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HomeNewsLocal governmentBryan Names Ray Martinez to Head the Law Enforcement Planning Commission.

Bryan Names Ray Martinez to Head the Law Enforcement Planning Commission.

Ray Martinez (Government House photo)

Gov. Albert Bryan named former Police Department Intelligence Director Ray Martinez director of the Law Enforcement Planning Commission, Government House announced Monday.

Martinez, a 12-year employee of the Police Department, served as the department’s director of internal affairs and labor relations manager and as director of intelligence where he developed the Criminal Intelligence Unit and its policies and procedures, according to Government House.

On Monday, Bryan said his administration will refocus the LEPC to ensure a more data-driven approach in the development of anti-crime programs and initiatives in the territory and that the administration will aggressively pursue the federal funding available to implement those programs.

“The LEPC plays a critical role in our law enforcement and crime prevention strategy,” Bryan said. “We are activating the long-dormant policy-making function of the LEPC to collect data for a smarter, more data-based approach to eradicating the root causes of crime in our communities.”

“The territory has hundreds-of-thousands of dollars available to target juvenile and delinquency prevention, and we must make those dollars work to stem the increasing number of youth offenders if we are to have a chance at reducing crime in the territory,” he said.

Martinez has a bachelor’s in international and comparative criminal justice from Kaplan University and a master’s in criminal justice and criminology from the University of Cincinnati. He is a graduate of the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center’s criminal investigation training program.

The Law Enforcement Planning Commission advises and assists the Governor in developing policies and initiatives aimed at reducing crime and delinquency in the U.S. Virgin Islands. It administers all federal block grants, and other criminal justice funds, which are awarded to the territory by the U.S. Department of Justice and Children’s Justice Act funds from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

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