Pubdate: Tue, 20 Jun 2006 Source: Times-Picayune, The (LA) Copyright: 2006 The Times-Picayune Contact: http://www.nola.com/t-p/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/848 Author: Gordon Russell, Staff writer GUARD, STATE TROOPERS TO PATROL NEW ORLEANS 'We're Not Going to Take It Anymore,' Nagin Vows In an extraordinary move usually reserved for the immediate crisis after natural disasters, a detachment of at least 100 Louisiana National Guard soldiers and 60 State Police troopers will be sent to New Orleans today in an effort to quell the steadily rising tide of bloodshed in the city, a wave of violence that culminated Saturday with the shocking murder of five youths in Central City. The deployment comes just months after the Guard pulled its last post-Hurricane Katrina units out of the city and follows requests from law enforcement officials, Mayor Ray Nagin and the City Council, who are growing alarmed at statistics that indicate the murder rate in recent weeks has shot above the city's pre-storm pace. Nagin and council members said Monday they are also likely to re-establish a juvenile curfew, a measure that was credited with helping to curb the city's top-in-the-nation murder rate in the mid-1990s. The mayor and council members announced their remarkable request for state law enforcement help at an unusual joint news conference in City Hall on Monday morning, at which the group decried the killings and declared war on what Councilman Oliver Thomas christened the equally dangerous offshoot of Hurricane Katrina: "Hurricane Crime." Gov. Kathleen Blanco called Saturday's Central City killings "shocking" as she approved the city's request, which had been in the works for weeks, on Monday afternoon. The city initially asked for 300 Guard soldiers and 60 troopers, and the Blanco administration said late Monday that the deployment will build up to that number in the coming weeks. Leaders of the various agencies involved will meet today to discuss patrolling strategies. For now, the plan calls for stationing troops mainly in desolate areas devastated by Katrina, Police Superintendent Warren Riley said in his own news conference late Monday. Their presence in those areas should curb looting, and will allow police to focus on "hot spots" in more heavily populated sections of town where most of the violence is occurring, he said. Deadly Force If Necessary That said, Riley noted that the added troops will have the power to arrest and detain suspects and to use deadly force if necessary. "They will be armed, locked and loaded and prepared," he said. Riley said the city first asked the state for law enforcement help in March -- well before last weekend's bloodbath, but just as the murder rate began a stubborn uptick after a post-Katrina lull. Officials said the National Guard troops were to arrive July 1, but as the murder count kept climbing, Blanco accelerated the deployment at the city's request. As of early Monday night, 53 people had been murdered this year in the city, well below the more than 134 killed in the first six months last year, according to NOPD figures. But accounting for New Orleans' reduced population, this year's murders are occurring at or above the same pace as before Katrina, depending on what population estimate is used. And the killings have accelerated since the beginning of April, with 36 of this year's 53 murders taking place in the past 12 weeks, police figures show. Even if the current population is 220,000 residents, a generous figure according to most experts, the 12-week total represents 16 murders per 100,000 residents, more than the 15.1 killings per 100,000 residents in the same period last year. Nagin and council members Monday made it clear that if violent crime is not brought into check, it will suffocate New Orleans' nascent recovery. "This is a great city," newly elected City Councilman Arnie Fielkow said. "But if we don't make people feel safe in their homes and their communities, nothing else is going to matter." The power to fix the problem lies with residents, Thomas said, challenging New Orleanians to take their city back from criminals. 'Rise Up' "Are we going to rise up and protest against the thugs? Are we going to march on them? Are we going to tell them it's unacceptable? Or are we scared?" Thomas asked. "I can pick on the mayor, but I can't pick on the drug kingpin. I can pick on the police chief, but I can't pick on the hit man. 'Cause guess what? If you live in this community scared, you're dead anyway!" To address the problem, officials prescribed several solutions, ranging from a juvenile curfew to increasing economic opportunities in poor neighborhoods to the reinstitution of night recreation leagues. In addition, the council, led by Fielkow, plans to hold a "crime summit" within two weeks, involving representatives of the criminal justice system as well as community leaders, Fielkow said. Among other things, that meeting will focus on better coordinating the various arms of the criminal justice system, which was woefully inefficient before Katrina and was left in shambles after the storm. Nagin said Monday that he believes some thugs are coming home from places like Houston because the judicial system is in such disarray here that they're in less danger of spending long stretches in prison. He said he and other city leaders will try to focus attention on abuses of the system, such as the lenient bond practices of certain judges. "We are going to as a community watch and monitor much closer what's happening in the criminal justice system," Nagin said. "And if we see some things that we don't like, you may see the mayor and the City Council show up at a hearing and be personally involved in making sure that people are not getting lower bonding so that they can get back out on the street." The council's crime summit likely also will include talk of how to better integrate the operations of the various law enforcement agencies in Orleans Parish, which include the Police Department, two sheriff's offices, and harbor and levee police forces. Recently elected Councilwoman Shelley Midura noted Monday that on a per-capita basis, New Orleans has the sixth-highest ratio of law enforcement officers to residents in the country, but that those high numbers for whatever reason do not translate into low crime statistics. Likely the most concrete of the ideas pitched Monday was the re-establishment of the juvenile curfew, something former Mayor Marc Morial championed shortly after he took office in the bloody days of the mid-1990s. The curfew, along with police reform and falling crime rates nationwide, was seen as a key to the halving of the murder rate that occurred under the watch of Morial and then-Police Superintendent Richard Pennington. Housing the Violators City officials were optimistic Monday that the juvenile curfew could be quickly re-established. The main sticking point appears to be figuring out where offenders would be housed for the night. During the mid-1990s, curfew violators were taken to a building on Tulane Avenue operated by then-Criminal Sheriff Charles Foti, the city's jailer. The building was not part of the Orleans Parish Prison jail complex. Renee Lapeyrolerie, a spokeswoman for Criminal Sheriff Marlin Gusman, said the sheriff has told juvenile justice groups that he will not house curfew violators in his jail. The only juveniles taken to the jail are those charged with adult offenses, she said. However, Gusman is amenable to having his deputies supervise a facility where such offenders are taken, provided it is not a jail, Lapeyrolerie said. For instance, recently elected Councilwoman Stacy Head had proposed the idea of housing curfew violators in a church gym, a solution Lapeyrolerie said could work. A member of Head's staff said the councilwoman and Gusman are working to come up with a solution "posthaste." Nagin said he envisions the curfew would last from 11 p.m. or midnight until dawn and would remain in effect at least through the summer. While city officials, residents and police have been sounding the alarm about rising crime for several months, the killings that occurred in the pre-dawn hours Saturday served as a rallying cry for Monday's events. It was the first time five people were killed in the city in a single violent episode since March 1, 1995, when a man sprayed bullets on a North Roman Street house, a crime for which he was sentenced to life in prison. Several council members on Monday invoked familiar rhetoric, saying the city's residents need to declare that "enough is enough." But the passion and anger were palpable, recalling the outrage that overtook the city in 1996 after the infamous triple slaying at the Louisiana Pizza Kitchen restaurant in the French Quarter. 'Line in the Sand' "The community people I've talked to have said they're not scared," Thomas said. "For some reason or another, this has drawn a line with everybody. OK. Little M.C. Killer don't get a pass anymore. He can't walk around the street. Maybe he might have to shoot all of us." "This is our line in the sand," Nagin said. "And we're saying we're not going to take it anymore." The mayor said he was contributing $1,000 of his own money to the reward offered by Crimestoppers for information leading to the capture of the killers in Saturday's crime. Nagin's donation was followed by several others announced at the meeting. While much of the focus Monday was on catching criminals and keeping them behind bars, there was also some soul-searching about the state of the city's youth, and discussion about spending money on measures that might reduce crime forever. Thomas bemoaned the diminishing worth of human life, as measured by young hoodlums, and wondered aloud: "What have we produced, that human life is so unvaluable?" Councilwoman Cynthia Hedge Morrell declared that the city was "reaping the benefits" of having "abandoned" the city school system 30 years ago. To turn things around, Fielkow appealed to the New Orleans Saints, his former employer, and the Hornets for help in financing night recreation programs. Newly elected Councilman James Carter spoke of the "economic deprivation" that permeates high-crime neighborhoods, and prevailed on business leaders to offer job opportunities to residents of those areas as the city rebuilds. Councilwoman Cynthia Willard-Lewis called for the state to open more schools and to extend their operating hours from 6 a.m. until midnight to allow adults and others to get education and "enrichment." And Hedge Morrell called on companies that have "made millions" from emergency federal contracts -- firms like the Shaw Group, Fluor Corp. and Phillips and Jordan Inc. -- to contribute some of their earnings to programs to help New Orleanians. "Step up and put your money into this community," she said. "Because this community is making you rich." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake