1. Demand-reduction
education programs in which law enforcement officers participate.
2. Multijurisdictional
task force programs to integrate Federal, State, and local drug law
enforcement agencies and prosecutors for the purpose of enhancing
interagency coordination and intelligence and facilitating multijurisdictional
investigations.
3. Programs
to target the domestic sources of controlled and illegal substances,
such as precursor chemicals, diverted pharmaceuticals, clandestine
laboratories, and cannabis cultivations.
4. Community
and neighborhood programs to assist citizens in preventing and controlling
crime, including special programs that address crimes committed against
the elderly and crime in rural jurisdictions.
5. Programs
to disrupt illicit commerce in stolen goods and property.
6. Programs
to improve the investigation and prosecution of white-collar crime,
organized crime, public corruption crime, and fraud against the government,
with priority attention to cases involving drug-related official corruption.
7. a. Programs
to improve the operational effectiveness of law enforcement through
the use of crime analysis techniques, street sales enforcement, schoolyard
violator programs, and gang-related and low-income housing drug-control
programs.
b. Programs
to develop and implement antiterrorism plans for deep draft ports,
international airports, and other important facilities.
8. Career
criminal prosecution programs, including the development of model
drug-control legislation.
9. Financial
investigative programs to identify money laundering operations and
assets obtained through illegal drug trafficking, including the development
of model legislation, financial investigative training, and financial
information-sharing systems.
10. Programs
to improve the operational effectiveness of the court process by expanding
prosecutorial, defender, and judicial resources and implementing court
delay reduction programs.
11. Programs
to provide additional public correctional resources and improve the
corrections system, including treatment in prisons and jails, intensive
supervision programs, and long-range corrections and sentencing strategies.
12. Prison
industry projects to place inmates in a realistic working and training
environment that enables them to develop marketable skills. With these
skills inmates also are better able to support their families and
themselves in the institution and make financial restitution to their
victims.
13. Programs
to identify and meet the treatment needs of adult and juvenile drug-and
alcohol-dependent offenders.
14. Programs
to provide assistance to jurors and witnesses and assistance (other
than compensation) to victims of crime.
15. a. Programs
to improve drug-control technology such as pretrial drug-testing programs;
programs to provide for the identification, assessment, referral to
treatment, case management, and monitoring of drug-dependent offenders;
and programs to enhance State and local forensic laboratories.
b. Criminal
justice information systems to assist law enforcement, prosecution,
courts, and corrections organizations (including automated fingerprint
identification systems).
16. Programs
to demonstrate innovative approaches to enforcement, prosecution,
and adjudication of drug offenses and other serious crimes.
17. Programs
to address the problems of drug trafficking and the illegal manufacture
of controlled substances in public housing.
18. Programs
to improve the criminal and juvenile justice system's response to
domestic and family violence, including spouse abuse, child abuse,
and abuse of the elderly.
19. Programs
with which State and local units of government can evaluate State
drug-control projects.
20. Programs
to provide alternatives to detention, jail, and prison for persons
who pose no danger to the community.
21. Programs
to strengthen urban enforcement and prosecution efforts targeted at
street drug sales.
22. Programs
to prosecute driving-while-intoxicated charges and enforce other laws
relating to alcohol use and the operation of motor vehicles.
23. Programs
to address the need for effective bindover systems for the prosecution
of violent 16- and 17-year-old juveniles for certain enumerated violent
crimes in courts with jurisdiction over adults.
24. Law enforcement
and prevention programs for gangs and youth who are involved in or
are at risk of involvement in gangs.
25. Programs
to develop or improve forensic laboratory capability to analyze DNA
for identification purposes.
26. Programs
to develop and implement antiterrorism training and procure equipment
for local law enforcement authorities.