Pubdate: Fri, 18 Aug 2000
Source: Washington Times (DC)
Copyright: 2000 News World Communications, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.washtimes.com/
Author: Jonetta Rose Barras

WHERE IS CHARLES RAMSEY?

You're walking up Columbia Road N.W. Saturday afternoon, minding your own 
business. Suddenly, it hits you. A tidal wave of marijuana. Sinsemilla. 
You're drowning in it. Arms flailing, you're looking for the source. A 
group of young Hispanic males pass a joint in broad daylight. Someone puts 
a little brown envelope under shrubs, another whistles at cars with 
Virginia and Maryland tags; they unabashedly broadcast in Spanish the 
quality of their wares. You knew this was the city's "green card strip," 
but now it's marijuana heaven and haven. You tell the guys, in English, 
that they're pretty bold. They smile. You head for the nearest supermarket, 
ostensibly for a bottle of Evian. But you pick up a large bag of chips, a 
few barbecue chicken wings and you latch onto a root beer soda. You have a 
mean case of the munchies. But you never put the joint near you're lips. 
Yes, you inhaled; it wasn't your fault. You thought the air you were 
breathing was natural. Few things are natural or normal on District streets.

Where are the police? Where are the ones Metropolitan Police Chief Charles 
Ramsey promised would saturate the neighborhood just after the latest 
killing on 18th St. N.W.? You feel violated, like the kid in that anti-drug 
commercial who is racing behind buildings and hopping over fences just to 
avoid the dealers. All your life you resisted the lure of drugs. You didn't 
succumb when you lived in the Desire Public Housing complex; didn't get 
trapped in California when folks at parties passed around pure grade 
cocaine as if they were offering hors d'oeuvres; and you certainly didn't 
go anywhere near the crack epidemic of the 1980s.

Now drugs have caught you, on a street in the nation's capital. Is anyone 
paying attention to the ills of this type of secondhand smoke? Is there no 
protection for the innocent, you ask as you finish a chicken wing and reach 
for a chip at the same time? Where are the police while these guys with 
funny accents wrap and sell their sinsemilla? Where are the police and the 
Immigration and Naturalization Service agents while green card peddling 
becomes a major market?

You hear their criminal whistle every time a truck or van with a Virginia 
or Maryland tag and occupants who look like them comes along. You see 
others stoop and lift small envelopes from the shrubs outside this 
apartment building, in the tree box outside another. Why don't the police 
see them? Are they blind? Or are they merely on permanent vacation?

Mr. Ramsey says he's short 200 officers - budget problems. At least 1,000 
are still behind desks, performing administrative functions while you and 
others are assaulted by thieves and mindless thugs; reportedly they'll be 
on the streets beginning next week. (You won't hold you're breath.) Then, 
there is the mob at D.C. Superior Court - "5,000 police officers are 
subpoenaed for more than 500 felony and misdemeanor cases scheduled each 
month. But most months, only 90 to 110 cases ever make it to trial," The 
Washington Times' Jim Keary told you.

You realize that even with all the money Congress has thrown at the 
District and with Mr. Ramsey appearing on radio and television - talking a 
great game - it's all the same. Same plot, different actors.You don't want 
to sound like a stuck record, but no one's changing the groove, at least 
not for people like you - captives of the city's failed war on crime, 
working class folks who don't have the luxury like some residents, of 
hiring their own guards to protect their neighborhood because the police 
either can't or won't.

You're thinking this as you read the Wall Street Journal report last week 
that said Mr. Ramsey and a Department of Justice official will be off to 
Prague later this month to teach the Czechs how to handle 
anti-globalization protesters. The World Bank and International Monetary 
Fund are holding meetings there in September. You wonder how you and your 
neighbors can get in with that crew. You pick up the phone and call police 
spokesman Sergeant Joe Gentile who confirms the story; he says the chief 
will travel with Special Operations Commander Michael Radzilowski. Two 
hours later, Mr. Gentile calls back. Never mind, he says. "Over the weekend 
the chief changed his mind. He wants to be here for the roll out of the new 
deployment plan." Good.

You think maybe if the chief were forced to live with the family of the 
next homicide victim, maybe if he were forced to take off his uniform and 
walk the streets like an average citizen - if he were forced to inhale 
sinsemilla, if his car were stolen, if someone broke into his home and 
stole priceless family heirlooms; if someone beat him just on GP (general 
principle), maybe then he might get close to understanding how you and 
other residents feel, and have felt for the past two years, when you all 
thought your rescue was at hand. Maybe then he'd see protecting you and 
other residents as more important than World Bank and IMF executives. Maybe 
he'd stop eyeing a job at the Justice Department and do the one he's 
getting paid to do here.

Jonetta Rose Barras is a columnist for The Washington Times. Her column 
appears on Fridays.
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