Pubdate: Mon, 6 Feb 2006 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 2006 San Jose Mercury News Contact: http://www.mercurynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/390 Author: Patrick May, Mercury News PUBLIC ENEMY NO. 1: A STREET Police Chief Vows to Clean Up Cul-De-Sac While the justice system deals with accused cop-killer Alberto Alvarez, East Palo Alto Police Chief Ron Davis is going after his main accomplice: The one-block-long cul-de-sac called Sacramento Street. This gritty tenth of a mile is close to where police officer Richard May was gunned down the night of Jan. 7 after responding to a disturbance call at a nearby taqueria. It's where Alvarez, now being held without bond in San Mateo County Jail, was discovered hiding the next morning. And for over a decade, police say, it has served as an open-air drug bazaar for the Sac Street Gang, one of the city's three major crime groups and Alvarez's suspected crew. Drawing on a variety of tools -- including a "Most Wanted" television show, stepped-up graffiti removal and temporary restraining orders pioneered 16 years ago by the city of San Jose -- Davis hopes to formalize plans this week to avenge May's slaying. Part of that effort features a crime-busting magic trick: He would like to make Sacramento Street disappear. "We'll be asking the community about possibly changing the name of the street," Davis said in an interview. "That way, you'd now belong to a gang named after a place that doesn't exist. We want to strip away their identity because there's power in identity." The clean-up campaign, which Davis says will target Sacramento Street and expand to other neighborhoods in this city of 32,000, really began during last spring's crime wave, perpetrated in part by Sac Street Gang members. Police stepped up their crime analysis, including a five-year homicide study, and began pin-mapping robberies and burglaries to better redeploy officers. They began immediately erasing gang graffiti and removing sneakers strung over telephone lines, an "Open for Business" sign among drug peddlers. But it was May's slaying, and another incident shortly before it, that has supercharged the campaign, leaving Davis almost breathless as he runs down his battle plans. Shortly before the officer's death, gang members allegedly threatened at gunpoint a homeowner trying to put up a security camera. That, said the chief, put the Sac Street Gang "at the top of our list. Threatening a community member who's trying to take affirmative action in a neighborhood -- and now shooting a police officer -- constitute a threat to our entire criminal justice system." Old Problem Despite the tough talk, a safer Sacramento Street won't be an easy fix. Former Police Chief Wes Bowling spent his entire decade as the city's top cop trying to clean it up. Bowling recently pointed out that the physical layout of the dead end -- with access limited and visitors easily monitored by rooftop lookouts -- makes Sac Street a safe harbor for the outlaws who rule it. "We hear gunshots all the time, so I guess we're used to it," says Regina Wagner, 35, a secretary who has lived at the end of the block for 10 years. "This street has had a 25-year history of drugs and gangs. They've been trying forever and ever to clean it up, but nothing ever happens." So Wagner and her neighbors have their routine: Come home, go inside, lock the doors and don't come out. Even Davis acknowledges that "this is not first time we've tried to clean up Sac Street; these are entrenched problems that need long-term solutions." But there is an encouraging precedent for East Palo Alto's efforts, located 20 miles south in the Rocksprings neighborhood of San Jose. Ten years ago, the four-square-block area was described by one judge as a gang-infested "urban war zone," where residents were "prisoners in their own homes." The city of San Jose became one of the first communities in the nation to try a novel approach to taking back Rocksprings after traditional policing methods came up short. Injunctions The idea was simple: Identify a small geographical area, compile a list of its known gang members through arrest records and statements to police, declare them a public nuisance and personally serve each one with a restraining order known as a "gang-abatement injunction." Joan Gallo, then city attorney for San Jose, said the order "described what they couldn't do -- they couldn't associate with other known gang members; they couldn't carry weapons; they couldn't bring spray paint into the area. It was very issue-specific." Challenged by civil libertarians, the city prevailed before the California Supreme Court. Meanwhile, back on the streets, "the results were absolutely fantastic," Gallo said. "I remember going back into Rocksprings, and people who'd been afraid to leave their homes were coming out and reclaiming their neighborhood. It was very dramatic." Rocksprings seems a safe and sleepy place today. Minh Luu, who grew up in the neighborhood and still lives there, has never heard of gang-abatement injunctions, "but they must have worked," the 24-year-old said the other day. "As a kid, I remember groups of 15 and 20 gang members selling drugs at the corner, but we gradually saw them less and less." East Palo Alto police admit they will never completely get rid of gangs. They realize that dispersing gangs could simply create more problems in adjacent neighborhoods. But San Jose's experience has convinced Davis they can at least shake things up on Sacramento Street. On the agenda at this week's meeting with other law-enforcement agencies will be developing "a comprehensive plan that will disrupt and dismantle the Sac Street Gang," he said. "When you dismantle something, the pieces are still there, but they're just not together anymore. "We want the Sac Street Gang to know," Davis said, "that their era of terror will soon be over." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake