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Paul Davis: City and federal task force is combating carjacking (broadandliberty.com)
I noted here in a previous piece, I have a friend who was carjacked by gunpoint some months ago when he was picking up his daughter from her workplace late one evening.
He’s a tough
South Philly guy, hardly a snowflake, but he is still traumatized over the
incident, although he did not use the word traumatized.
He told me that
he remains bothered over the carjacking, wondering if he should have drawn his
legally carried firearm and defended himself and his car.
“The car was
insured, but in the car were personal items and I hate that these two creeps
took them from me,” my friend said. “I could have blasted the one who came to
my car window and pointed a gun at me, but I’m not sure I would have got the
second one.”
He said he
worried that his daughter might have been hit with a stray bullet when she
walked out into the street, so he got out of his car and handed over his car
keys.
“They were kids,
teenagers, and we know they can’t shoot for shit, holding the gun sideways like
they do in the movies. I thought these idiots would shoot at me and hit my
daughter.”
I mentioned to my
friend that city and federal law enforcement recently held a press conference
to highlight the impact of their two-year task force on carjacking in the
city.
“I hope they can
put an end to this violent crime and make sure nobody else becomes a victim
like me,” he said. “I just hate being a crime
victim.”
On April 12th,
Jaqueline C. Romero, the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of
Pennsylvania, held a press conference along with Philadelphia Police
Commissioner Kevin J. Bethel, ATF Philadelphia Special Agent in Charge Eric J.
DeGree, and FBI Philadelphia Special Agent in Charge Wayne A. Jacobs, the
leaders of the law enforcement agencies that comprise the Philadelphia
Carjacking Task Force.
The law
enforcement officials at the press conference spoke of the benefits of the task
force partnership, the task force’s several significant investigations. and
accomplishments over the past two years.
U.S. Attorney
Jacqueline C. Romero spoke of the number of carjackings in Philadelphia. After
hitting a historical high of 1,311 in 2022, it dropped 31 percent to 900 in
2023. In addition, the numbers for the first quarter of 2024 are indicative of
another marked decline from last year.
She said that
from January 2022 through March 2024, 59 cases investigated by the Carjacking
Task Force have resulted in federal charges, with a total of 103 defendants
federally charged in connection with 121 individual carjackings.
Romero also
discussed recent case developments, such as the sentencing of Dashawn
Pringle to 10½ years in prison for two armed carjackings and the guilty
plea of John Nusslein to two carjackings, including one where an elderly
delivery driver was fatally beaten, resulting in a potential sentence of 25
years in prison. She also noted the guilty pleas of Angel Fayez and Kevin Antun
to a crime spree that began with a carjacking. According to Romero, Fayez and
Antun are now facing mandatory minimum sentences of seven years in prison, and
statutory maximum sentences of life in prison.
“We want our
community to know that significant strides are being made on their behalf by
the Philadelphia Carjacking Task Force,” Romero said. “At the same time, we
want carjackers, and would-be carjackers, to know that we can and have charged
defendants as young as eighteen years old federally, and in the cases we’ve
prosecuted, we’ve obtained some very significant sentences. Carjacking
defendants routinely receive sentences of seven to fifteen years — and can even
face up to a lifetime of imprisonment in some cases.”
ATF Special Agent
in Charge DeGree talked about ATF’s role on the task force, providing
investigators and employing ATF’s crime gun intelligence tools. He also
highlighted one of the agency’s key cases, in which Tarik Chambers and Kikeem
Leach-Hilton committed three back-to-back carjackings, then crashed into
and critically injured an elderly driver while fleeing from police. The men
were sentenced to more than eighteen years in prison. Two other defendants in
the same carjacking crew, Rashad Johnson-Price and Khasir Lynch, have pleaded
guilty to additional carjackings; each faces about a decade in federal prison
when sentenced.
“Our team of ATF
special agents are working tirelessly with our partners in the Philadelphia
Carjacking Task Force to seek justice and prevent these dangerous crimes,”
DeGree said. “Carjacking is not only a deadly dangerous crime, it is a serious
federal offense, carrying lengthy federal prison sentences, even for first-time
offenders.”
FBI Special Agent
in Charge Jacobs spoke of the cases of Shamire Young and Robert Riles.
Jacobs said Young and three co-conspirators committed a carjacking at gunpoint
in Northwest Philadelphia, pistol-whipping one of the victims. Young pleaded
guilty and was sentenced to seven years behind bars. Riles and two
co-conspirators committed a carjacking at gunpoint of a mother and daughter in
West Philadelphia, with Riles pleading guilty and receiving a sentence of more
than eleven years in prison.
“Whether a single
subject or a group of subjects — with criminal history or without — the message
is simple. Your actions have consequences,” Jacobs said. “No matter who
you are, the FBI and each agency on this task force will hold you to account.”
Philadelphia
Police Commissioner Bethel spoke of the decrease in carjackings in the city
over the last two years, crediting the work of the task force for getting
numerous violent offenders off the street. Bethel spoke of the importance of
partnerships like the Carjacking Task Force and how local and federal
authorities must work together to reduce violent crime.
The success of
the task force, with the U.S. Attorney’s Office prosecuting the carjackers in
federal court rather than having Philadelphia District Attorney Larry “Let ‘Em
Loose” Krasner prosecute them, is a step in the right direction.
There are still carjackings, to be sure, but the feds, along with the Philadelphia Police, can cause would-be-carjackers to pause, and they can put the violent carjackers in federal prison.
Paul Davis, a Philadelphia writer and frequent contributor to Broad + Liberty, also contributes to Counterterrorism magazine and writes the “On Crime” column for the Washington Times. He can be reached at pauldavisoncrime.com.
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