Pubdate: Mon, 19 Jul 2004 Source: Star-News (NC) Copyright: 2004 Wilmington Morning Star Contact: http://www.wilmingtonstar.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/500 Author: Millard K. Ives Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/racial.htm (Racial Issues) VIOLENCE ON THE STREETS Attacking The Problem Of Black-On-Black Crime Editor's Note: Society pays a high price for violence - in lost lives, dashed hopes, lost wages and the cost of caring for victims and their families. This is the second in a two-part series looking at the human and financial toll. Read Sunday's report, "Violence: a costly 'disease,' " at www.star newsonline.com. Business owner Darryl Brown sat in his dimly lit Castle Street insurance office one recent Thursday afternoon, recounting how the street life of his 22-year-old son, Terry Green, had cost his son his life. Mr. Green was gunned down earlier that day, June 24, on Glenn Drive in what Wilmington police believe was a drug-related shooting. It was the fourth time he had been shot - the third time this year. Mr. Green's death was part of inner-city warfare in Wilmington that has resulted in 15 reported shootings this year. Fourteen were in the northwest section of the city. All 15 victims were black, as were all but one of the suspects. "If people can learn from this that living in the streets is not a badge of honor, if his death can save one life, then maybe he didn't die in vain," Mr. Brown said of his son. The 15 shootings shed light on a self-destructive street life that has loaded the New Hanover County jail and emergency rooms with black men, created a violent-crimes task force, caused the local NAACP to pressure the Wilmington police for more drug crackdowns and sent black community leaders looking for answers. The shootings also terrified residents. Several bullets lodged in the walls of a home with children inside near the 1200 block of South Ninth Street when a man stepped out of a car June 28 and began firing at another car. A few days earlier, Louise Moore found bullet holes in the side of her home at the corner of 14th and Glenn streets. "I grew up in this neighbor-hood, but it ain't never been this bad," Ms. Moore said a day after the incident. The statistics on black-on-black crime are grim. Racial statistics on the victims and assailants in all gunshot assaults in Wilmington are not recorded, but the U.S. Department of Justice does keep records on homicides. In the 80 homicides reported in Wilmington between 1993 and 2002, the most recent years on which the statistics are available, 58 victims - nearly 73 percent - were black. Yet blacks make up only 25.8 percent of the city's 92,000 residents. In the cases of 37 black victims, the suspected killer also was black. In 19 of the cases, the race of the suspects was unknown. In two cases, the offenders were white. Linda Rawley, public information officer with the Wilmington Police Department, said the cost of the shootings can be seen in the giant holes they leave in the fabric of the black community. "It rips at the very fiber of the family and surrounding community," said Officer Rawley, who is black. "It angers family members, it embitters neighbors and causes great tension in the community." Many of this year's shootings in Wilmington were sparked by drugs or an argument, including one over a woman. Armed robbery is suspected in at least three of the shootings, including the only one with a white suspect. "Most shootings are usually over drugs, money or women," said Barry Coburn, an analyst with the police department who compiles the city's crime statistics. All the suspects in this year's shootings are men, except for one in which gunfire ended a March 5 argument between two women at Rankin Terrace. James Johnson, a professor of psychology at the University of North Carolina at Wilmington, said men have always tended to be more violent than women. But he added the violence displayed by black men tends to be excessive in the inner cities. He said the violence has spread and been promoted through rap music and violent black images in the media. "There's this perception out here that violence is a badge of black manhood," said Dr. Johnson, who is black. "Some people feel, to be a real black man, you have to be violent." Officials with the local chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People point to poor socioeconomic conditions in many black communities that, they say, has left many there feeling they have no choice but to sell drugs. It's a career the New Hanover County chapter's political action chairman, Bernard Robinson, believes triggers many shootings. "We have to stop letting people use our neighborhoods as safe havens for drug dealers," Mr. Robinson said. Some officials and groups say they are working hard to combat the problem. NAACP officials have been attending meetings with police, trying to persuade the department to place more officers in drug-infested areas and sponsor more community programs. "We need to build stronger neighborhoods, not more jails," Mr. Robinson said. Drugs as well as limited education, poverty, chronic unemployment, lack of hope, disenchantment and negative images in the media have all been cited as underlying causes of black-on-black crime, community leaders and public officials said. Terry Jones, pastor at Warner Temple AME Zion Church, said black-on-black crime isn't a simple issue to solve. "There are too many underlying causes involved," he said. "It's going to take a lot in our communities to fight this." Officer Rawley praises a local effort for trying to get a tighter grip on gun violence. The Violent Crimes Task Force is a partnership of the Wilmington Police Department, the New Hanover Sheriff's Office, New Hanover District Attorney's Office and other law enforcement agencies. They work with federal prosecutors to get more severe sentences for criminals committing violent acts with guns, said Jon David, an assistant district attorney. "We believe getting more guns off the street is the answer," he said. It's not clear how many men have been siphoned from society to incarceration by urban community warfare. But according to a New Hanover County jail official, of the building's 392 inmates in jail Saturday, 223 were black. Patricia Thomas, who recently served as a chaplain for the Pender Correctional Institution, stressed that more classes and programs in conflict resolution and anger management need to be introduced into black communities to keep more black men out of jail. One city program aims to keep inner-city youngsters from ending up in jail. On Saturday nights, when many teens are out on the street, the gym at the Martin Luther King Center on Eighth Street is filled with at-risk black and white children trying to stay out of trouble. They participate in various activities, including basketball, swimming, tennis and listening to motivational speakers. Sponsored by the Wilmington Police Department with the help of community residents, the Youth Fitness and Mentoring Program was created to target children who were at risk for making poor choices regarding violence, said Officer Verna Atwood, who runs the program. "This not only gives them something else to do but something positive to think of when they are not here," Officer Atwood said. It is one of a number of community efforts to curb violent crime in the inner city. Various community organizations are working to solve some of the underlying issues of black-on-black crime. But some people, such as Dolores Moore, president of the New Hanover County chapter of the NAACP, argue that not enough is being done by individual residents. "This problem is occurring in the black community, and black residents must take more of a personal lead to fight it," she said. Officer Donnie Williams, who grew up in the public housing community of Creekwood, added it shouldn't be just a police effort but a community effort. Some police officers added that it is up to parents to get more involved with their children. "A lot of the shootings could be prevented if there was more parental guidance," Sgt. Kevin Hargrove said. It should be noted that the overwhelming majority of murders recorded across the nation are between people of the same race. According to the latest numbers on murders in single victim/single offender incidents released by the U.S. Department of Justice, 92.3 percent of black victims were killed by black offenders in 2002, and 84.7 percent of white victims were killed by white offenders. It also should be noted that the death of Mr. Green was the only murder this year in Wilmington that involved black suspects and black victims. But proportionally, blacks in the United States are more likely than whites to die a violent death. According to the U.S. Department of Justice, 48.7 percent of murder victims in 2002 across the nation were white, and 48.5 percent were black - although blacks made up only 12.3 percent of the country's population in 2000. One solution to stopping the shootings in urban American may begin with simply talking about them. Many in the community cried out in recent years after several shootings of black men by law enforcement officers. But despite the number of deaths it causes, black-on-black crime is a taboo subject in many circles. It's often considered politically or culturally incorrect for blacks to criticize their own people, Officer Rawley said. Some view the term "black-on-black crime" as a cliche and wonder why no one talks about white-on-white crime. "It's a term that perpetuates the negative images of our black youth," said Johnnie Fields, an official with the Castle Street Association, a merchants group for the surrounding community. "Too many black men already are surrounded by negative stereotypes that assume they are trouble," Ms. Fields said. Chaplain Thomas said she feels that crimes involving blacks tend to be more publicized in the media. Mr. David, the assistant district attorney, said he looks at the issue as a social issue rather than a "black" issue. Dr. Johnson thinks it's important to bring the problem of -black-on-black crime to the forefront. "If these victims had all been shot by whites," he said, "the black community would be up in arms by now, demanding an investigation." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth