Broad & Liberty ran my piece on the recent series of car break-ins in Philadelphia.
You can read the piece via the below link or the below text:
Paul Davis: Broken windows (broadandliberty.com)
What a way to
start your day.
Center City
residents awoke to discover that twelve parked cars were vandalized on 22nd
Street from Arch Street to Chestnut Street.
The Center City
residents walked to their parked cars and discovered that their cars had broken
windows and small items in the cars had been stolen. The vandalism and thefts
are like the other recent cases of vandalism and thefts in other neighborhoods.
Earlier, South
Philadelphia residents awoke to discover that nineteen parked cars were
vandalized on Washington Avenue.
The cars were
found with smashed windows, torn apart interiors, and small items stolen. The
residents were shocked and outraged, as well as frustrated by the lack of
security and safety in their neighborhood.
Camera footage
from a nearby business recorded a person walking through the parking lot late
in the evening while peering into cars with a flashlight.
Vandalism and
theft from auto are minor crimes, but they are quality-of-life crimes that
significantly affect people and can lead to more dangerous and more substantial
crimes.
These
quality-of-life crimes are preventable. The police, who are still searching for
the vandal and thief, can install city cameras where the vandalism and petty
thefts are occurring. After all, the Delaware Valley Intelligence Center, where
city cameras across the city are monitored by the police, is located in South
Philadelphia at the old Defense Department depot, known locally as the
“Quartermaster.”
Increased police
patrols can also discourage vandalism and theft from
autos.
I reached out to
retired Philadelphia Police Sergeant Gary Capuano, a South Philadelphia
resident, and asked him for his take on the crimes.
“First off, I
want to let everyone know that if they are a victim of a crime, no matter how
trivial it may seem, report it. Police need to know where crimes are happening
in order to devote manpower to that particular area,” Capuano said. “If only
two out of twenty victims file a report, your area may not get the proper
attention that is needed.
“It’s bad enough
that thefts from autos can be combined and one set of district control numbers
(report number) can be used for multiple victims as long as the time and
proximity to each other is ‘close.’ It’s considered a ‘continuous
act.’”
Capuano said that
is how Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) used to work. Local police department
statistics were turned over to the FBI through this system.
“I believe the
system now used is called NIBRIS and it works the same way. So, the recent
nineteen cars that were broken into in South Philadelphia more than likely all
have the same report number (DC#) as do the 27 or so cars that were broken into
this past May in Fairmount.
Capuano suggests
that to prevent theft from one’s vehicle, one should ensure that one locks
their car doors upon exiting. Remove any valuables and don’t leave anything in
plain view. Even loose change that may be of little value to the car owner is a
score for someone with a drug addiction.
“That dollar or
two in change in your cup holder is going to cost you a few hundred dollars to
get your window fixed. All too often I have seen videos posted from victims on
social media where a suspect just walks down the block in the late night/early
morning hours trying car door handles, hoping to find one that was left
unlocked. Call 911 and provide the officer with the video so they
know who they should be looking for,” Capuano advised. “The responding officer
can go back to their district and provide this video to the district’s crime
prevention officer, who can then upload it to the roll call room television so
officers can view the video for themselves and focus their attention on the
right people.”
Capuano also
suggests that to ensure that the officer does his/her job, one can send an
e-mail to the district lieutenant and/or captain and attach the video. He said
that all city employees’ e-mails are their first name.last name
@phila.gov.
“I’ve heard too
many stories where an officer tells a complainant that someone will be out to
retrieve said video only for that to never happen. You can also submit a roll
call complaint through the phillypolice.com website. Click on
the three bars on the upper right-hand side of the screen, click on forms and
reports, scroll down to “submit a roll call complaint” and fill the form
out. This form can be used for disorderly crowds, nuisance properties, abandoned
autos, graffiti, vandalism, security checks and anything else that you may
need.”
Capuno said the
officer who responds to your theft from auto should make an attempt to lift
fingerprints. Don’t begin cleaning your vehicle prior to the officer’s
arrival.
“I have seen too
many times that an officer will write on the report ‘scene contaminated.’
That’s a crock. Who contaminated it? You with your prints, the owner of the
vehicle? Obviously, your prints belong in the car. What they can do at that
point is still lift the print(s) and submit them for analysis. “They can go a
step further and take your prints and submit them with the lifted print(s) —
your prints are called elimination prints.
“I know that you
probably don’t feel like going to a meeting after a long day at work, but you
should let your voice be heard. Find out when your respective district is
having their monthly PSA meeting and go. Challenge the lieutenant/captain on
what he/she is doing to ensure that your family and property is being
protected. Strength is in numbers. Also, making a phone call to a councilperson
can’t hurt either. Policing and politics, in my opinion, often go
hand-in-hand.”
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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