Cedric Alexander

law enforcement analyst

Cedric Alexander, a former commissioner of community safety in Minneapolis, is a law enforcement expert with over 40 years of experience in public safety. Alexander has also been deputy commissioner of the New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services and an assistant professor at the University of Rochester department of psychiatry. He is a former national president of the National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives (NOBLE). He is the author of “The New Guardians: Policing in America’s Communities for the 21st Century” and “In Defense of Public Service: How 22 Million Government Workers Will Save Our Republic.”


Latest from

Cedric Alexander

4mos ago
MS NOW Opinion

Why we can trust the stats that violent crime is down

When leaders make unfounded claims about data manipulation, the entire statistical infrastructure on which democracy depends is destroyed.

7mos ago
MS NOW Opinion

Trump’s DOJ seems determined to make American policing worse

Trump’s Department of Justice getting rid of consent decrees with certain police departments won’t strengthen the effectiveness of local policing but weaken it.

1year ago
MS NOW Opinion

Local officials need to be ready for potential Election Day violence

Given everything we’ve seen over the past few years, it’s imperative that officials at every level be prepared.

1year ago
MS NOW Opinion

Tyreek Hill didn’t deserve the rough treatment he got from Miami-Dade police

Officers abandoned their training and surrendered to a macho impulse to dominate.

1year ago
MS NOW Opinion

Sean Grayson had a history full of red flags. Then he appeared at Sonya Massey’s door.

I’ve been in law enforcement for decades. I’d never have hired Sean Mayson, the deputy who killed the 36-year-old Springfield mother.

2years ago
MS NOW Opinion

Karin Riebe was murdered by her son. Did police let it happen?

When laws designed to decrease fatal interactions between law enforcement officials and the public pass , it’s important that police make good-faith efforts to embrace them.