Pubdate: Mon, 05 May 2003 Source: Virginian-Pilot (VA) Copyright: 2003, The Virginian-Pilot Contact: http://www.pilotonline.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/483 Author: Michelle Washington, The Virginian-Pilot CRACKDOWN ON SMALL CRIME AIMS TO MAKE NORFOLK SAFER NORFOLK -- The man was 20 yards from home and down the street from a restaurant with a public bathroom. Yet he relieved himself against someone else's house, in broad daylight, while the owner was at work. A police officer saw him, waited until he finished and charged him with urinating in public. Prosecutor Tanya Bullock handled the case as if the man had relieved himself on her own home. She argued for the maximum penalty and got it -- a $500 fine. Bullock is one of four assistant commonwealth's attorneys assigned to pursue "quality of life" crimes in a broad section of Norfolk as part of the Project Safe Neighborhood Team. The team, established in September, targets behavior such as urinating in public -- UIP, for short -- trespassing, shoplifting and possessing marijuana. The theory behind it resembles the one former Mayor Rudolph Giuliani used to combat crime in New York City: Crack down on lesser offenses, and more serious crimes will decrease. A photo taped to Bullock's office door reminds her every day of her success in fighting for neighborhoods. It shows her behind her desk, smiling, with a caption written in bold, black ink: "I got $500 for UIP." Federal and city money pays for the program. Before September, prosecutors rarely followed misdemeanor cases in General District Court. Now, the four lawyers -- Bullock, Laurel Uhlar, Aneka Williams and Sam Abed -- prosecute misdemeanor crimes committed in a wedge-shaped swath of the city. The section generally encompasses the 23504 ZIP code and runs from the commonwealth's attorney's office on City Hall Avenue downtown to the Virginia Zoo and from just east of MacArthur Center to just west of Military Circle Mall. The area includes all of the city's public housing and the Huntersville, Park Place, Berkley and Campostella areas. Prosecutors picked those areas because a majority of Norfolk's gun-related crime happened in them between 1999 and 2002. The team's efforts extend outside the courtroom. The lawyers visit the neighborhoods to explain their mission. They meet with business owners and managers to ask about problems. They introduce themselves to school principals, and they attend neighborhood gatherings. "We're not just there to prosecute them," Uhlar said. "We're there to try to make their lives a little easier and get the little bit of people who are causing the problems for an awful lot of good people." It might sound silly to aggressively prosecute a man for urinating in public, Uhlar said, but, if someone urinates "in my yard all the time, on the side of my house, I'm going to be aggravated." The crime cost the man $40 an ounce, she joked. Bullock and Uhlar spent a windy, cold afternoon in April visiting neighborhoods they recently added to their prosecution area -- Berkley, Campostella and the Oakleaf Forest public housing area. Bullock already knew Berkley -- she grew up near Hardy Avenue. Her father still lives on Craig Street. She felt at home as they stood in front of the Southside Boy's and Girl's Club. The neighborhood team is her second job as a lawyer, and she sees it as a great place to gain experience. "After I went to training and got into the communities, I realized people care about people kicking over their stuff," she said. Uhlar became a lawyer because of Atticus Finch, the noble defense attorney who was brave enough to defend a black man against the false accusations of a white woman in Harper Lee's novel, "To Kill a Mockingbird." She has worked for the commonwealth's attorney since 1997 and used to try murder cases. She volunteered for the neighborhood team. "I think people have a right to live well," Uhlar said. "There's less pressure than if you lose a homicide case. But we don't like to lose." In Oakleaf Forest, Uhlar carried a camera to take pictures of the streets, courtyards and no-trespassing signs they would be talking about later in court. Quinton Allen, a Norfolk police community resource officer, showed them around. Residents have complained about car thieves abandoning stolen vehicles, Allen told them. Some said the thieves used their trash cans to stash the screwdrivers they used to bypass the cars' starters. Allen pointed to a wooded area behind a fence at the property line. Officers lose suspects who jump that fence, he said. Drug dealers know the ins and outs of the neighborhood and use cell phones to notify people on back streets that police are on the way. Evidence of drug use and sales littered the ground. Allen used his foot to prod a three-inch metal tube -- a crack pipe. He kicked over a pile of tobacco that he called a "Blunt mound" -- the innards of a Philly Blunt cigar that had been gutted and filled with marijuana. Having prosecutors in court on misdemeanor cases from the neighborhood has helped gain convictions, Allen said, and provides officers with needed backup. If a defense lawyer calls a witness, he said, an officer can't object on his own to say, "This person wasn't there." But the prosecutors can. And because the team members know the community, they can argue for what is best for the neighborhood. "Part of our job is to educate judges about why a person deserves the maximum sentence for a misdemeanor," Bullock said. "People don't see why a defendant deserves one year in jail just for trespassing." Banning someone convicted of trespassing from a street or apartment complex does little if another hangout is a few steps away. So the lawyers ask judges to ban trespassers from a two-to three-block radius. Their knowledge also helps defendants. If it's a first offense, the team members know that. If the person has a family member in the neighborhood that they need to visit, the lawyers know that, too. Sgt. David E. Shipley, the supervisor for the Norfolk Police Department's community resource officer program, said it's too early to know conviction rates. But he said the effort is working. Criminals need each element of what Shipley called a crime triangle: desire, opportunity and ability. The team works to reduce all three. Beatrice Garvin, who heads the Olde Huntersville Civic League, said residents have long worked to attract business and foster safe neighborhoods. She thinks the program has helped. "We feel like we're being heard and that our concerns are of significant value," Garvin said. "It's just another tool the community can use to make it a neighborhood of choice, a neighborhood you will feel comfortable about raising your child in, having your family visit, conducting economic business." In court, Bullock is brisk and businesslike. Last week, she dismissed two cases for lack of evidence. Other defendants didn't get off so easily. Police Officer C.E. Lee charged several people with trespassing at an apartment complex in the 800 block of C Ave. Officers knew drug dealers used the place for business, Lee said, and two shootings have occurred there this year. The property owner sent a letter to the police chief authorizing officers to enforce no-trespassing signs. One defendant argued that he lives next door and that his children play in the parking lot. "Did you see the no-trespassing signs?" Bullock asked. "Yes." "You were standing there?" "Yes." "No further questions," Bullock said. The judge ordered the man to work off a $500 fine through community service and to stay away from the property, except to retrieve his children. Bullock had fought for one more small victory. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom