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130

IF YOU LEFT THE CRIMINALS IN JAIL THEN THEY WOULD NOT BE OUT TO CAUSE POLICE CHASES.

There, I fixed it for you. No, I don't care if the criminals get hurt or die. Also, "light touch" policing is what made this a problem. The criminals know the rules on when you have to end a chase so they intentionally would drive fast and cause danger to get the chase to end.

Archive: https://archive.today/ETPLb

From the post:

>Police chases increased tenfold in the six months after Chief Todd Chamberlain broadened the Aurora Police Department’s policy to allow officers to pursue stolen vehicles and suspected drunk drivers, a move that made Aurora one of the most permissive large police agencies along the Front Range. Aurora officers carried out more chases in the six months after the policy change than in the last five years combined, according to data provided by the police department in response to open records requests from The Denver Post. The city’s officers conducted 148 pursuits between March 6 — the day after the policy change — and Sept. 2, the data shows. That’s up from just 14 police chases in that same timeframe in 2024, and well above Aurora officers’ 126 chases across five years between 2020 and 2024.

IF YOU LEFT THE CRIMINALS IN JAIL THEN THEY WOULD NOT BE OUT TO CAUSE POLICE CHASES. There, I fixed it for you. No, I don't care if the criminals get hurt or die. Also, "light touch" policing is what made this a problem. The criminals know the rules on when you have to end a chase so they intentionally would drive fast and cause danger to get the chase to end. Archive: https://archive.today/ETPLb From the post: >>Police chases increased tenfold in the six months after Chief Todd Chamberlain broadened the Aurora Police Department’s policy to allow officers to pursue stolen vehicles and suspected drunk drivers, a move that made Aurora one of the most permissive large police agencies along the Front Range. Aurora officers carried out more chases in the six months after the policy change than in the last five years combined, according to data provided by the police department in response to open records requests from The Denver Post. The city’s officers conducted 148 pursuits between March 6 — the day after the policy change — and Sept. 2, the data shows. That’s up from just 14 police chases in that same timeframe in 2024, and well above Aurora officers’ 126 chases across five years between 2020 and 2024.

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