PHILADELPHIA
– United States Attorney William M. McSwain convened a press conference
today outside the Byrne United States Courthouse after the sentencing hearing
for Jovaun Patterson, the man convicted of shooting a Philadelphia shop owner
with a military-style assault rifle during an attempted robbery. During
his remarks, U.S. Attorney McSwain addressed the escalating violent crime
crisis in Philadelphia, the anti-law enforcement bias pushed by certain groups,
and the devastating impact that both continue to have on minority communities
in the City.
You can read his remarks below:
Jovaun
Patterson has been sentenced to over 14 years in federal prison for shooting
and attempting to rob Philadelphia shop owner, Mike Poeng. Mr. Patterson
has been held accountable for his violent criminal behavior and will now serve
an appropriate sentence. This was only possible because the U.S.
Attorney’s Office stepped in and charged Mr. Patterson after the local
authorities had bent over backwards to give him a break, negotiating an overly
lenient sentence that sent a message that violent crime has little
consequences.
That
sad state of affairs – where the mishandling of Mr. Patterson’s original case
necessitated federal involvement – is symbolic of a larger catastrophe that is
playing out before our eyes in Philadelphia. Homicides, shootings, and
serious violent crime have all skyrocketed in 2020 – from already intolerable
levels that existed in 2019 and 2018. Almost all the victims are racial
minorities, the vast majority of whom are Black. This past weekend alone,
at least 25 people were shot. So far this year, over 100 children have
been shot, a 68% increase as compared to last year. Again, almost all of
these child victims are racial minorities, the vast majority of whom are Black.
And we all know about Zamar Jones, the 7 year-old boy who was murdered earlier
this month while playing on his front porch in West Philadelphia.
This
is . . . infuriating. There is nothing more important
than the safety of children. But where is the sense of outrage, where is
the anger, where is the sense of urgency among City leaders? This
slaughter in our streets has largely been met with indifference, a sense of
inevitability, even a shrug of the shoulders. Or as the District Attorney
frequently puts it: “poverty equals bullets.”
“Poverty
equals bullets.” That condescending statement is a slap in the face to
every law-abiding, low-income resident in the City. There are scores of
low-income people in the City who respect the law, never shoot anybody, love
their neighbors, and work hard to improve their neighborhood. Poverty is
never an excuse for violent crime, and certainly not for murder. There is
no possible justification for walking up to somebody and shooting them.
Furthermore, poverty isn’t going away overnight. As law enforcement
leaders, we can’t put the violence problem at the doorstep of poverty and just
leave it there. That is the equivalent of abandoning the people we are
sworn to protect and serve.
Instead,
we must do something. At the U.S. Attorney’s Office, we have and we are –
unlike the District Attorney’s Office. With our anti-violence public
messaging campaign that we launched last month, the law-abiding citizens of
Philadelphia know where the U.S. Attorney’s Office stands – with them and with
our law enforcement partners. The campaign also puts potential criminals
on notice that if they commit a crime with a gun and we have federal
jurisdiction, we will prosecute them to the fullest extent of the law. We
will come after them with everything that we have. We are spreading that
message of deterrence through billboards, bus shelter advertisements, posters,
the Internet, social media, videos, radio, and TV. It’s a message that is
sorely needed in the City, and one that I believe will make neighborhoods safer
and save lives.
And
this is not just messaging. It is backed up by federal resources and
results. The U.S. Attorney’s Office prosecuted 53% more violent crime
cases in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania this past fiscal year than we
prosecuted the year before. In Philadelphia’s most dangerous
neighborhoods – what are designated as Project Safe Neighborhood (or PSN)
target districts – we charged 72% more violent crime and weapons cases than the
year before. And, where necessary, we have provided federal oversight in
cases like today’s Patterson sentencing. Still, we know that in order to
meet today’s challenges, we must do even more.
But
the federal authorities cannot do it alone. We need City leaders to speak
with one voice in condemning violence – not making excuses for it and not
treating violent defendants like they are somehow the victims in all of
this. And most importantly, the rhetoric should be backed up by
aggressive local prosecution that holds criminals accountable and therefore
makes neighborhoods
safer.
City
leaders also should speak with one voice in rejecting the extreme anti-law
enforcement bias that is currently being peddled by certain irresponsible
fringe groups. This bias – especially if it is not forcefully condemned
by City leaders – puts the police on their heels and puts violent criminals on
their toes, ready to stride forward confidently. One year ago, I stood in
this spot and decried the culture of disrespect for law enforcement in the City
– a culture that celebrated chants like “F*** the police” and “No good cops in
a racist system.” Today, the bile and vitriol coming from some elements
of the mob makes those chants sound quaint by comparison.
The
vast majority of Philadelphia police officers do their jobs faithfully and
honorably – and by putting on the uniform and doing the dangerous work inherent
in their mission, they show that they value the lives of others more than they
value their own. They, like all responsible citizens, abhor police
brutality and are in favor of accountability for police. We can and
should work towards better relations between the police and the community
without indulging infantile notions that the police as a whole make communities
more dangerous. Obviously, they do just the opposite. So to those
of you out there who say that we should “abolish the police,” or “defund the
police,” or “abolish prisons,” or one of my favorites, that “communities should
be left to police themselves,” I have a message for you: your ideas are absurd
and deserve nothing but scorn. Moreover, those ideas would cause great
harm to the most vulnerable members of our society. Victims of violent
crime, like Mike Poeng, are the ones who suffer the consequences of these foolish
notions. As is often the case, the policies demanded by the
self-righteous mob would come at the expense of minority
communities.
Everybody
in our City deserves to live in a safe neighborhood – regardless of race or
income level. It is time for City leaders to step forward and do
everything that they can to make that a reality. We won’t get there by
treating violent criminals like they are victims, or by undermining law
enforcement, or by grasping for excuses – like conveniently blaming the pandemic.
It’s true that the virus isn’t making things any easier, but violence is
contagious, too. It can easily spread across a City or even beyond.
We must confront it and stop it and put the good people of this City
first. Thank you.
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