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Hartford Courant - September 18, 2006
South Side Slide
With Robberies And Aggravated Assaults On Rise, Activists
And Merchants Call For Expanded Police Presence In Southern
Half Of Hartford
By Tina A. Brown, Courant Staff Writer
The sign in the window at the Great Wall Chinese
Restaurant on Maple Avenue in Hartford says "Help Wanted."
But Sean Lu isn't sure he'll get many takers.
His three previous drivers quit out of fear.
Each was robbed at gunpoint of food and money - one of them
twice, the manager of the family-owned restaurant said.
Less than a block away from the restaurant,
Bank of America took the unusual step of shutting down a drive-through
ATM after a number of customers reported that they had been
robbed there.
Over the last two years, crime has generally
been on a downward track in Hartford, though homicides spiked
in 2005 and flare-ups, such as a wave of shootings in the
North End last spring, tend to spark close scrutiny.
But neighborhood activists and merchants in
the city's southern half are looking at some statistics with
alarm. In the southeast section of the city, which includes
Barry Square, the South End and downtown Hartford, robberies
have shot up, increasing more than 50 percent over last year.
Aggravated assaults are up as well.
In southwest Hartford, which includes the Frog
Hollow, Parkville and Behind The Rocks neighborhoods, robberies
also are up, by about 35 percent. Larcenies have increased
in both sections.
Other crime categories - murder, burglary and
rape, among them - are down.
The increases in robberies, larcenies and aggravated
assaults have sparked a call to the Hartford Police Department
for stepped-up enforcement and higher visibility. Merchants
are also moving ahead on their own, with one group spending
$40,000 to put a patrol van with strobe lights on the streets
at night.
"We don't want to scare people away," said Hyacinth
Yennie, a community organizer with the Maple Avenue Merchants
Association. "We are working real hard to make sure our streets
are safe."
Trouble After Dark
By day, the city's South End bustles with people
from inside and outside the city shopping and eating.
But David Barbieri, whose mother owns Mishy
& David's, a clothing store on Franklin Avenue, said the neighborhood
changes once the street lights come on.
"At least twice I've seen fighting in the street.
... My guard is up. ... At night you see a bunch of people
hanging behind the buildings. On weekends it's especially
crazy," he said.
Gilberto Allara, who purchased a multifamily
house two months ago in the Barry Square section, says he
blames the spike in certain crimes on drug dealers who, he
says, often park their cars in front of his house and congregate
on the sidewalk.
"You've got good people who live here," Allara
said. "Why you going to do that on this street?"
He posted "Keep Out" and "Police Take Notice"
signs on the windows of his apartments, hoping to scare loiterers
away. But the traffic of buyers and sellers kept coming until
a police officer started parking at night in the gasoline
station lot across the street.
"You put a cop there every single day - and
every single night you won't have that," Allara said. Police
and neighborhood activists say there's no single culprit or
reason for the spike in crime. Some blame drugs; others say
the diversion of resources to stem a wave of shootings in
the city's North End this summer left the southern half of
the city vulnerable.
One pattern uncovered by police involved the
theft of cellular telephones.
In July and August, police say, at least a
half-dozen people were robbed of cellphones, which were used
to call local pizza and Chinese restaurants for deliveries.
When the drivers arrived, groups of people in their teens
and 20s robbed the drivers of food and money at gunpoint.
At the Great Wall restaurant on Maple Avenue,
three delivery drivers had already been robbed in August when
a woman called about 10 p.m. one night asking for a delivery
to Wethersfield Avenue.
By then, Lu and his drivers knew of the risk.
Several other Chinese restaurants from Park Street to Maple
Avenue were robbed repeatedly in August, he said. But delivering
food is a major part of the business, so the driver walked
out the door with the order.
Before the driver reached his car, Lu said,
a man wielding a gun jumped out from behind a telephone booth.
He demanded the car keys, money - and the food - before ordering
the driver to cross the street. The robber then drove away
in one of Great Wall's delivery cars.
About a block away from Great Wall, Marian Cardone,
a Maple Avenue resident for some 60 years, says she regularly
looks out her window before going to bed at night.
One night in July, she said, she saw a teenager
get out of a car and take a seat on her porch, which faces
a Bank of America branch at the corner of Maple Avenue and
Preston Street. Cardone said that before she could do anything,
the young man on her porch tied a dark-color bandanna over
his face and ran across the street toward a car approaching
the bank's ATM.
The bank has since shut down the machine in
the rear of the building after several customers complained
that they had been robbed, Hartford Police Deputy Chief Jose
Lopez said.
Ernesto Anguilla, a spokesman for the bank,
couldn't say for sure how many of its ATMs across the Northeast
have been shut down because of security issues.
He acknowledged, however: "It doesn't happen
regularly."
A Call For Police
Neighborhood activists want the Hartford Police
Department to play a more active role in stemming the problem.
"We need more police visibility," said Yennie,
the activist. "Barry Square has one of the highest crime rates
in the city."
Among all city neighborhoods, north and south,
Barry Square has had the most robberies in 2006 - 73. Frog
Hollow is a close second with 67.
The South Hartford Alliance, a nonprofit organization
of all merchant associations in Hartford's South End, is helping
tackle the problem on its own. Earlier this summer, the organization
spent $40,000 on two vans. The vehicles, with strobe lights,
are driven by Hartford Guides who are assigned to patrol the
area.
Visible patrols are needed at a time when the
South End has become a place of "opportunity" for criminals
taking advantage of stepped up patrols by city and state police
in Hartford's North End, said Alphonse Marotta, a former city
councilman and president of the Franklin Avenue Merchants
Association.
"[The van drivers] try to be the eyes and ears
for the police department," Marotta said, and "to give people
who come to the area a sense of safety and security."
"Visibility can't hurt," said Councilman John
Bazzano, a South End resident.
But Bazzano, along with officials in the Hartford
Police Department, said most of what neighborhood residents
experienced this summer were relatively isolated issues and
should not be seen as a sign of a deeper problem. Crime today
in the South End is not as bad as it was three years ago,
Bazzano noted.
"A lot of crimes can be attributed to illicit
activity," he said. "I live there. It's a great place to live.
I don't have a problem. I think the police are on it. I don't
think it's open season at all. One person can create a crime
wave," Bazzano said.
Lopez, Hartford's deputy police chief and commander
of the southern half of the city, said many of the department's
crime fighting efforts are handled by undercover narcotics
and major crimes detectives and other officers.
"We are working hard to get information that
would lead to the apprehension of these individuals" committing
the recent spate of burglaries and robberies," Lopez said.
"We believe it is a couple of groups. We are looking for those
who are still doing it and at those who committed previous
robberies."
Lopez said he is seeing signs of progress and
said an increased presence has slowed the robberies. In early
August, teams of undercover police officers set up surveillance
in various parts of the South End, hoping to catch the teams
of robbers, Lopez said.
In several cases, the officers arrested convicted
felons on weapons charges. Although police were unable to
charge anyone with the cellular telephone restaurant robberies,
Lopez said police believe they may have caught at least some
of those responsible.
In another example, four men that police suspected
were preparing to rob customers at an ATM were stopped in
a motor vehicle that contained weapons.
"We are trying to do proactive things to catch
them," Lopez said. "We are trying to get ahead of this before
someone is seriously injured."
Contact Tina A. Brown at tabrown@courant.com.
Copyright 2006, Hartford Courant.
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