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Justice Department axes hundreds of grants that help crime victims and fight opioid abuse

Justice Department axes hundreds of grants that help crime victims and fight opioid abuse
IS HERE. ALL RIGHT, KAREN, WHAT DO WE KNOW ABOUT THE IMPACT HERE? WELL, THE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE WON’T SAY WHICH OR HOW MANY GRANTS THEY ELIMINATED. THEY WOULD ONLY TELL US THEY’RE CUTTING PROGRAMS THAT DON’T ALIGN WITH TRUMP ADMINISTRATION POLICIES. WELL, TODAY WE VISITED AN ORGANIZATION HERE IN MASSACHUSETTS THAT’S WORKING EVERY DAY TO STOP VIOLENCE. AND THEY FOUND OUT LAST NIGHT MILLIONS OF DOLLARS OF THEIR FEDERAL FUNDING THAT HAD BEEN PASSED WITH BIPARTISAN SUPPORT WAS CUT. HERE AT UTECH AND LOWELL. WHETHER THEY’RE WORKING AT THE TEEN DROP IN CENTER OR ARE OUT ON THE STREETS, WHAT HAVE YOU BEEN UP TO? STAYING OUT OF TROUBLE. THE MISSION IS TO HELP YOUNG ADULTS WHO HAD BEEN INVOLVED WITH CRIMINAL ACTIVITY AND GANGS GET ON A PATH TO SUCCESS. THIS IS ABOUT PUBLIC SAFETY, AND IT’S ABOUT ALLOWING YOUNG PEOPLE TO TRANSFORM. THEY HAVE A 25 YEAR TRACK RECORD OF CHANGING LIVES, HONORED FROM THE MERRIMACK VALLEY TO THE WHITE HOUSE. BUT LAST NIGHT, UTEC CEO GREG CROTEAU GOT AN EMAIL FROM THE FEDERAL DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE ABRUPTLY CUTTING THREE OF UTEC GRANTS TO REDUCE VIOLENCE TOTALING ABOUT $2 MILLION. THAT’S GRANTS THAT FUND OUR WORK IN THE STREETS, BEHIND THE WALLS. YOU KNOW, THE WORK DIRECTLY SUPPORTING YOUNG ADULTS. IT’S ALL ABOUT HELPING REDUCE VIOLENCE IN THE STREETS AND HELPING YOUNG PEOPLE AGES 18 TO 25 WORK ON EDUCATION AND EMPLOYMENT. THEIR NEXT JOURNEYS. THE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE WOULDN’T COMMENT ON THE CUTS OR SAY HOW MANY GRANTS WERE ELIMINATED, BUT GAVE THIS WRITTEN STATEMENT. THE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE IS FOCUSED ON PROSECUTING CRIMINALS, GETTING ILLEGAL DRUGS OFF THE STREETS AND PROTECTING AMERICAN INSTITUTIONS FROM TOXIC DYE AND SANCTUARY CITY POLICIES. DISCRETIONARY FUNDS THAT ARE NO LONGER ALIGNED WITH THE ADMINISTRATION’S PRIORITIES ARE SUBJECT TO REVIEW AND REALLOCATION. I DON’T THINK THAT MAKES SENSE. IF YOU’RE THE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, YOUR PRIORITY, I THINK, IS PUBLIC SAFETY. AND THIS IS ONE OF THERE’S THERE’S NO QUESTION THE DATA IS INCREDIBLY CLEAR, NOT ONLY IN MASSACHUSETTS, BUT NATIONWIDE. CRIME IS GOING DOWN. RIGHT. AND SO IT DOESN’T SEEM TO ALIGN AT ALL. SO UTEC CEO SAYS, WHEN YOU HAVE THAT DATA THAT’S SHOWING WHAT’S WORKING TO STOP VIOLENCE, NOW IS NOT THE TIME. NOW IS THE TIME TO INVEST IN THAT. IT’S NOT THE TIME TO CUT IT. THEY’RE PLANNING TO APPEAL AND TAKE ACTION, AND THEY’RE ALREADY UNITING WITH OTHER ORGANIZATIONS TARGETED BY WHAT THEY’RE ESTIMATING TO BE HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS OF DOLLA
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Justice Department axes hundreds of grants that help crime victims and fight opioid abuse
The Justice Department terminated hundreds of grants this week, effectively slashing the budgets for organizations across the country that assist crime victims and fight both gun violence and opioid abuse.Related video above: Lowell, Massachusetts, nonprofit working to reduce violence sees federal funds cutThe cancellations, which claimed that the more than 350 already-distributed grants “no longer effectuates the program goals or agency priorities,” sent shockwaves through grantee organizations.“I was flabbergasted,” said Renee Williams, who leads the nonpartisan National Center for the Victims of Crime. Her organization has operated a hotline for 10 years through a DOJ grant and connects victims of heinous crimes to specialists who help them navigate everything from legal assistance to state bureaucracies.That grant was cut Tuesday evening.“I genuinely believed that this administration had victims in the forefront of their mind,” Williams told CNN. “But to get that email to see that they were cutting out victims, and that this hotline — which we know is a lifesaving resource to so many people — was no longer a priority was just stunning.”It is not unusual for new administrations to review applications for federal grants or award grants based on their political preferences. But it is highly unusual for grants to be clawed back once the money is allocated and is being used, former DOJ officials told CNN.And though the cuts represent a relatively small portion of the grants administered by the department, experts worry that the funding cuts will fatally impact organizations whose projects are already underway.“People who have been hurt by crime are just going to be hurt again when they try to get help,” said Kristina Rose, the former director of Joe Biden's Justice Department’s Office for Victims of Crime, which oversees billions of dollars in grant funding. “Everyone eventually will feel the impact of this.”The cuts were first reported by The Washington Post.“This Department of Justice is focused on prosecuting criminals, getting illegal drugs off of the streets, and protecting American institutions from toxic DEI and sanctuary city policies,” a Justice Department spokesperson said in response to CNN’s questions about the cuts. “Discretionary funds that are no longer aligned with the administration’s priorities are subject to review and reallocation.”Canceled grants go to the heart of victim supportAmong programs whose grants were canceled are organizations that work to protect and help individuals who were the victims of a crime.Those groups — many of which have received bipartisan support in the past — say that without their funding, the victims they support could be left without legal help, safe housing, medical and trauma support, or even funeral expenses to bury a loved one who had been murdered.Copies of several grant termination letters shared with CNN say the DOJ has “changed its priorities,” and want these federal grants to be “more directly supporting certain law enforcement operations, combatting violent crime, protecting American children, and supporting American victims of trafficking and sexual assault, and better coordinating law enforcement efforts at all levels of government.”But many grant recipients believe this action will do the opposite by pulling the rug out from programs that have been working in communities across the country.One program at risk of immediate shutdown is a group that sends advocates to the bedside of someone in the hospital who has been injured from a gunshot or other type of assault. The advocates can help them navigate how to report the crime if they choose and can help the victims find services to assist in their recovery.Another DOJ grant that funded trauma recovery centers in Iowa was also canceled, as were grants that put kennels in domestic violence shelters so that victims could bring their pets with them when they fled. The Justice Department restored at least some of the shelter pet programs Wednesday evening, a source told CNN.When news of the cuts first surfaced Tuesday, dozens of grantees gathered on a videoconference to discuss their options, including whether to take legal action.Many of the organizations found that they had already been cut off from the financial systems from which they could access their grant money, one official said. Others tried to contact their grant managers at the Justice Department.“I want to believe and I want to hope it’s a mistake, and that mistake will be rectified,” said Williams.Reform and oversight efforts also cutThe terminated grants also touch local government groups whose efforts are focused on research, statistics and efforts to reform things like policing and the juvenile justice system.“Instead of helping to keep our residents safe, the Trump Administration is once again cruelly clawing back critical public safety funding for our state,” wrote Democratic New Jersey Attorney General Matthew Platkin in a statement.“Cutting critical initiatives to fight hate crimes, to prevent violence in our communities, and to combat opioid abuse is as reckless as it is dangerous,” Platkin continued.In Kansas City, Missouri, officials in City Hall learned Wednesday that a grant that funded counseling and treatment programs through their mental health court had been terminated.“It takes away a tool that we have to give people treatment and then break the cycle of recidivism that we see on nuisance offenses,” Democratic Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas told CNN.Lucas argued that judges cannot jail people with mental health issues for an extended amount of time for nuisance crimes, and that without treatment, those offenders will be back on the street without help and resources.“I think it’s going to lead to vastly inferior outcomes for people in Kansas City who want to be safe,” said Lucas.

The Justice Department terminated hundreds of grants this week, effectively slashing the budgets for organizations across the country that assist crime victims and fight both gun violence and opioid abuse.

Related video above: Lowell, Massachusetts, nonprofit working to reduce violence sees federal funds cut

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The cancellations, which claimed that the more than 350 already-distributed grants “no longer effectuates the program goals or agency priorities,” sent shockwaves through grantee organizations.

“I was flabbergasted,” said Renee Williams, who leads the nonpartisan National Center for the Victims of Crime. Her organization has operated a hotline for 10 years through a DOJ grant and connects victims of heinous crimes to specialists who help them navigate everything from legal assistance to state bureaucracies.

That grant was cut Tuesday evening.

“I genuinely believed that this administration had victims in the forefront of their mind,” Williams told CNN. “But to get that email to see that they were cutting out victims, and that this hotline — which we know is a lifesaving resource to so many people — was no longer a priority was just stunning.”

It is not unusual for new administrations to review applications for federal grants or award grants based on their political preferences. But it is highly unusual for grants to be clawed back once the money is allocated and is being used, former DOJ officials told CNN.

And though the cuts represent a relatively small portion of the grants administered by the department, experts worry that the funding cuts will fatally impact organizations whose projects are already underway.

“People who have been hurt by crime are just going to be hurt again when they try to get help,” said Kristina Rose, the former director of Joe Biden's Justice Department’s Office for Victims of Crime, which oversees billions of dollars in grant funding. “Everyone eventually will feel the impact of this.”

The cuts were first reported by .

“This Department of Justice is focused on prosecuting criminals, getting illegal drugs off of the streets, and protecting American institutions from toxic DEI and sanctuary city policies,” a Justice Department spokesperson said in response to CNN’s questions about the cuts. “Discretionary funds that are no longer aligned with the administration’s priorities are subject to review and reallocation.”

Canceled grants go to the heart of victim support

Among programs whose grants were canceled are organizations that work to protect and help individuals who were the victims of a crime.

Those groups — many of which have received bipartisan support in the past — say that without their funding, the victims they support could be left without legal help, safe housing, medical and trauma support, or even funeral expenses to bury a loved one who had been murdered.

Copies of several grant termination letters shared with CNN say the DOJ has “changed its priorities,” and want these federal grants to be “more directly supporting certain law enforcement operations, combatting violent crime, protecting American children, and supporting American victims of trafficking and sexual assault, and better coordinating law enforcement efforts at all levels of government.”

But many grant recipients believe this action will do the opposite by pulling the rug out from programs that have been working in communities across the country.

One program at risk of immediate shutdown is a group that sends advocates to the bedside of someone in the hospital who has been injured from a gunshot or other type of assault. The advocates can help them navigate how to report the crime if they choose and can help the victims find services to assist in their recovery.

Another DOJ grant that funded trauma recovery centers in Iowa was also canceled, as were grants that put kennels in domestic violence shelters so that victims could bring their pets with them when they fled. The Justice Department restored at least some of the shelter pet programs Wednesday evening, a source told CNN.

When news of the cuts first surfaced Tuesday, dozens of grantees gathered on a videoconference to discuss their options, including whether to take legal action.

Many of the organizations found that they had already been cut off from the financial systems from which they could access their grant money, one official said. Others tried to contact their grant managers at the Justice Department.

“I want to believe and I want to hope it’s a mistake, and that mistake will be rectified,” said Williams.

Reform and oversight efforts also cut

The terminated grants also touch local government groups whose efforts are focused on research, statistics and efforts to reform things like policing and the juvenile justice system.

“Instead of helping to keep our residents safe, the Trump Administration is once again cruelly clawing back critical public safety funding for our state,” wrote Democratic New Jersey Attorney General Matthew Platkin in a statement.

“Cutting critical initiatives to fight hate crimes, to prevent violence in our communities, and to combat opioid abuse is as reckless as it is dangerous,” Platkin continued.

In Kansas City, Missouri, officials in City Hall learned Wednesday that a grant that funded counseling and treatment programs through their mental health court had been terminated.

“It takes away a tool that we have to give people treatment and then break the cycle of recidivism that we see on nuisance offenses,” Democratic Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas told CNN.

Lucas argued that judges cannot jail people with mental health issues for an extended amount of time for nuisance crimes, and that without treatment, those offenders will be back on the street without help and resources.

“I think it’s going to lead to vastly inferior outcomes for people in Kansas City who want to be safe,” said Lucas.