Pubdate: Sun, 24 May 2009
Source: Baltimore Sun (MD)
Copyright: 2009 The Baltimore Sun Company
Contact:  http://www.baltimoresun.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/37
Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/topic/Stop+Snitching

CITY'S CRIME PROBLEM

Our view: Baltimore's police commissioner was right to  say that the 
police alone can't solve it; in the end,  it's up to all of us

When Baltimore police roll into city neighborhoods  known for serious 
drug violence, the first thing they  often hear are shouts of 
"Five-O! Five-O!" from  lookouts warning of their approach. The 
lookouts, mostly men in their 40s and 50s who are considered too  old 
to play much of a role in the street-level drug  trade, earn a meager 
subsistence on the periphery of  the business. Younger, up-and-coming 
dealers pay them a  pittance to keep watch, usually in the form of 
just  enough heroin or crack cocaine to get them through  another day.

So when Baltimore Police Commissioner Frederick H.  Bealefeld III, 
who came up through the ranks and once  walked those mean streets 
himself, considers how to  manage Baltimore's endemic crime problem, 
he's got to  be thinking of those middle-age guys on the street 
who,  broke, unemployed and addicted, are as much victims of  the 
city's violent drug trade as are the junkies who  line up in the 
shadows to buy their daily fix.

"The best thing I could possibly do to reduce crime in  Baltimore 
would be to give all my officers two kinds of  cards to hand out," 
the commissioner says. "One would  name a drug treatment clinic 
people could enter that  day; the other would tell them where to find 
a job. If  I had those two cards, it would be amazing what this  city 
would look like."

Mr. Bealefeld made headlines last week when he told a  radio talk 
show host that no matter how many cops he  puts on the streets, the 
city won't be safe until  everyone starts doing their part in 
combating crime:  police, prosecutors, judges, educators, social 
workers, health officials, neighborhood residents and, perhaps  most 
important, parents.

The commissioner wasn't trying to pass the buck. From  where he sits, 
the police are making progress against  violent crime. But they can't 
do it alone.

Here are some statistics: Overall, crime in the city is  down 10 
percent from this time last year. There have  been 23 percent fewer 
nonfatal shootings, and homicides  are practically level, with only 
four more cases than  this time a year ago, when murders hit a 
20-year low.  Meanwhile, the department's focus on getting the 
most  violent offenders and their guns is paying off: Police  seized 
1,038 guns since Jan. 1 and arrested 482 people  on weapons charges, 
up 12 percent from 2008.

Getting guns off the street is the key to reducing  homicides. But 
the problem is huge, and Mr. Bealefeld  says a gun task force that 
monitors people convicted of  weapons charges still needs to do a 
better a job  figuring out where the guns are coming from. Last year, 
officers seized 2,900 illegal guns in the city. That  surely helped 
cut the number of homicides, but the  figures are still daunting.

What more can police do? Officers can engage  communities more 
effectively to win residents' trust  and cooperation; that's the only 
way to overcome the  city's infamous "stop snitching" culture of 
witness  intimidation. They can work with after-school  initiatives 
aimed at gang violence mediation and  support prisoner re-entry 
programs that help ex-inmates  stay straight. They can coordinate 
with agencies that  provide educational and recreational 
opportunities for young people, who are too often the victims of 
gun  crimes, and they can refer addicts to treatment.

But in the end, crime isn't just the police  department's problem, 
and to really make a dent in it  Mr. Bealefeld and his officers will 
need help from  individuals and institutions across the city and 
state. Over the long term, solving Baltimore's chronic crime  problem 
will take the work of many people, and it has  to begin well before 
the yellow crime-scene tape goes  up - because by then, it's usually too late.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom