Armed task force to patrol streets in Paragould
Tue Dec 18, 2012 1:13AM
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Paragould,
Arkansas, Mayor Mike Gaskill and Police Chief Todd Stovall announced at a
December 14 Town Hall meeting that beginning in 2013 the streets of their city
were going to be patrolled by police officers bearing SWAT gear and AR-15s. “If
you’re out walking, we’re going to stop you, ask why you’re out walking, and
check for your ID.”
The move comes
in response to a recent increase in violent crime. In a city with a population
of only 26,113, Paragould had 86 rapes, robberies and assaults in 2010 and those
numbers are expected to nearly double for 2012. Paragould currently has a
City-Data crime index rating of 465.0, well above the national average of
309.3.
Property crime
statistics in Paragould are even more alarming. While the national average for
burglary, theft and auto theft is at 7 for every 1,000 people, the Paragould
average is 20.14.
Police Chief
Stovall told citizens attending the Town Hall meeting that he did not consult an
attorney before making plans to institute what he considers martial law. He also
announced that task force members could stop anyone they wanted to and didn’t
even need to be looking for a specific suspect on the
streets.
According to
Stovall, any individual who does not produce identification could be charged
with obstructing a governmental operation.
“I’m hoping we
don’t run across [any] of that,” Stovall said. “Will there be people who buck
us? There may be. But we have a right to be doing what we’re doing. We have a
zero-tolerance. We are prepared to throw your hind-end in jail, OK? We’re not
going to take a lot of flack.”
Stovall claims
it’s not necessary to consult an attorney because the alarming rise in crime
meets the requirements of “reasonable suspicion,” enabling him to legally accost
citizens.
“To ask you for
your ID, I have to have a reason,” he said. “Well, I’ve got statistical reasons
that say I’ve got a lot of crime right now, which gives me probable cause to ask
what you’re doing out. Then when I add that people are scared…then that gives us
even more [reason] to ask why are you here and what are you doing in this
area.”
Stovall is
labeling his initiative “Stop-and-ID” similar to Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s
“Stop-and-Frisk” policy in New York City, a program that’s had disastrous
results and stirred outrage among the African-Americans and Latinos who’ve
become targets of racial profiling and police harassment and
brutality.
Toni Miquel of
MSNBC calls Bloomberg’s Stop-and-Frisk policy “racist and ineffective, leaving
the city with, in essence, a policy of racial harassment.”
The NYPD is one
of the few departments in the city to operate without an oversight committee.
Officers are given daily quotas for stops and rewarded for meeting those quotas.
If they don’t meet those quotas their jobs are in
jeopardy.
Obviously, the
easiest way to meet those quotas is to go into the poorer neighborhoods,
populated by African-Americans and Latinos – where you’re sure to find plenty of
people walking on the street. It doesn’t matter if they’ve committed a crime or
not, the officer just needs to file a report. But if the target resists, so much
the better. Then they can tie him up in the court system and add his legal fees
to the city’s coffers.
In response to
phone calls the day after the Paragould Town Hall meeting, Mayor Gaskill tried
to alleviate fears by stating the he wasn’t concerned about the potential for
racial profiling by the police department. Officers would only be patrolling the
areas with the highest crime rates.
But Mayor
Bloomberg said essentially the same thing about his Stop-and-Frisk initiative
and we’ve all seen the results in the now infamous video where a young
African-American man named Alvin was verbally and physically harassed by
officers and called a “mutt”, simply for walking on the
street.
And so far,
Bloomberg’s initiative has had little to no effect whatsoever on New York City
crime rates. In 2002 there were 1,892 victims of gunfire in New York City and
police officers stopped-and-frisked 97,296 people. In 2011, there were still
more than 1,800 victims but stops had increased to almost 686,000. In total,
guns have been found in less than 0.2 percent of the more than 4 million stops
since 2002.
Paragould Chief
Stovall is adamant though. Citizens will be stopped and asked to produce ID and
a reason for being on the street. “They may not be doing anything but walking
their dog,” he said. “But they’re going to have to prove it.”
infowars.com
FACTS & FIGURES
In 2011, in New
York City, 685,724 people were stopped, 84 percent of whom were Black and Latino
residents — although they comprise only about 23 percent and 29 percent of New
York City’s total population respectively. ccrjustice.org
Did you know
that guns are found in less than .02% of stops? So while it may be getting a few
guns off the street and save a few lives, it’s at the cost of violating a
targeted group’s Constitutional rights. NBC News
Police in New
York City disproportionately stop black and Latino people even in low-crime
areas, leading to a "two-tiered" policing system that divides along racial
lines, according to civil rights campaigners. The Guardian
Drawing on the
NYPD's own figures, the NYCLU [New York Civil Liberties Union] argues the
department's controversial policy of stopping and frisking hundreds of thousands
of citizens each year has done little to change the number of guns on the
street, presenting a direct challenge to the justification for the practice
frequently provided by mayor Michael Bloomberg and the NYPD. The
Guardian
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