Pubdate: Fri, 22 Nov 2002
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 2002 Los Angeles Times
Contact:  http://www.latimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/248
Authors: Andrew Blankstein and Richard Winton, Times Staff Writers
Note: Times staff writers Megan Garvey, Mitchell Landsberg and Jessica 
Garrison contributed to this report.
Related: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v02/n2130/a07.html

AUTHORITIES HIT SKID ROW AGAIN

Tis Time, Officers Fan Out In Early Evening. Advocate For Homeless Calls It 
'Grandstanding.'

As darkness fell Thursday, authorities launched a second round of sweeps 
through Los Angeles' skid row, a vast homeless encampment just east of 
downtown where officials say they are determined to root out lawless elements.

Police said "Operation Enough" was intended to address a growing problem of 
parole and probation violators who are avoiding prison by living in the 
densely populated, litter-strewn area.

The operation was launched after business organizations decried the huge 
homeless population in the area, but officials said that complaints had 
nothing to do with the sweep, which has been planned for months partly in 
response to double-digit increases in homeless assaulting or robbing each 
other.

"What we are really trying to do is reduce aggravated assaults and 
robberies in the skid row area," said Los Angeles Police Capt. Charlie 
Beck. "Either you catch them in the act or you remove them another way." 
Beck reiterated that police were going after those who pose a threat to the 
community, not targeting the homeless.

Around 5 p.m. Thursday, hundreds of law enforcement officers from the Los 
Angeles Police Department, the California Department of Corrections and the 
California Youth Authority, as well as federal agents, began massing near 
police headquarters at Parker Center. The Corrections Department was the 
lead agency in the sweeps, and many parole officers came from around the 
state to participate.

Following a briefing, authorities fanned through the neighborhood, some 
carrying photographs of suspected parole and probation violators. They 
swept into low-cost hotels, shined flashlights into tents and questioned 
people on the street. The majority of people on the row, however, were left 
alone.

But a homeless advocate Thursday blasted what she called indiscriminate 
harassment of one of the city's most vulnerable populations.

"They went after everybody," said Alice Callaghan, an Episcopal priest and 
former Catholic nun who runs Las Familias del Pueblo. Talking of 
Wednesday's sweeps, she said, "They stood up whole lines of people against 
the walls. This was not a carefully targeted assault against criminals.... 
And if they knew about all these criminals before, why did they wait for 
one day to grandstand? What was the purpose?"

Officials said they did not have a figure on how many people were arrested 
Thursday. Wednesday's sweep resulted in 108 arrests, 57 of them for parole 
violations and two for violating probation.

Police refused repeated requests Thursday to identify those arrested. Beck, 
commander of the LAPD's Central Division, said most arrests were for drug 
offenses or those who were found in violation of parole for prior drug 
offenses. But the group included people who had been in prison for assault, 
burglary, robbery and drug dealing, he said. Police confiscated many 
weapons, including knives.

In addition to the parole and probation arrests, 19 people were arrested 
for felony violations, mostly drug possession. Eight were arrested on 
misdemeanor violations, police said.

Another six arrests were for outstanding felony warrants and 14 for 
outstanding misdemeanor warrants. Again, police refused to identify the 
suspects or their alleged crimes. One juvenile was arrested on an 
outstanding warrant.

Authorities on Wednesday also impounded six cars, made one arrest for drunk 
driving and handed out 100 traffic citations, both for moving violations 
and for jaywalking. Those cited were not taken into custody, police said.

Each of those accused of violating their parole was taken to the county 
jail and will soon appear before a deputy court commissioner to determine 
whether they will be returned to prison, said Jerome Marsh, administrator 
of parole and community services for the Department of Corrections.

Callaghan, the homeless advocate, strongly criticized the operation.

"I think our new police chief wants everybody to know who's in town. And 
while he hasn't been able to do anything about the gang killings in 
South-Central, he can easily come down and assault the poorest and most 
vulnerable in the community. I think that just shows that he's a coward."

Callaghan said she considered the first-night roundup of 108 people to be a 
relatively paltry catch for the police. "The raid proves that most of the 
homeless on skid row are not criminals. That's the only good news to come 
out of yesterday," she said.

Bratton, discussing the raid on Wednesday, insisted that the police were 
attacking criminal behavior, not homelessness.

"This isn't about kicking the homeless off the streets," he said. "I have 
great compassion for the homeless. But many of these people arrested are 
violent offenders who make skid row unsafe for people who truly have 
nowhere else to go."

Jose Luis Hernandez, 74, who has lived at the King Edward Hotel on 5th 
Street for the last five years, welcomed the sweeps.

"It's good to see the police,'' Hernandez said Thursday night. "Maybe other 
people have problems with the police, but there are bad people out here."

Bratton said he had far fewer tools to deal with bad behavior on city 
streets than he had as police commissioner in New York.

He cited California laws that prohibit arrests of people who urinate or 
defecate in public if there are no public restrooms immediately available.

Times staff writers Megan Garvey, Mitchell Landsberg and Jessica Garrison 
contributed to this report.
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