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		U.S. attorney general calls for counseling, intervention to prevent mass 
		shootings
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		 [October 24, 2019] 
		By Sarah N. Lynch and Andy Sullivan 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Attorney 
		General William Barr on Wednesday announced a new effort to prevent mass 
		shootings through court-ordered counseling and supervision of 
		potentially violent individuals.
 
 The effort, announced in a memo to federal prosecutors and law 
		enforcement officials, follows dozens of deadly mass shootings in the 
		United States this year, including a massacre of 22 people at a Walmart 
		in El Paso, Texas, and another just one day later in Dayton, Ohio, in 
		which nine people were killed.
 
 The FBI was given expanded powers after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks to 
		investigate foreign terrorism threats. But it has at times struggled to 
		track home-grown threats and was criticized for not doing more after 
		receiving warnings about a gunman who was later responsible for the 
		February 2018 mass shooting at a high school in Parkland, Florida.
 
 Lawmakers are considering whether new laws are needed to help 
		investigate those who are motivated by white supremacy, anti-Semitism 
		and other extreme ideologies that are protected by the U.S. 
		Constitution's free-speech safeguards.
 
		
		 
		
 Others, such as the gunman who killed 59 people in Las Vegas in October 
		2017, do not appear to have any ideological affiliation.
 
 Barr said a training conference at FBI headquarters in December will 
		consider new ideas to face threats such as enlisting psychologists and 
		community groups.
 
 In one successful case, Barr said, the FBI worked with parents and 
		social-service workers to get court-ordered supervision and 
		mental-health treatment for a young person who was the subject of a 
		threat investigation.
 
 Barr's announcement came on the same day that a handful of Republican 
		senators led by Texas Republican John Cornyn unveiled proposed 
		legislation that aims to prevent mass shootings through collaboration 
		with online platforms, expanded mental health treatment, stepped-up 
		investigations of unlicensed firearms dealers and greater use of the 
		death penalty.
 
 Michael German, a former FBI agent now with the Brennan Center for 
		Justice, said Barr's proposal risks encroaching on civil liberties and 
		stigmatizing mental illness, he said.
 
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			U.S. Attorney General William Barr delivers remarks at the 
			Securities and Exchange Commission's (SEC) Criminal Coordination 
			Conference at the Securities and Exchange Commission building in 
			Washington, U.S., October 3, 2019. REUTERS/Tom Brenner/File Photo 
            
 
            "While studying gun violence and exploring all options to reduce it 
			are important Justice Department functions, promoting simplistic but 
			false profiles for law enforcement won't solve any problems and will 
			only lead to abuse," he said in an email.
 Some 341 people have been killed in mass shootings so far this year, 
			according to the Gun Violence Archive, a group that tracks such 
			incidents. That is a fraction of the 30,000 to 40,000 people who 
			have been killed by gun violence in recent years, according to the 
			group.
 
 FBI data show that hate crimes that target victims based on race, 
			religion, sexual orientation or gender identity have risen from 
			5,850 reported incidents in 2015 to 7,175 in 2017, the most recent 
			year for which statistics are available.
 
 The U.S. Homeland Security Department, created in the wake of the 
			Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, unveiled a new strategy last month to better 
			counter home-grown threats as well as those originating overseas – 
			singling out white supremacy in particular.
 
 The FBI has already taken some steps toward potentially utilizing 
			social media and earlier this year requested bids for a contractor 
			to help detect national security threats by trawling through social 
			media sites.
 
 The Justice Department's internal watchdog is currently reviewing 
			the agency's efforts to identify homegrown terrorism threats.
 
 (Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch and Andy Sullivan; Editing by Steve 
			Orlofsky and Lisa Shumaker)
 
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