The Dallas based group "Mothers Against Police Brutality" is moving from protest to policy change.

The group will spend the next few months meeting with officials with the Dallas Police Department, the Dallas Mayor's Office, and the District Attorney's office presenting its nine action steps to changing policing.

The group says it is especially focused on the use of excessive and deadly force. Their goal is to make policing safer, more fair, more proportionate and more just.

The group's proposals can be found here.

"We began as a protest group," said Collette Flanagan, who founded MAPB after her son, Clinton Allen, an unarmed 25-year-old African American, was killed by Dallas police in 2013. "But we have always had our eye on actual, tangible changes to the unaccountable use of deadly force by police officers in Dallas and throughout the country."

In a press release, MAPB says, since 2003, there have been more than 68 deaths of unarmed individuals killed by Dallas police.

"The last time a city of Dallas police officer was indicted in the fatal shooting of a citizen, Richard Nixon was President of the United States," said MAPB co-founder John Fullinwider.

NBC 5 reached out to Dallas police for comment and received the following statement:

"Chief Brown has previously provided a statement related to your request that’s posted on our website. I have included a link to the site."

