Lack of concern puzzling Thursday, Mar 29 2007 

headscratch.gif

This morning as I scanned the websites of the various media outlets in New Orleans I found it more interesting what was missing than what was there.

Between early Saturday morning and Noon on Wednesday, there were 6 murders. Six murders in 5 days!

I failed to see the screaming headlines about the mounting mayhem.

Maybe I missed something.

Maybe having reach the status of “Murder Capital” of the U.S. there is nothing left to say.

Maybe it’s just that murders are becoming so commonplace in New Orleans that they have become as newsworthy as people running red lights.

Maybe it’s because that as Steve Perry suggested, there are no tourists being killed.

Maybe it’s that the media believed Mayor Ray Nagin when, on Monday, he told the Baton Rouge Press Club: “The state will have some comfort” that New Orleans is getting its law enforcement back on track….

Maybe it’s because the media has accepted the NOPD’s explanation of the murders that it is just “criminals killing criminals.”

Maybe there’s nothing that can be done except to wait on Dr. Lee P. Brown’s plan for “community policing.”

Maybe nobody any longer cares.

Whatever, the dearth of coverage works to the benefit of the public officials responsible for protecting the public. No pressure, no effort.

Any enlightenment will be appreciated. I don’t want to continue to worry about family and friends in New Orleans if there is no problem.

C.B.

New Orleans murder update (5 in 4 days) Wednesday, Mar 28 2007 

New Orleans has now recorded at least its 48th murder in the first 86 days of the year.

The latest murder victim was shot last night in Eastern New Orleans.

There were 5 murders in the last 4 days!

Seems as though the rate of murders is increasing. Yet on Monday, Mayor Nagin suggested that crime was under control so that the State Police can be withdrawn by the end of June and the National Guard can begin a draw-down in September.

Apparently, Mayor Nagin has been out of town too much. Perhaps if he appeared at each murder scene he might realize that violence in New Orleans is increasing.

More as it happens.

C.B.

Crime’s under control in N.O.??? Tuesday, Mar 27 2007 

If words made it so, the citizens of New Orleans should feel safer today.

Yesterday, Mayor Nagin made a speech to the Baton Rouge Press Club. Below are
a few of his comments from today’s Daily Monopoly about crime and some questions
that his comments beg, but were apparently not asked:

“The state will have some comfort” that New Orleans is getting its law enforcement back on track, Nagin said, ….

Is being the “Murder Capital” (47 murders in 85 days) of the United States Nagin’s
idea of getting law enforcement “on track”?

Nagin said the New Orleans Police Department has graduated one class of 40 officers and another 40-member class is under way now, Nagin said.

How many members of the NOPD have retired, resigned or been charged with
crimes since the first of the year?

Nagin said …police are also focusing on the city’s crime “hot spots,” and will continue to use cameras to monitor some neighborhoods.

Cameras? Didn’t we just read that cameras are ineffective weapons in
reducing crime? See story here.

“We can still use the State Police for special events” but their continued presence can end when the state’s budget year ends June 30, Nagin said.

How does Nagin square eliminating the State Police in mid-summer when
he said “although the added forces are needed to see the city through summer
months when crimes typically increase”?

Nagin suggested that the National Guard forces might be phased out 100 troops at a time over a period of months starting around Sept. 1, but did not suggest a specific end date.

Did the criminals agree to a detente? Or his Nagin just going to declare victory over crime
on September 1?

Head’s up for the bad guys

Such statements are reminiscent of Mayor Nagin’s comments a few months after the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers flooded New Orleans. He declared the city the safest
place in America and declared that there were “too many law enforcement personnel” in the city. They left and crime went up dramatically.

We only hope that the criminals in New Orleans didn’t read today’s Daily Monopoly.
The mayor has now given the criminals a time-line for a reduction in law enforcement
in New Orleans.

Rather than feel safer the people of New Orleans, if they felt safe before the mayor’s
comments, should now be in fear. At least they now have a time-line to know when
to expect crime to spike (even higher).

C.B.

Next Page »