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Residents and police talk crime in West Philly

Posted on 15 September 2011 by Mike Lyons

About 100 West Philadelphia residents packed the basement of the Calvary Center tonight to talk to police and University City District (UCD) officials about how to curb crime in the neighborhoods west of 40th Street.

The regular monthly meeting, which usually attracts less than a dozen people, was standing-room-only tonight as residents questioned police about topics ranging from the effectiveness of plain-clothes officers to the funding of a campaign for more porch lights. Police and UCD officials called on residents to help keep neighborhoods safe by requesting more walking escorts and calling police when they see suspicious activity.

Neighborhood organization was a consistent theme of the meeting.

“We have to organize as a community,” said resident Karen Allen. “Otherwise we will be picked off one by one.”

The increased attendance at the monthly meeting with police was in response to the rape and robbery on Tuesday night near 48th Street and Springfield Avenue.

Many residents who attended the meeting wanted to talk about specific issues. Several were concerned about the area near 48th and Baltimore. A woman who lives at 800 S. St. Bernard St., a small side street near 49th and Baltimore, said she has seen an increase in criminal activity on her street, including three robberies earlier this week.

“It feels like a battle zone with kids running up and down our street with guns,” she said.

Lt. Brian McBride, who heads the Philadelphia Police Department’s University City unit, said that officers have been active in the neighborhood and made arrests in those cases.

“It’s been a battle over there,” he said. You’re right. We’re working very hard on it.”

McBride said that the department has employed a strategy that includes several plain clothes police officers in areas beyond 40th Street.

But several residents were concerned that there were no longer enough uniformed UCD bike patrols further out in the neighborhood.

“The change I see is that at night they are concentrated around 40th and Walnut,” said one person at the meeting. “It’s like if you sneeze in that neighborhood then, boom, you’re done.”

Matt Bergheiser, UCD’s executive director, said more patrols have been stationed near 40th and Walnut to help combat the rash of flash mobs last month. That area, intelligence showed, was a possible target, he said.

Bergheiser said that UCD has performed target policing before, including a crackdown near the 46th and Market El stop, which had seen an increase in crime earlier this year. Police targeted a wall near a residential area bordering the El stop and deployed more plain clothes officers. They have taken a similar approach to the increased crime below Baltimore Avenue.

“I know it’s not as visible,” Bergheiser said. “But it’s out there.”

That deployment is part of an ongoing strategy to address crime, he said “We look at every single crime every single week to try to stay ahead of the trends,” said Bergheiser.

One resident was concerned that the area south of Baltimore Avenue near 48th Street was targeted because it was on the border of police districts – that there was an “escape route” where police from different districts would not overlap. McBride said police nearby, regardless of the district, would respond to an emergency.

“In an emergency, all bets are off,” he said. “Any police can go anywhere.”

McBride advised residents at the meeting to report suspicious activity. Some people at the meeting said that in a diverse neighborhood suspicious activity was often hard to pinpoint. One person raised a specific example: He was on a trolley when he overheard a group of teens talking about the best way to rob someone at night. McBride advised him to call it in.

“On the off chance that it was a threat,” he said, “I would step off the trolley and call 911 and someone would be dispatched.”

What became clear in the meeting, though, is that people in the neighborhoods have been reluctant to report “suspicious activity.” There are likely several reasons for that. Many people are new to the neighborhood and so are still getting accustomed to what is “normal.” Also, “suspicious” is to judge.

But McBride, Bergheiser and the other speakers offered some concrete advice:

• Keep your porch light on if you have one. It costs about $3 a year to keep a 100-watt bulb on from dusk until dawn.

• Trim big bushes back. It sounds trivial, but police have noticed that in West Philly would-be robbers hide in overgrown bushes.

• Walk confidently. Beware that ear buds and headphones make you vulnerable, as does carrying lots of stuff.

• Look for light. As we know, light is our friend.

• Don’t be afraid to call the UCD ambassadors. Yes, those folks on bikes with the yellow shirts will walk you places at night. One of the folks at the meeting said that there are 12,000 calls for them near the Penn campus and “not so many” past 40th Street. They patrol out to 50th Street and usually arrive within 5 minutes. They will introduce themselves and be friendly. Call them. The number is 215-387-3942.

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Car break-ins, thefts from autos still a big problem

Posted on 05 September 2019 by WestPhillyLocal.com

An uptick in thefts from autos was reported back in May in the 18th Police District, which covers West Philadelphia neighborhoods south of Market Street, and the number of such thefts and car break-ins has remained high throughout the summer, according to several crime alerts from police.

Last Thursday, a string of thefts from cars parked on the 4800 block of Hazel all the way to the 5100 block of Hazel was reported. The thefts took place between the early morning hours of 2 a.m. to 4:30 a.m.. Check out this video:  Continue Reading

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Police headquarters, burglaries, rally against shooting deaths: West Philly news roundup (updated)

Posted on 10 February 2014 by WestPhillyLocal.com

Here’s a summary of news coming out of our neck of the woods in the past few days and a reminder on a couple of community events this week. Editor’s Note: The meeting on the potential sale of the University City High School has been postponed until Wednesday, Feb. 26.

provident_insurance_building

Provident Mutual Life Insurance Co. building. (Archived photo/West Philly Local).

• Another hurdle has been cleared for the plan to move the police headquarters into the Provident Mutual Life Insurance Co. building at 46th and Market Streets. Last Thursday, Councilwoman Jannie Blackwell introduced two bills that would allow the city to borrow up to $250 million for the project, according to a report by Philadelphia Inquirer. The 87-year-old building has been vacant since 1983, when Provident Mutual Life Insurance Co. moved out, and has been put on the endangered properties list by the Preservation Alliance of Philadelphia.

• A rally was held on Saturday, Feb. 8 to protest recent purse snatching and shootings in Philadelphia. The rally was held at 53rd and Market Streets, the site of the most recent purse snatching, when a 29-year-old woman was shot to death and her companion, a 34-year-old woman, was wounded. Dozens of people attended the event, organized by Handbags 4 Piece, and many people spoke out, including the mothers of the victims (check out the Handbags 4 Piece Facebook page for photos and videos).

Ground was broken last week at the site of the new high-rise apartment building at 36th and Market Streets. The 28-story 364-unit mixed-use structure is a joint project of the University City Science Center and Southern Land Co., of Nashville. The project, which will also include 14,600 square feet of ground-floor retail space and parking for 200 cars and 140 bicycles, is expected to be completed in spring 2015.

• Residential burglaries are still a cause for concern in University City, according to the latest crime update released by the University City District. Over 20 burglaries took place in the area in January, which is a double of the number of burglaries in December. Three burglary-related arrests have been made. UCD also reports that there were about a dozen robberies in the area, four of them at gunpoint, with arrests made in nine of these cases. August and September were peak months for robberies in the area, with over 30 incidents reported.

• Great news for fried chicken and gourmet donuts fans: Philly’s super popular chain Federal Donuts is close to opening their location in University City. The awnings to their new shop at 3428 Sansom were recently complete:

Another tweet by Federal Donuts said that the new location is opening “very soon” but the date hasn’t been announced yet. We’ll keep you posted.

• Two meetings on the sale of vacant schools and other School District of Philadelphia properties in West Philadelphia will take place this week: on Tuesday, Feb. 11 you can learn more about the future of Shaw Middle School (54th & Warrington) and on Wednesday, Feb. 11 (postponed until Feb. 26) there will be a meeting on the potential sale of the University City High School, Drew Elementary School and Walnut Center buildings. Click here for more information. If you missed our story on the Wilson School building’s future, click here.

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