Bracken McKey on Why Crime Prevention Requires Cross-Industry Commitment, Not Just New Laws

  • Former Washington County Chief Deputy District Attorney Bracken McKey argues that the most effective crime prevention strategies involve industry collaboration and community trust — not legislation alone.

The Limits of Legislation

Oregon, USA, 10th March 2026, ZEX PR WIRE — Laws define what is prohibited. They do not, on their own, prevent crime. That distinction matters more than it is often given credit for, according to Bracken McKey, an attorney and the owner of McKey Law in Washington County, Oregon.

McKey spent 26 years as a prosecutor with the Washington County District Attorney’s Office, rising to Chief Deputy District Attorney before entering private practice in 2024. His career included cases that required coordination across industries — work that earned him recognition from both the Recording Industry Association of America and the Oregon Construction Industry.

In recent commentary, McKey has argued that cross-industry partnerships represent one of the most underused tools in crime prevention.

What the Evidence Shows

The pattern McKey observed over his career is consistent: crimes that span industry lines — intellectual property theft, construction fraud, organized theft at job sites — are most effectively addressed when prosecutors and private sector partners are communicating before a case reaches the courtroom.

Waiting for a crime to occur and then building a prosecution is reactive. Structuring relationships between law enforcement and industry partners so that warning signs are identified early is a different kind of investment — and one with measurable downstream effects.

A Practical Framework

McKey points to several principles that communities and businesses can apply without waiting for legislative action:

Identify the overlap between your industry’s vulnerabilities and local law enforcement priorities. Schedule structured conversations with the DA’s office or local police before you have a specific case.

Train internal teams to recognize and document patterns, not just individual incidents. Prosecutors work more effectively with organized records than with isolated complaints.

Build relationships across organizations in your sector. Crime patterns often span multiple businesses before they are identified. Shared early warning systems reduce the time between first incident and response.

What Individuals Can Do

For community members, McKey recommends staying informed about local crime prevention initiatives and engaging with neighborhood programs that connect residents with law enforcement in non-crisis contexts. Trust built outside of emergencies is the trust that functions during them.

About Bracken McKey

Bracken McKey is the owner and attorney at McKey Law, based in Washington County, Oregon. He served 26 years as a prosecutor with the Washington County District Attorney’s Office, including years as Chief Deputy District Attorney. He now practices criminal defense and personal injury law. More information is available at www.brackenmckey.com.

Published On: March 10, 2026

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