"We can't arrest our way out of some of these problems.
We can't keep doing the same things.
We're not saying it's an end all, but it's what we've decided to do to try to make change."
That's the message from retired Atlanta police officer Tyrone Dennis, who started Clippers and Cops after 10 years with the city's gang unit, CBS News reports.
The nonprofit pairs at-risk youth with local police officers in barbershops, where they spend time talking about issues such as decision-making, goal-setting, and "dos and don'ts on traffic stops, rap music, prison, and just try to help them do better at interacting with law enforcement," Dennis says.
He says he was inspired to start Clippers and Cops last year after prosecutors decided not to move forward with a case against Caden Weeks, a 16-year-old arrested along with three others on multiple felony charges, including illegal gun possession and street gang activity.
Weeks' mother, Tomeka, says she spent $8,000 of her savings bailing her son, but the program changed everything.
"If they fall down, they're able to get back up and get their life back on track,"
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