See a summary of prop 36 HERE
Tag: Crime
Vital City | Vital Signs: The State of Crime in New York City at Midyear 2024
A sluggish recovery with three warning bells for the quality of city life
— Read on www.vitalcitynyc.org/articles/the-state-of-crime-in-new-york-city-at-midyear-2024
Why Wasn’t the NYC Stabbing-Spree Suspect in Jail? | City Journal
Misguided state and city policies helped put him back on the street.
— Read on www.city-journal.org/article/why-wasnt-he-in-jail
Reducing recidivism, increasing literacy and more
This is a new approach to reduce criminal recidivism.
Reducing recidivism, increasing literacy and more
— Read on www.tucsonspotlight.org/email/f32bd7bc-561d-4a0b-9474-0b8c39461d96/
Not Worth the Risk: Why US Cities Should Rethink Transit Fare Policing
The authors of the article want readers to believe that the police saw the offender enter the subway without paying the subway fare and the police simply shot the offender. A careful reading of the article highlights the following points by the authors: $2.90 isn’t worth killing a person. Subway fare enforcement is a racist police crime-fighting strategy. Subway fare enforcement, doesn’t make sense economically. Transportation discrimination.
$2.90 isn’t worth killing a person.
True, killing a person for not paying a $2.90 subway fare is wrong. It is sad and tragic. However, what happened in the event discussed in the article (Article: “Not Worth the Risk: Why US Cities Should Rethink Transit Fare Policing”, See the news article HERE) is the police confronted the offender for entering the subway system without paying the fare and he pulled a knife on the officers. Brandishing a knife towards the police makes the offender a violent person. The offender posed a risk of deadly force to police and the persons on the subway. Through the offender’s actions he escalated his criminality from fare evasion, to resisting arrest, to menacing, attempted serious assault, or attempted murder. The police must react to a man with a knife on a subway car full of people. Keep in mind the offender could have simply co-operated with the police where the worst result would have been the offender released on an appearance ticket.
Subway fare enforcement is a racist police crime-fighting strategy.
The police crime-fighting strategy that was critized in the article and is always under attack by liberals is Broken Windows Policing. It’s ironic that Broken Windows Policing is labeled as a racist police strategy when, in the 1982 article by Wilson and Kelling, the authors explicitly acknowledge there is a risk of biased or racist actions by police when enforcing Broken Windows Policing.
“The concern about equity is more serious. We might agree that certain behavior makes one person more undesirable than another, but how do we ensure that age or skin color or national origin or harmless mannerisms will not also become the basis for distinguishing the undesirable from the desirable? How do we ensure, in short, that the police do not become the agents of neighborhood bigotry?
We can offer no wholly satisfactory answer to this important question. We are not confident that there is a satisfactory answer, except to hope that by their selection, training, and supervision, the police will be inculcated with a clear sense of the outer limit of their discretionary authority That limit, roughly, is this — the police exist to help regulate behavior, not to maintain the racial or ethnic purity of a neighborhood.”
**SEE Page 35 in Kelling, G. L., & Wilson, J. Q. (1982). Broken windows. Atlantic monthly, 249(3), 29-38. (https://cdn.theatlantic.com/media/archives/1982/03/249-3/132638105.pdf)
Enforcing subway fare evasion can keep out the type of person that has nefarious intentions. Many times persons stopped for subway fare evasion are wanted on warrants, were carrying weapons or contraband, (see Maple, J., & Mitchell, C. (1999). The crime fighter: putting the bad guys out of business and Bratton, W. J., & Knobler, P. (1998). Turnaround: how America’s top cop reversed the crime epidemic) or enter the subway system to commit a crime. When police apply Broken Windows Policing they don’t ignore other violations and crime. Police presence in the subway system and enforcement civil and physical incivilities (Broken Windows violations) the police are enforcing the most visible violations/crimes, respond to concerns of subway riders, and support the “Good Users” on the subway.
Subway fare enforcement, doesn’t make sense economically.
The cost of fare evasion may surprise the reader. Subway fare evasion diminishes the Quality of Life on the subway for ridership. There are also economic costs.
“Losses to the MTA’s operating budget are staggering, with nearly $700 million in revenue not collected in 2022 alone. This includes $315 million lost in bus fares, $285 million in subway fares, $46 million in bridge and tunnel tolls, and $44 million in railroad fares.
Fares and tolls account for a significant proportion of the MTA’s annual budget revenue — almost $7 billion a year. But every dollar lost to evasion impairs the MTA’s financial stability, threatens reliable transit for all New Yorkers, and increases the need for alternative revenue sources, including through larger fare and toll hikes.”
See: https://new.mta.info/blue-ribbon-report-fare-toll-evasion
It is rare to witness serious crime. Much of what drives fear are signs of social and physical disorder. If physical and social disorder along with minor violations of the law are left unchecked, more Good Users will refrain from using the subway system. These circumstances cause further decline of the subway system towards disorder, crime, and chaos.
Transportation discrimination.
The authors end their article claiming that there should be an end to ridership fees. That people should be provided with free transportation and should be able to ride the subway free of police harassment.
There are about an “Annual paid subway ridership was about 1 billion in 2022. Daily ridership fluctuates, but is currently running in the range of 3.4 million on weekdays” (See page 42 https://new.mta.info/blue-ribbon-report-fare-toll-evasion). There are about 4,000 officers assigned to NYPD Transit, probably some amount less than 4,000 are assigned to patrol the subway system. The police officers assigned to the NYC subway system are reassuring to the ridership. The only persons that are unhappy to see the police in the subway are the criminals.
Police officers ‘punch bags’ in ‘epidemic’ of violent attacks
There has been a surge in violence against the police, a BBC investigation has found.
— Read on www.bbc.com/news/articles/c4grg0m085po
Prosecutors in State Courts, 2020 | Bureau of Justice Statistics
Prosecutors in State Courts, 2020 | Bureau of Justice Statistics
— Read on bjs.ojp.gov/library/publications/prosecutors-state-courts-2020
Analysis: What is police policy on vehicle pursuits?
Over the span of nearly 24 hours, Western New York saw a pair of high-speed vehicle incidents that turned deadly. What is police policy on vehicle pursuits across the region? Read more from WBEN:
— Read on www.audacy.com/wben/news/local/analysis-what-is-police-policy-on-vehicle-pursuits
The Impact of Individualized Focused Deterrence on Criminal and Prosocial Outcomes
This research memorandum published by CNA’s Safety and Security Division (SAS) and funded by the National Institute of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, U.S. Department of Justice, examines the impact of individualized focused deterrence on criminal prosocial outcomes.
— Read on www.ojp.gov/ncjrs/virtual-library/abstracts/impact-individualized-focused-deterrence-criminal-and-prosocial
The Anti-Crime Election | City Journal
What some state and local results say about the future of public safety in America
— Read on www.city-journal.org/article/the-anti-crime-election