The grants will support law enforcement departments, local jurisdictions, technical assistance and research organizations in projects to protect the physical and mental health of the police, the DOJ said in a statement. âLaw enforcement officers have high rates of on-the-job injury, psychological illness and suicide,â said Matt Dummermuth, OJPâs principal deputy assistant attorney general.Â
The OJP provided $29.8M to reimburse officers up to 50 percent for the cost of body armor vests, $12M for safety and wellness programs and another $12.2M for body-worn camera programs. Research programs for police and public safety, health and wellness also received over $2M in funding.Â
In 2017, the department recorded a five percent increase to more than 60,000 line-of-duty assaults against officers compared to incidents in 2016. The DOJ plans to release another grant for multi-disciplinary, scenario-based active shooter training to better protect and equip first responders across the country.