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Do law enforcement agencies have an obligation to communicate?

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Do law enforcement agencies have an obligation to communicate?

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Presentation by Iveta Kažoka at a 2-day seminar on Raising of Awareness as an Effective Tool to Prevent Fraud and Corruption, Riga, February 22, 2018

Presentation by Iveta Kažoka at a 2-day seminar on Raising of Awareness as an Effective Tool to Prevent Fraud and Corruption, Riga, February 22, 2018

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Do law enforcement agencies have an obligation to communicate?

  1. 1. Do law enforcement agencies have an obligation to communicate? 22.02.2018, Riga Iveta Kažoka, director of Centre for Public Policy PROVIDUS 2-day seminar on Raising of Awareness as an Effective Tool to Prevent Fraud and Corruption
  2. 2. Duty to be open and transparent Duty to safeguard confidentiality and integrity of information
  3. 3. «When practicable, a clear and factual account of the operation should be provided at the earliest opportunity, while taking care to avoid compromising the operation in any way» College of Policing, UK, Communication guidance
  4. 4. Communication with public/media should be high priority even in strategic and tactical planning Develop a media plan for high-profile operations in order to: • provide the public with sufficient information (to minimise disruption) • provide your agency’s own perspective on the event • maximise public confidence that your agency knows what it is doing
  5. 5. What are the risks if there is no media plan? • False and/or inconsistent messages (especially when multiple agencies are involved) • Delays in info updates might lead to public speculations that might be damaging to suspects/witnesses/victims involved • Media starting their own investigations that interfere with the operation • Undermining legal proceedings
  6. 6. Talking to media • On the record or off the record • Who is talking? • Who is a journalist? • Exclusives: to what extent are they permissible? • Key principles: fair, accurate, relevant, timely

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