Pubdate: Sun, 05 May 2002
Source: Cincinnati Enquirer (OH)
Copyright: 2002 The Cincinnati Enquirer
Contact:  http://enquirer.com/today/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/86
Author: Peter Bronson

WHEN THE COPS ARE HANDCUFFED, CRIME TAKES A CITY HOSTAGE

Drug Cancer

This is Cincinnati: A perfect spring day at a Reds game, families cracking 
jokes and peanuts, cheering until the last out, then back on the freeway to 
big, safe lawns in MiniVanville.

This is Cincinnati on drugs: "They called me at home at 4 a.m. A voice 
said, 'I'm here.' 1 said, 'What do you mean, you're here?' He said, '1 can 
see you sitting up in bed. Now I see you walking by your window."'

The man in the car fled before police arrived, but his words linger. "A man 
came to my house and threatened to rape my wife," said Steve Goodin.

Like Chicago, 1929

Mr. Goodin is an assistant Hamilton County prosecutor.  The threats began 
when his wife, Jennifer, executive director of Ronald McDonald House, 
testified against renewal of a liquor license for Uncle Milt's, a hangout 
for drug dealers who infest Burnet Avenue.

"I know what these guys are capable of," Mr. Goodin said "They can turn 
very violent when they feel their turf is violated."

It sounds like Chicago, 1929, not Cincinnati in 2002. But parts of 
Cincinnati look like lawless corners of Detroit and Los Angeles, where the 
drug boys operate brazenly in broad daylight, with no fear.

Law-enforcement officials, community activists and residents agree: The 
police feel handcuffed.  Cops no longer  aggressively go after drug dealers 
because they've seen what happens when drug suspects resist arrest.

In case after case, cops have been accused of racism and excessive force. 
The cops have been investigated, put on trial, threatened with jail, forced 
into debt for legal fees. Their careers and lives have been wrecked.

Blame the Cops

The Rev. Damon Lynch III has played the race card to make cops the bad guys 
and glorify outlaws as martyrs.   "If you want to get the cops to back off, 
just yell, 'Racial profiling,' " said Tom Jones, who is trying to clean up 
his mostly black neighborhood in Avondale. "The most ridiculous crap is 
accepted by Cincinnati, and nobody will say anything against it. If you do, 
you are ostracized."

Some blame the cops for a "slowdown." But the same critics would be the 
first to yell "racism" if a drug dealer resists and gets hurt. The cops 
knew that and drug dealers nearly always fight or run.

To a cop, it's all pain and no gain to bust the drug markets in 
Over-the-Rhine and Avondale that provide curbside service to buyers from 
the suburbs.

Even if they make an arrest, the dealer can be back on the street in hours, 
according to Tom Gould, chief deputy for Hamilton County Clerk of Courts 
James Cissell.

"The cost of bail bonds up to a million dollars is often looked at as a 
cost of doing business in that world," Mr. Gould said. "It's not unusual to 
see $25,000, up to $100,000 posted the same day.It takes about four to five 
hours to do the arrest paperwork  After that; they can be back on the 
street. It's revolving door justice."

Mr. Goodin has watched the wide-open drug deals, prostitution, brawls and 
crime at Milt's after dark. He says, "It's insane."

And so is Cincinnati for handcuffing its cops as the drug cancer spreads.

For now, it's an "inner-city" problem. But it could be coming soon to a 
neighborhood near you.

Just ask Mr. and Mrs. Goodin.
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