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Patrolling Alone

Posted 02/27/2009 by Bill King

Patrolling Alone

A couple of weeks ago, I got in late one evening at Hobby after being out-of-town for the day. I had missed dinner so I decide to grab a burger on the way home. About 9PM, I stopped by a fast food restaurant near Hobby. It was located in a somewhat less than desirable neighborhood and in an area where gang activity has regularly been reported.

As I pulled into the parking lot, I noticed a HPD cruiser was also parked in the lot. I parked next to it and headed inside. About the time I reached the door, a young, lady HPD officer exited the restaurant. She did not have a partner with her. She was only a few feet away from and our eyes met. I asked her, "Do they have you patrolling this neighborhood by yourself?" "Every night," she responded with a grim smile.


Officer Timothy Abernethy – Killed in December
attempting to apprehend suspect alone.

As I watched the young officer drive away, I wondered what dangers she might face that night. Would she have to confront a gang alone? Would she have to break up a family violence situation by herself? I also wondered what family was at home waiting for her to return, worrying that she might not. I wondered if that family included any children.

I also thought about HPD officer Rodney Johnson being shot in the back while making an arrest without backup. I thought about HPD officer Timothy Abernethy who was gunned down in cold blood after pursuing a suspect into an apartment complex alone.

The scene I witnessed would have been unheard of twenty years ago. Then almost all night patrols were manned with two officers. However, over the last two decades, HPD has adopted a strategy in which 90% of the patrols have only one officer. The theory behind this change was that it allowed HPD to project a larger "presence" in the community by having more patrol units on the street and thereby deterring crime. While this theory makes sense intuitively, as far as I have been able to determine its actual effectiveness in reducing crime has never been empirically demonstrated.

Some officers I talked with argued that it is actually less effective. They contend that patrolling alone alters the behavior of the officers, making them less aggressive for obvious reasons. Several cited incidents where they had waited for back up after arriving alone at the scene, resulting in the perpetrator escaping. The new Crime Reduction Units (CRUs) introduced by HPD in the last year have gone back to two-officer patrols with apparently good results. Of course, these accounts are anecdotal and do not necessarily prove that the one-officer strategy is ineffective. However, any doubts about the effectiveness should be weighed heavily against the clearly increased risk to the officers.

But respective of whether this is a more or less effective strategy; I have a problem with my city sending our young men and women out alone to protect me and my family. I do not think there are many of us who can get up in the morning and look at ourselves in the mirror and believe in our hearts that this is the right thing to do. My purpose here is not an indictment of the current HPD administration or previous administrations under which the policy was originated and grew. The one-officer patrol policy is the result of the inconsistent demands we, as citizens, have made on the City and HPD to simultaneously reduce crime, respond within minutes to hundreds of thousands of calls each year and still control costs.

To go back to having two officers in patrol cars we are going to have to either increase the number of officers (thereby increasing the costs) or reduce the number of patrols or some combination of the two. Regardless, it is going to cost us as citizens in one fashion or another. But it is a cost that I believe we are morally compelled to pay. I do not want to get up one day and read in the paper that a young lady officer that I met by chance one evening has been gunned down by a gang near Hobby Airport because she had no back-up.

[Note: When my wife and a friend read this blog they told me they thought I was being sexist by identifying the officer I saw as a being a woman. That is not my intention. I believe having men or women officers patrolling alone at night is unsafe and I think if the officer that evening had been a young man, I would have had a similar reaction. Both of the officers that were lost in last year while patrolling alone were men. I will have to confess that a sense of chivalry-tinged guilt probably caused the sight a young woman driving off alone probably had a greater impact on me than if it had been a man. However, regardless of whether that is politically correct by current standards, it does not change the fact that officers patrolling alone, particular at night, are vulnerable . . . whether they are men or women.]


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First Six Months Crime Stats Show Mixed Results

Posted 09/29/2008 by Bill King

FIRST SIX MONTHS CRIME STATS SHOW MIXED RESULTS
September 29, 2008

I recently obtained HPD's FBI crime report for the first six months of 2008 and compared the numbers to the first six months of 2007. There are some areas that show significant improvements. However, disappointingly, the situation worsened in some of the more serious crime categories. Copies of the first-half-of-the-year reports can be found here Copies of the first-half-of-the-year reports can be found here Crime Report 2007 - 1st Half and Crime Report 2008 - 1st Half.

The total number of violent crimes increased for the first six months of this year to 12,389 from 11,609 for the first six months of last year, a 6.7% increase. We do not have the estimated 2008 population for the City yet, but certainly it did not increase by 6.7%, meaning that the violent crime rate increased. Rape increased by an alarming 20% and aggravated assault by 12%. The number of robberies was virtually unchanged at 5,300.

On the plus side, the murders were down by 7%. Major property crimes showed an even more dramatic drop with burglaries down from 14,209 to 12,492 (-12%) and thefts down from 36,289 to 34,484 (-5%). Auto thefts dropped a whopping 22% from 9,899 to 7,672. All non-violent crime was down by a little over 9%.

It was also encouraging that there were improvements in clearance rate for most crimes. The clearance rate is the percentage of offenses in which HPD has arrested and charged a suspect. There were significant improvements in violent crimes, increasing from 26% to 32%, and robberies, increasing from 18% to 24%. The clearance rate for burglaries continued to be problematic inching up from 7.34% to 7.64%. For all reported crimes, the rate improved significantly from 24% to 31%.

Notwithstanding the troubling increases in the rape and aggravated assault statistics, the report must, on balance, be viewed positively. If these trends hold up for the entire year, they would represent the most significant improvement in the crime rates in the several years. Also, many crime experts believe that an improvement in the clearance rates will be followed by lower crime rates.

It is always dangerous to attribute increases or decreases in crime to any specific causes. However, there are several recent initiatives which have probably played a part, to-wit:

» HPD has devoted substantial resources to over-time, providing enhanced patrol and investigative activities, and is gradually increasing its regular compliment of officers;

» HPD has created special Crime Reduction Units ("CRUs") that aggressively patrols high crime areas;

» HPD has brought its real-time crime center on-line although it is still in the implementation phase; and

» Perhaps most significant, numerous private and community groups have become engaged in crime prevention. For example, the East End Chamber of Commerce has established a Crime Awareness Committee that meets with the community and local law enforcement officers monthly. There is a similar meeting in the Brays Oak area and many other neighborhoods are initiating such efforts. Also, there have been renewed efforts by other private groups such as Crime Stoppers and the Houston Police Foundation.

In a month in which Houston's first Latina police officer was shot to death in a drive-by shooting while watching television from her wheelchair, it is hard to be optimistic. However, unlike many other drive-by shootings, this case was solved and the gunmen arrested. Significantly, it was solved by a tip made to Crime Stoppers. It is a case that shows that when the community and the police work together, we can make a difference. Now is the time to re-double all of our efforts and hope that the faint light seen in the first six months' statistics is the light at the end of the tunnel.


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Burglary in Houston

Posted 05/19/2008 by Bill King

Burglary in Houston

The following is a link to an article I wrote that appears in the Sunday Chronicle about burglary rates in Houston.

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/editorial/outlook/5787383.html


This article is a follow up on a report I sent many of you earlier that analyzed crime rates generally. This article highlights that over 29,000 burglaries were reported in 2007, an 8% increase from 2006. More disheartening, only 1,985 (7%) of these burglaries were solved.

Last Friday night I rode the evening shift with a HPD officer from the Westside Command Station. During the evening we answered two burglary calls. Meeting and visiting with the victims in these two cases, poignantly put faces on the dry statistics I have been studying.

In the first case, the victims lived in a quiet west side neighborhood in a typical subdivision. The couple was in their early 50's with two sons in college. He works in technology and she as an administrative aide at a local school. They were obviously hard-working folks who valued their community, church and family.

The articles taken were predictable . . . a laptop, speakers, flat screen monitor, etc. But also taken was the wife's jewelry including a pendant from now deceased brother and a bracelet her husband gave her on their 25th anniversary. The thieves probably hocked these items for minimal value. They were, of course, invaluable to her.

The second victim was a young lady, probably in her early twenties living in an upscale, gated apartment complex. I guessed it was the first time she had ventured from her parents' home. Similar items were taken . . . laptop, television, jewelry.

The value of the items, while substantial, in no way describes the emotional impact on the victims. The loss of items with sentimental value, the sense of personal invasion, the anxiety for their personal safety and the loss of a sense of community - all these showed in their faces. As I watched the wife and the young woman wipe tears away from the corners of their eyes, it occurred to me that this happens to someone every 20 minutes in Houston. Little wonder that 95% of Houstonians in a recent poll said that crime was a serious problem which we must address.

Be part of the solution. Please click on the links below to visit each organization to learn how you can get involved.


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