Pubdate: Sat, 03 Feb 2007 Source: Journal Standard, The (Freeport, IL) Copyright: 2007 The Journal Standard Contact: http://www.journalstandard.com/shared-content/perform/?domain_name=journalstandard.com&form_template=letters Website: http://www.journalstandard.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3182 GETTING TOUGH ON CRIME The issue: The recent crime spree Our view: The city needs to take some leadership and act swiftly to address this growing problem We as a community are appalled at the crime happening in our midst early into this new year. Recall that there was a shooting and brazen home invasion involving five gunmen claiming to be cops. This was in a working-class residential neighborhood, and the people with guns were outside on the street at one point - one person trying to flee the scene even jumped into some poor soul's window at 4 a.m. Imagine that for a wake-up call some quiet morning. Then, we have 23-year-old Reginald Pendelton, who died in police custody last week, after surviving a shooting at Freeport's Plaza Hotel in 2006. There are other, less dramatic examples - the many thefts, burglaries, assaults and other street crimes that don't merit more than a mention in the police blotter. Meanwhile, cocaine, the local drug of choice, continues to be an all too common thread on the streets and on the case call in Stephenson County Circuit Court. Whether these recent incidents turn out to be the start of a downward spiral or an anomaly in a year's worth of crime stats, it's clear that waiting to act is no longer an option. The city should rapidly develop and implement an emergency plan to fight neighborhood crime. In the short term, we need more cops on the street, and we need leadership from City Hall. The city must go into the problem neighborhoods and clean them up. Enforce existing building codes and crackdown on slumlords who profit from others' misery and get their rent checks from thugs. Light up these neighborhoods and intersections, put surveillance cameras at problem corners, and hold regular neighborhood meetings to encourage neighbors to help. Given what's gone on in recent weeks, we can't imagine that families and working people from all over town would not support a special tax or tax increase to help give the police department the resources it needs - more officers and equipment are vital and desperately needed. How much would it take to add 10 cops to the force? How much for five building inspectors and five child welfare case workers? How much to get the garbage out of the yards and out of the gutters? It is time we did some honest soul-searching on this problem for a change. Think of it as a homeland security charge for Freeport. Doing the same thing will not get us a different result, just more sad headlines. We could build five Wal-Mart SuperCenters and put up sprawling wind farms from here to the western horizon, yet if we never feel safe in our own city, in our own homes, and on our streets and sidewalks, no one else ever will, either. And those who do come here will be those who profit from the misery of others. But this problem of urban crime is not purely economic - at least not to the majority of us who still have a soul, still care about the future of this community and the safety of its children. Good, working people of all age groups, races and economic strata are suffering every day in Freeport because of the thugs and career-criminals who have taken over their neighborhoods and our streets. Criminals, come from Chicago and St. Louis and Milwaukee, and they aren't here to deliver the mail. It is time to show them the door. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake