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Mardi Gras in the Murder Capital

By Robin Templeton, AlterNet. Posted February 16, 2007.


Tourists arriving in New Orleans for the long Mardi Gras weekend will find the city loaded with law enforcement and furious local residents who say that the cops aren't doing anything to halt the city's soaring murder rate.
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It's Mardi Gras in the murder capital of the United States. New Orleans' most raucous parties and parades take place this long holiday weekend, which culminates on Fat Tuesday.

Carnival season officially kicked off on January 6th, a day that also closed out a week when more killings took place in New Orleans than in Iraq. New Orleans has seen 22 murders so far this year. New York, with 30 times more residents, has a 2007 murder count of 43.

The steady flow of national news reports that New Orleans has the nation's highest per capita homicide rate could not be more poorly timed. Tourism, responsible for 35 percent of New Orleans' budget and 85,000 jobs, has the power to make or break the city's still faltering recovery from Hurricane Katrina.

Tourism, says Mary Beth Romig of the New Orleans Metropolitan Convention and Visitors Bureau, "is a perception-driven industry. If people think the city is not safe, they're not going to come." The crime wave, Romig says, "is a challenge for us. But it's nothing but good news to tell people that we have more police on the streets."

In fact there's been an all out troop surge in New Orleans.

The New Orleans Police Department is 85 percent re-staffed, while the city's population has been cut in half. Reinforcing local law enforcement are 300 National Guard and 60 state troopers, costing the state $500,000 a week. And the head of the notorious Orleans Parish Prison -- whose guards abandoned thousands of detainees in flooded, locked cells without food or water for days after Katrina hit -- has dispatched corrections officers to help patrol the streets.

Residents are concerned that the amassing of law enforcement, though it may improve the city's public image, will do little to improve public safety unless the local police force roots out corruption, gains community trust and addresses underlying causes of community destabilization.

"Why can't the NOPD solve the crime problem?" asks Robert Smallwood, an information technology consultant and longtime resident of the French Quarter. "Part of it is that they're corrupt to the core. It's common knowledge that they're in on it in terms of the drug trade."

A neighborhood survey by the New Orleans Metropolitan Crime Commission found that only 38 percent of residents think the police department does a good job preventing crime and just 43 percent feel that police are trustworthy.

Smallwood stayed in the city during Katrina and wrote a book about his experience called The Five People You Meet in Hell. "I was one of the so-called 'looters,'" he says. "People were helping one another out, trying to get basics like food and water. The cops were watching. They had already taken all of the cigarettes and good meat."

Ursula Price, an investigator with the criminal defense organization A Fighting Chance, explains: "Police-community relations are a terrible problem in New Orleans. People are legitimately afraid to call the police or cooperate with them. There are documented cases of civilian retaliation against witnesses because cops leaked information."

The police are making a record number of arrests, about 900 a week. They're just not getting the bad guys. According to the watchdog organization Safe Streets Strong Communities, 80 percent of detainees in the parish jail are being held for non-violent offenses, mostly low-level drug and alcohol charges. Two-thirds of the city's murders go unsolved.


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View:
New Orleans sheriff runs a racket
Posted by: kelt65 on Feb 16, 2007 12:21 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
New Orleans cops arrest an astounding number of people every day and always have. Almost always these are blacks arrested for misdemeanors for which whites could easily be arrested for were they targeted as heavily. Of course they can't make bail and wind up actually spending their 10 - 30 days there. I've heard this situation is due to the Federal funds the sheriff gets for keeping the prison population bursting at the seams.

New Orleans doesn't need more f-ing pigs. We already have more pigs per capita than any city in the states.

Pigs don't reduce crime, most of them are criminals themselves.

The problems in New Orleans are infrastructural and the only thing more cops will produce is a riot.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

This writer doesn't think Iraqi deaths count...
Posted by: lessbread on Feb 17, 2007 3:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Carnival season officially kicked off on January 6th, a day that also closed out a week when more killings took place in New Orleans than in Iraq. New Orleans has seen 22 murders so far this year. New York, with 30 times more residents, has a 2007 murder count of 43.

According to this source, Iraq Coalition Casualty Count, there were 1802 Iraqi Security Forces and Civilian Deaths in January 2007. That estimate is likely on the low side. That source reports that there were 83 US deaths and 3 UK deaths in Iraq during that month. The idea that in the first week of January there were more killings in New Orleans than in Iraq is complete bullshit.

Does this writer realize that when he spews crap like that he's regurgitating the GOP propaganda line that Iraq is safer than urban cities in America?

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» Yes, A Serious Flaw... Posted by: grumble-bum
» RE: Yes, A Serious Flaw... Posted by: lessbread
Corruption, Rascism, Criminals
Posted by: albrechtkrausse on Feb 19, 2007 2:13 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
NO is very corrupt and rascist city. Unfortunately many of the native residents there don't do much to help themselves out of stereotypical roles (drunk, drug dealing, illiterate, doing tap dances for change, robbing people, dropping out of school, etc.) Also many of the people who wanted to work left the city and found better employment/lives elsewhere. The city also exists for debauchery (booze, girls-gone-wild, excessive gluttony, strip clubs, voodoo) which attracts an unsavory elements to the city.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]