authors / consultants on international policing, 
              social policy and human rights. 
               
              The hour is growing late and Bill Murray sits at his computer with 
              a cold plate of spaghetti beside him. But he's undaunted. Mayor 
              Hahn has recently appointed former New York Police Commissioner, 
              Chief William Bratton, to be LA's top cop, and Murray is doing his 
              homework. 
               
              "This is arguably the most important job in the city," declares 
              Murray. "Although the Chief's off to a good start, residents still 
              have a lot of questions." 
               
              Murray squints and rubs his eyes. They close and his head bows, 
              as in prayer. "The citizens of Los Angeles should be able to give 
              input and make suggestions to the Police Department. In every part 
              of our city we need to know that our voices are being heard." 
            ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
             
              This article, gleaned from an interview with this maverick activist 
              - a true oxymoron of a man, if there ever was one - may be reprinted, 
              all or in part, without permission. 
               
              We ask only that you advise Bill Murray at webmaster@lacp.org 
              of your intentions. Mr. Murray also invites full-length interviews 
              at your pleasure. 
            ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
            EDITOR'S 
              NOTE: For more background information on Bill Murray, the community 
              response, and how Los Angeles Community Policing began please see 
              the following LACP.org articles: 
               
              LACP 
              honored by Police Commission - At a recent Police 
              Commission meeting held in the Hollenbeck area, LACP was honored 
              when our founder and webmaster was awarded an LAPD "Certificate 
              of Appreciation." 
               
              Your 
              Comments - 
              Read 
              the recent comments and criticisms from the LACP "stakeholders" 
              - highlights from community members, LAPD officers and City officials. 
               
              Who 
              started this? - We created this grassroots forum as private 
              citizens, independent of any other group or affiliation. Active 
              community volunteers and community policing advocates, we have no 
              vested interest in anything other than a sincere desire to be of 
              service. 
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