Monday, October 27, 2025

Articles by Joanna Putman

2 articles found

Cincinnati Police use paid college intern program to recruit young cadets
Technology

Cincinnati Police use paid college intern program to recruit young cadets

CINCINNATI — As police departments across the country face recruitment challenges, the Cincinnati Police Department aims to build its future force through a revived and expanded Understudy Program aimed at preparing young adults for law enforcement careers, WCPO reported. Launched as a pilot in 2023, the program now includes 24 paid interns who rotate through various units of CPD while pursuing college degrees, according to the report. The initiative is designed to give participants practical experience before they are eligible to join the police academy at age 21. | REGISTER NOW: Protecting major events from drone threats Participants say the program provides crucial early insight into the profession. “The things that they teach at the academy, some of that is not going to be new to us,” said 21-year-old Justin Sedgwick, one of the original 12 understudies. “We’re going to know it already, we’re going to have a feeling for it already, so it’s going to be very natural for us.” Sedgwick is one of nine current interns expected to begin police academy training in April. Three others have already graduated and five are currently enrolled. Melia Newburn, also 21, joined the program in early 2025 after learning about it from a University of Cincinnati professor. She said the chance to observe CPD’s day-to-day operations helped her understand the reality of police work beyond classroom instruction. “You can move around and you’re an intern, so you’re not really a police officer,” Newburn told WCPO, “but they’re learning to become a police officer.” Participants rotate through patrol, investigations, traffic and specialized units such as the Crime Gun Intelligence Center, gaining experience that CPD leaders say is often missing from traditional recruitment paths. Lt. Shannon Heine, who helps oversee the program, said it revives the spirit of the department’s former Police Cadet Program, which ran from 1955 through 1970 and again in the ‘90s and early 2000s before being cut due to budget constraints both times. The new version is now fully funded by city and federal grants, with Cincinnati recently applying for a $175,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Justice to support its growth, according to the report. Heine said the program gives young people a realistic view of the profession before they fully commit. “[They] get to see the inner workings of what it takes to be a policeman, what the real surrounding is in a law enforcement environment and really what those calls for service are like and what the background is and what work goes into it,” Heine told WCPO. With CPD currently about 100 officers below full staffing, the program has become a key part of its recruitment strategy, and a way to build deeper connections between future officers and the communities they aim to serve. What do you think are the biggest benefits or potential drawbacks of using paid internships to recruit future police officers? Looking to navigate the complexities of grants funding? Lexipol is your go-to resource for state-specific, fully developed grants services that can help fund your needs. Find out more about our grants services here.

DHS- Mexican drug cartels offer up to $50K bounties for hits on ICE and border patrol officers
Technology

DHS- Mexican drug cartels offer up to $50K bounties for hits on ICE and border patrol officers

WASHINGTON — Mexican drug cartels have reportedly launched a structured bounty system targeting U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP) personnel, according to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). DHS said criminal networks are offering payments ranging from $2,000 for intelligence gathering to as much as $50,000 for the assassination of senior federal officials. The announcement follows federal charges filed two weeks ago against a member of the Chicago-based Latin Kings gang, accused of placing a bounty on a CBP commander overseeing operations in Los Angeles, Chicago and Portland. | READ NEXT: Trump designates cartels as foreign terrorist organizations: What it means for policing “These criminal networks are not just resisting the rule of law, they are waging an organized campaign of terror against the brave men and women who protect our borders and communities,” DHS Secretary Kristi Noem stated.According to DHS, cartels have disseminated a “structured bounty program” offering: $2,000 for doxing and surveillance of ICE/CBP officers,$5,000 to $10,000 for non-lethal assaults or kidnappings, andUp to $50,000 for assassinations of high-ranking officials. | REGISTER NOW: Protecting major events from drone threats Cartel-affiliated gangs, including the Latin Kings, are said to have deployed armed “spotters” with radios to monitor and report the movements of federal agents in real time, according to DHS. DHS maintains that threats against federal officers are escalating in both scale and sophistication, with incidents including drone surveillance, ambush attempts and explicit death threats. The agency has not disclosed operational changes but said it remains committed to protecting its personnel and enforcing federal immigration laws.