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Neighbors notice drop in crime after initiative
Officer Joshua Martin, one of the Tulsa police officers assigned to the Safe City Initiative, types information into his computer during a stop while patrolling a high-crime area. CORY YOUNG / Tulsa World
By NICOLE MARSHALL World Staff Writer
Published:
9/16/2007 2:37 AM
Last Modified: 10/8/2007 5:01 PM
Correction
This story about the Tulsa Police Department’s Safe City Initiative incorrectly reported how many homicides had occurred in the city. Forty-nine homicides had occurred by Saturday.
Officers assigned to the Safe City Initiative have arrested 74 people since the crackdown targeting high-crime areas began in late August.
Some Tulsa residents like Ken Bacon said that they are already noticing a difference.
Bacon, who lives near 32nd Street and 101st East Avenue, said there is a noticeable difference in the amount of criminal activity in his area because of the Safe City Initiative, which began in late August.
Criminal activity seemed to overflow from a nearby apartment complex and a bar, Bacon said, and residents in his neighborhood were frequent victims of car and home burglaries.
He would often hear loud music at night and gunfire from the complex, Bacon said. Careless drivers even drove through a complex fence near an area where children had been playing just minutes earlier, he said.
"If they had been there, they would have been killed," he said of the children.
But Safe City officers have been patrolling the area, and the noise and crime levels have subsided, Bacon said.
"The increased presence by the officers is helping. I have to give them all praise for what they are doing," he said.
Bacon said
Capt. Matt Kirkland, the task force's supervisor, gave him his card and told him to call anytime -- day or night -- if there was a crime problem, and someone would respond.
"That means a lot to me," said Bacon.
Since the Safe City Initiative started Aug. 26, officers assigned to the unit have made 49 felony arrests and 25 misdemeanor arrests.
They have also seized seven handguns and made numerous drug arrests, most of which involved possession with intent to distribute drugs such as cocaine and marijuana.
"We have a list of individuals whose names keep coming up in relation to violent crime in Tulsa," Kirkland said.
The Safe City officers have also assisted investigators in recent high-profile cases, he said.
They helped homicide detectives in the search for Martinez Williams, who was arrested in the homicide of a man who was shot while working outside his mother's home on Tuesday.
They also have been searching for Jermaine Jeffery, who is charged with the death of a woman whose car was rear-ended by a suspect who was fleeing a shooting Sept. 7, and for Brandon Brown, who is charged with a homicide at a bar late Thursday.
Brown turned himself in on Friday evening.
"Whenever these high-profile violent crimes lend themselves to having a lot of officers out looking for a suspect and tracking someone down, we are ready to just jump right in," Kirkland said.
But because the team's focus is on patrolling areas where crime frequently occurs, they are likely to be nearby when a violent crime occurs.
"Because of past incidents associated with high school games," Kirkland said, Safe City officers were patrolling the area around McLain High School for Science and Technology when shots were fired outside the school after a football game on Aug. 31.
The Safe City officers took one of the suspects into custody, Kirkland said.
Aaron Calvert, security coordinator of Tulsa Housing Authority, said he has noticed a more visible police presence in all parts of the city since the the Safe City Initiative started.
"They look for specific people, and they are turning over every rock, whether it is on our properties or not on our properties," Calvert said.
Another focus of the unit is to crack down on clubs where violent crimes frequently occur or start.
So far this year, at least six of the 50 homicides in Tulsa occurred at clubs or resulted from fights that started at clubs, Kirkland said.
Nicole Marshall 581-8459
nicole.marshall@tulsaworld.com
By NICOLE MARSHALL World Staff Writer
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Tony G.
, (9/16/2007 2:54:09 AM)
They may have slowed down in one area, only to be picked up somewhere else. They still have NOT picked up the scumbag who shot the pawn shop employee, and there are still HOOKERS all over Admiral & Sheridan area.
About the bars shootings, Tulsa would be better off if it were a DRY county.
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c.g.
, Tulsa (9/16/2007 10:58:32 AM)
Nothing does more to stop crime than knowing a cop is or may be just around the corner. They can try all the shuffling and initiatives they want. More cops is the answer.
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Kevin
, Tulsa (9/16/2007 12:35:43 PM)
Tony?? The pawn shop employee suspect is long gone. TPD can't just travel the country and chase this guy. There is something called Jurisdiction. People like this are entered NCIC. He will get pulled over and he will get caught. I think the department does a fine job with what they have. They have one of the highest violent crime solve percentages in the country. As for the crime shifting somewhere else, that happens everywhere! Maybe if some of these penny pinchers would vote for some of the initiatives on the ballot, we could fill the couffers more and afford more police!
Report Comment
C.F.
, Tulsa (9/16/2007 1:15:07 PM)
Decrease in crime,32nd and S. Mingo wasn't that where a suspected murderer held up two workers last week?
Report Comment
DavidS
, Tulsa (9/16/2007 4:57:10 PM)
I'm gratefull this has been put together with more officers even though it is still the "Street Crimes Unit" with more help. This is something each division used to have that was downsized years ago. I just wish it was in the budget to keep it up and maybe even grow, it should never be downsized again.
I won't get into the fact that the 31st and 101st area is really not much better than it was ,from what is heard on the scanner.
This group is doing a bang up job though but I would like some facts on how many they have brought in are already out on bond.......
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