Fighting L.A.’s gangs with families

 

Officials say L.A. Deputy Mayor Guillermo Cespedes’ effort, known as the Gang Reduction and Youth Development program, is working.

Los Angeles Times
Opinion / Editorial
By Jim Newton
February 27, 2012
Guillermo Cespedes

 

Guillermo Cespedes speaks to the media after his appointment. (Los Angeles Times / September 8, 2009)

In a large conference room at City Hall East, more than 100 gang-intervention workers gathered last week to hear about a new approach to heading off gang violence and the destruction it causes. They had come to hear a family tell its story.

The mother did most of the talking, guided by a counselor. She was there with two of her children, a son and a daughter, and they’d been through the wringer. An older daughter had gotten in trouble, deeper and deeper. She’d neglected her schoolwork and fought back when her parents tried to discipline her. She ran away from home, got pregnant. “The road she was on,” the mother said, “was not good.”

As the mother and father became increasingly preoccupied with trying to set their older daughter straight, they had less time to spend with their younger children, and soon those two began to show signs of trouble as well. Their grades dropped; the boy’s interest in sports flagged.

Gripped by the sense that they were losing control, the parents called for help. It came in the form of a local organization, whose counselor dove into the life of this young family, escorting the kids to school, arranging for tutors, counseling the parents. Slowly, life settled down. The son got glasses, started doing his homework and brought up his grades; the younger daughter joined a program for future executives and thrived.

Asked to explain what got his attention and turned him around, the boy responded, “Jesus,” then quickly added, “and the ladies.”

The counselor for this session was Harry Aponte, a nationally recognized gang-intervention expert from Philadelphia, and he patiently waded through the family history as the audience of intervention workers listened, many taking notes.

This family-centered approach represents a new tack in Los Angeles’ long quest to divert young people from gangs. The philosophy behind it is that focusing on a single troubled child isn’t enough. Schools and neighborhoods surround children, but their families are their core of support and thus the most natural people to help them.

“We’re shifting the focus from the individual to the family,” Deputy Mayor Guillermo Cespedes explained. “Every family has a problem-solving mechanism that gets jammed. We’re trying to address that.”

Police and others credit Cespedes’ efforts, known as the Gang Reduction and Youth Development program, with making steady progress against gang violence in Los Angeles. Last year, crime overall in the city continued its long decline (though homicides ticked back up by a single killing, from 297 to 298), and the drop in gang crime continued to outpace that for crime generally. Fewer gang members fired shots or were themselves shot, and gang crimes overall fell by more than 15%, from 5,537 to 4,694. (Again, homicides were an exception, though a relatively small one: 170 killings in 2011 were attributed to gang violence, up from 161 the year before.)

So impressed is Police Chief Charlie Beck with the program’s contribution to reducing gang crime in Los Angeles that, in an interview with Times reporters and editors last week, he said he’s judging the field of mayoral candidates in part by which ones would keep the office structured as part of the mayor’s staff. That configuration is useful, Beck explained, because gang crime is not spread evenly throughout the city, and giving the council oversight of the efforts means that there are pressures to spread its resources across 15 districts, rather than concentrate them where they are needed. “If [the program] becomes a council department again,” he said, “it’s not going to have the focus it has now.”

Meanwhile, the approach is continuing to evolve. Driven by the program’s determination to fuse research and real-world experience, Cespedes says he and others have concluded that families need to be at the center of the program’s efforts. Hence the training last week at City Hall.

During his 90 minutes with the family, Aponte listened carefully as the mother and her children spelled out the elements of their success as well as the challenges that lie ahead. The older daughter has just had her baby and is living in a group home. The younger children still have a long way to go in school, and the temptation of gangs will not recede with just one strong report card.

But Aponte also recognized the family’s progress, its emergence from a long stretch of tough work. “You’re celebrating life,” he observed. “You’ve gone through a dark alley, and now you’re celebrating.”

The mother nodded, as did her children. Aponte turned to his audience to emphasize the point: “They will not lose this…. This is their trophy to take home.”

 

 

 

 

 

Direct Link:  http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-newton-column-gang-intervention-20120227,0,3021365.column

 

Teen fatally shot outside his home minutes before new year begins

Los Angeles Times
By:  Ruben Vives
January 1, 2012

A 14-year-old boy in South Los Angeles was fatally shot outside his home just minutes before the start of the new year, according to the Los Angeles Police Department.

The teen was standing outside his home in the 1300 block of 61st Street when someone shot him Saturday around 11:55 p.m., said Los Angeles Police Sgt. Rudy Alaniz.

“He stumbled inside the house, where he told his mother he had been shot,” Alaniz said.

The teen was taken to a local hospital, where he was pronounced dead, he said.

There was no suspect description and police were still trying to determine a motive for the shooting.

“We don’t know if it’s gang related or not,” Alaniz said.

More than 500 people were killed in Los Angeles County last year, according to the LA Times’ Homicide Report.

 

Direct Link:   http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2012/01/teen-fatally-shot-before-new-year-south-la.html

 

Armed man injured in one of two L.A. officer-involved shootings

Los Angleles Times
Andrew Blankstein
December 30, 2011
 

An armed suspect was injured Friday in one of two separate officer-involved shootings in Los Angeles, authorities said.

About 1:40  p.m., officers spotted a man with a gun in his waist band in the 1600 block of West 2nd Street and began chasing him, police said. At one point during the pursuit, the man pointed the weapon at the officers.

One officer opened fire, striking the man in his stomach area, police said.

No officers were injured in the incident.

Earlier, police shot at a man in South Los Angeles after he opened fire on officers.

Neither the two officers involved nor the suspect were hit by gunfire, said LAPD spokeswoman Norma Eisenman.

The officers had just finished fueling their car at the Southeast Area Police Station when they spotted the man pointing an object at them about 9 a.m. at 107th and Figueroa streets, Eisenman said.

Moments later, the man fired an unknown number of rounds at the officers, she said. The officers returned fire and chased the man on foot. At least one suspect was taken into custody.

 

Direct Link:  http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2011/12/armed-suspect-injured-in-one-of-two-separate-officer-involved-shootings.html

 

Man opens fire on LAPD officers in South L.A.

Los Angeles Times
By: Andrew Blankstein
December 30, 2011

Los Angeles police officers shot at a man in South Los Angeles on Friday morning after he opened fire on the officers, department officials said.

Neither of the two officers, who are assigned to the 77th Street station, nor the suspect washit by gun fire, said LAPD spokeswoman Norma Eisenman.

The officers had just finished fueling their car at the Southeast Area Police Station when they spotted the man pointing an object at them about 9 a.m. at 107th and Figueroa streets, Eisenman said.

 Moments later, the man fired an unknown number of rounds at the officers, she said. The officers returned fire and chased the suspect on foot.

Police said they had detained someone in connection with the incident but it was not immediately clear if it was the alleged shooter. They were also combing the area looking for a possible second suspect.

 

Direct Link:   http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2011/12/man-opens-fire-on-lapd-officers-in-south-la.html

 

L.A.’s triumph over crime

More officers and better policing are among the key reasons L.A. is a much safer city today.

The graduation ceremony recruit officer class of October 2009.Across the nation, the homicide rate — the number of people killed per 100,000 population — increased from about four per 100,000 in the 1950s to about 10 in the early 1990s; since then, it has dropped to about 5.5. The decline in Los Angeles has been far greater: In 1993, the homicide rate was 30.5 per 100,000; this year, it’s on track to end at about six. (Los Angeles Times)

November 26, 2011

As families gather across Los Angeles and beyond, many will celebrate the holiday weekend with a joy they owe in part to this city’s historic triumph against crime. In the early 1990s, Los Angeles typically was the scene of more than 1,000 murders a year, a shocking toll that sapped the city’s self-confidence as it cut a devastating swath through neighborhoods, schools and, most tragically, families. It has become easy in recent years to expect crime to decline here, but it’s worth remembering how dangerous this city was compared with how safe it is.

As of mid-November this year, 254 men and women have been murdered in Los Angeles during 2011. That’s still a shocking number, but it means that some 800 families will enjoy this holiday without the shadow of murder. And that’s true year after year; those 800 families are merely those who escaped a tragedy in the last 12 months. Hundreds more would have suffered a loss in the previous year or years before, so the relief is as compounding as the tragedy once was.

That sea change in violence and its ramifications is part of a national trend, though the effects in Los Angeles have been particularly dramatic. Across the nation, the homicide rate — the number of people killed per 100,000 population — increased from about four per 100,000 in the 1950s to about 10 in the early 1990s; since then, it has dropped to about 5.5. The decline in Los Angeles has been far greater: In 1993, the homicide rate was 30.5 per 100,000; this year, it’s on track to end at about six. As city leaders like to note, not since Eisenhower was president has Los Angeles been this safe.

The reasons for this change have been widely studied, though not to a complete consensus. Social scientists have pointed to changing demographics — the aging of a youthful population that accounts for most violent crime — the waning popularity of crack, rising prison populations, gun control laws, even the legalization of abortion. The theory regarding abortion argues that unwanted children are disproportionately inclined to commit crimes, so limiting the number of such children also has had the effect of reducing crime. One provocative statistic: The decline in crime in high-propensity abortion states from 1985 to 1997 was 25.9%, while in low-propensity abortion states over the same period, crime increased 4.1%.

But two factors have commanded the most attention: the increased number of police officers, again nationally as well as in Los Angeles, and the adoption of new policing strategies, usually under the general definition of “community policing.” Both have been at work in Los Angeles for most of that period, and offer a persuasive rebuttal to social scientists who once doubted whether police had much to do with crime. Driven by improved statistical analysis and refined responses to crime trends — as well as renewed commitment to respect for constitutional rights — police are registering significant gains in systematically combating crime. Long and gratefully past are the days when chiefs such as Los Angeles’ Daryl F. Gates could argue that smaller, aggressive forces were in the public interest. Gates’ approach led to increased crime and public revulsion at police practices; the opposite has bolstered confidence in police and driven down crime. The impact of modern policing, both in numbers and in approach, is validated by the work of the LAPD in recent decades, as it is in New York and elsewhere. Today, few criminologists argue that police are irrelevant.

There is, in addition, a growing body of literature on the effects of this historic decline in crime, especially murder. For every crime there is a cost — property that is lost, medical bills to pay, work days missed and the more difficult-to-measure effects of psychological damage to survivors. One study by researchers at Iowa State University in 2010 concluded that the societal cost of a single murder — including the cost to victims, to the criminal justice system and to the lost productivity of offenders, as well as a complicated measure known as the “willingness to pay” to prevent murder — exceeds $17 million. By that calculation, the savings to Los Angeles of eliminating 800 murders a year since the early 1990s comes to more than $1.36 billion annually. As those researchers noted “In addition to the lives that are lost and shattered, murder also denotes extraordinary collateral fiscal costs.”

No family that has lost a relative to murder ever entirely recovers. The empty seat at Thanksgiving may be occupied, but the hole left by an absent son or daughter, a missing mother or father, never again is filled to the brim. This weekend in Los Angeles, 800 families enjoy a holiday that would have been barren by comparison had they lost a loved one this year to a murder. That is a social victory for which every resident of this city should be appreciative.

 

LAPD officer accidentally shoots himself in foot

Los Angeles Times
December 28, 2011

Los Angeles Police officer accidentally shoots himself in foot

 

A Los Angeles police officer accidentally shot himself in the foot Wednesday morning as he and another officer were responding to a disturbance call in South Los Angeles. 

The officers were still inside their police cruiser near the intersection of Broadway and Century Boulevard when the officer in the passenger seat accidentally discharged his weapon, said Officer Bruce Borihanh. The round hit the unidentified officer in the foot, Borihanh said. 

Borihanh said the wound was relatively minor and that the public was not in danger. The department is investigating the circumstances surrounding the accidental discharge.

 

Direct Link:  http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2011/12/lapdshotshimselfinfoot.html

 

Cop shoots, injures man who fired on officers in South L.A., LAPD says

Los Angeles Times
December 20, 2011
Los Angeles police shot and wounded a man in South Los Angeles on Tuesday afternoon, authorities said.

Police said two patrol officers from the 77th Street Division were in the area of 84th Place and Towne Avenue shortly before 2:30 p.m. when the man fired shots at them, LAPD spokesman Gregory Baek said.

One of the officers returned fire, hitting the suspect, a man in his 20s, in the chest. His condition was not known.

No details were available about what prompted the man to fire at the officers. Police say another man is being sought.

 

Direct Link:   http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2011/12/cop-shoots-injures-man.html

 

 

 

Gunfire at a party in South L.A. kills one person, injures three

Los Angeles Times
December 18, 2011

A shooting outside a party in South Los Angeles early Sunday morning left one man dead and three people hospitalized.

Two men opened fire on a group of people at about 2:25 a.m. outside a home on the 800 block of West 84th Street, hitting three of them, said Sgt. David Craig at the LAPD’s 77th Street station.

One of the those shot was pronounced dead after being taken to a hospital. Of the other two, one was shot in both legs and the other in one leg, were in stable condition, Craig said. A fourth victim, who suffered a fractured skull while running from the shooters, was in intensive care.

The authorities released neither the names of the victims nor descriptions or a possible motive of the shooters.

– Abby Sewell

 

Direct Link:  http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2011/12/shooting-party-south-los-angeles.html

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