Broad + Liberty ran my piece on Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner (seen in the above photo).
You can read the piece via the below link or the below text:
Paul Davis: Ask any cop — Larry Krasner is soft on crime (broadandliberty.com)
"Is Larry Krasner a prosecutor or a social worker?” a disgruntled, veteran police officer asked me. “Is he a law enforcement officer or a political activist?”
The
cop, one of many police officers who often contact me to vent, was upset about
the District Attorney’s Violence Prevention Grant Initiative, which is
Krasner’s response to gun violence and murder in Philadelphia. Earlier this
month, the Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office announced the reopening of
applications for grants.
“Instead
of giving tax money to former gangbangers, con artists and well-meaning but
ineffective community groups, the DA should use that money to hire more
prosecutors. Experienced and talented prosecutors, not like the group of rank
amateurs and social workers he has now,” the cop said.
On
March 6th, Krasner’s office put out a press release that announced that the
Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office Community Engagement Team were
re-opening the application process for the DA’s Violence Prevention Grant
Initiative, “as the city heads toward the Spring and Summer months of 2023 — a
time of year in which gun violence, and the tragedy that accompanies this
public health and safety problem, typically increases.”
According to the press release, the Philadelphia Foundation, in partnership
with the District Attorney’s office, has awarded nearly one million dollars in
violence prevention funding to dozens of local community-based 501(c)(3)
organizations since May 2021. The foundation intends to award $250,000 in
additional grant funding during this latest round.
“Tackling
our city’s gun violence crisis requires the use of all the tools in our
toolkit: vigorous enforcement and prosecution of those who are driving the
violence in our communities; expanded forensic science in order to strengthen
investigations and prosecutions; and prevention,” Krasner stated. “My office is
thrilled to continue awarding grants to properly vetted groups who are
providing the supports necessary to address the root causes of violent crime.”
“Vigorous
enforcement and prosecution, my foot,” the cop said, referring to the DA’s the
press release. “Ask any cop, and they will tell you that Krasner is soft on
crime. We arrest the bad guys, and the DA won’t prosecute them or cuts a
sweet-heart deal for them.
“Any
cop will tell you, Krasner favors the crooks over cops. That’s why we have a
high murder rate and so much gun violence in Philly. But he sure likes handing
out tax dollars to community activist groups like most white, guilty, liberal
politicians.”
As
for the DA properly vetting the groups getting the generous grants, the officer
scoffed and questioned the $392,000 given to the “Guns Down Gloves Up” youth
boxing program.
“This
do-gooder group, formed by a police captain no less, is now under investigation
for fraud. I think most of these community groups should be investigated
thoroughly. Are they on the up and up, and do they actually prevent gun
violence?”
As
a former amateur boxer who began training in the ring as a pre-teen at the
South Philadelphia Boy’s Club in the mid-1960s, I thought that the Guns Down
Gloves up was one group that might be worthwhile. But according to the Philadelphia
Inquirer in January, the city suspended the lucrative grant to Guns
Down Gloves Up and eight Philadelphia police officers have been
placed on restricted duty and had their firearms taken away.
And
according to the Inquirer, the FBI is investigating the
program after the newspaper reported that the police officers had improperly
received tens of thousands of dollars in city antiviolence grant money. The
police officer who founded the program, former 22nd District Captain Nashid
Akil, was reportedly transferred due to chronic absenteeism.
The Inquirer reported
that the grant for Guns Down Gloves Up, awarded in December 2021 to Epiphany
Fellowship Church and Villanova University, is the subject of several
investigations. As the Inquirer noted, Guns Down Gloves Up was
one of 31 programs that collectively received $13.5 million in what the city
called Community Expansion Grants. It’s a part of a $155 million city effort to
counter a historic surge in gun violence.
The
Inquirer also reported that Captain Akil described the program as his, even
though city employees are not eligible for city grants. Nearly $76,000 went to
Akil and nine other Philadelphia Police Department staffers, according to
financial records obtained by the Inquirer. The grant application specified
Akil would not be paid.
The
grant to Guns Down Gloves Up was suspended by the city in November, as the
program was being investigated by the Philadelphia Police Department and the
Office of the Inspector General.
“Some
of these community groups do good work, I’m sure. But you know the best way to
prevent violence in Philly?” the officer said to me. “Lock up the bad guys,
prosecute them, put their butts in prison, and get them off the street.”
Paul Davis is a Philadelphia writer who covers crime.
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