Pubdate: Fri, 12 Apr 2002 Source: Albany Herald, The (GA) Contact: http://www.albanyherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1747 Author: Ben Holcombe, Staff Writer RESIDENTS FED UP WITH NEIGHBORHOOD CRIME More Than 15 Northeast Dawson Residents Rail Against Widespread Crime And A Lack Of Police Presence DAWSON -- Residents of one Dawson neighborhood have had enough. Thursday night, more than 15 people made sure the city council knew just how fed up they are with widespread crime where they live. For more than an hour, residents complained about drug use and dealing, wayward gunfire, even public urination and defecation in the streets and in their back yards. But drug activity, they said, is the most predominant illegal activity, and they think police could do more to stop it. "People set up shop on the first of the month," said resident Michael Greer. "It's the same people in the same clothes sitting in the same place selling the same dope." Gloria Green, another northeast Dawson resident, said it's so bad that "I can sit on my porch and get a free high." Lucious Holloway, a Terrell County commissioner who lives in northeast Dawson, was troubled recently by the sound of five gunshots and frustrated that police won't "haul people in" for questioning because of civil liberty concerns. "Unless I see people shoot, ain't nothing I can do about it," Holloway said. As the livid complaints continued, so did a chorus of "Um-hmms" and "Amens." When Mayor Pro Tem Calvin Stephens suggested residents appear before the Public Safety Committee, the complainants threatened to stay until midnight. Instead, an impromptu public forum ensued with Police Chief Lee Webb. Webb said that during the past two weeks, police have made 60 arrests for everything from drug offenses to noise ordinance violations as part of their stepped-up enforcement efforts. And the recently formed Dawson Anti-narcotics Response Team (D.A.R.T.), is getting back to "good, old-fashioned community policing," especially in the northeast sections of the city, Webb said. Residents also said they worry that if they call to report crime, police officers will release their names to suspects, who might retaliate against them. City Manager Barney Parnacott said the city is setting up an anonymous crime tip hot line that would allow people to report suspicious activity without giving their names. Ward 2 Councilwoman Janet Andrews-Mitchell, who put the issue on the council's agenda, said she wants the matter given top priority. "We can't fix it in one day," she cautioned. "It didn't get that way in one day." Ben Holcombe can be reached at (229) 434-8738. - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl