Pubdate: Sun, 05 Mar 2006
Source: Times Daily (Florence, AL)
Copyright: 2006 Times Daily
Contact:  http://www.timesdaily.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1641
Author: Jenny Bone Miller
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/women.htm (Women)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

CRIME RATE ON ANNISTON'S ELM STREET WORST IN CALHOUN COUNTY

Elm Street stretches 2,700 feet, a short walk for  neighborhood 
children on their way to Constantine  School. They pass an elderly 
woman tending her  daffodils, three playgrounds in red, yellow and 
green -  and drug runners with semiautomatic weapons. Crime data 
shows 43 felony crimes were committed on Elm Street in  the two years 
from Jan. 1, 2004 to Dec. 31, 2005.

That's one felony for every 62 feet of the street the  kids walk 
along. It's more than any other street in  Calhoun County, according 
to an analysis done by The  Anniston Star of area crime reports and maps.

This is where the children get their first images of a  community and 
how it lives. It's where many of their  parents and grandparents grew 
up. It's the place they  call home.

The reasons vary, police and residents say, but in  recent years Elm 
Street's business with the law seems  to come from a blend of factors 
that make the road on  Anniston's south side a hot spot for blue lights.

On one side is the Constantine Homes public apartment  complex, which 
makes the street one of the county's  most densely populated. 
Residents of the complex are  mostly single mothers, and officials 
say that while the  apartment residents aren't the source of the 
crime, the  situation leads to trouble.

On the other side, elderly residents, some of whom have  lived in the 
neighborhood for more than 40 years, keep  track of the comings and 
goings. At the street's west  end are the motorcycles of the Devil's 
Disciples, whose  headquarters is behind a 6-foot wooden fence.

The human mix on Elm Street, like the crime, is  diverse. The 
classrooms at Constantine Elementary  School capture that diversity 
every day in the  community's children, who decorate their classrooms 
with the creativity of their artwork.

Police, Elm Street residents and city officials say an  equally 
creative solution is needed to root out the  neighborhood's crime.

Many on Elm Street are identified here by their first  names because 
they're afraid to let anyone know what  their last one is. The Star 
generally doesn't rely on  sources who aren't fully named, but in the 
case of  crime reporting, the paper's editors thought it was 
important to get the perspective of residents, even if  they spoke 
only on a first-name basis.

An elderly woman at the end of the street, Norma, has  lived in her 
home for 43 years.

She said she feels safe because the Devil's Disciples  are neighbors.

"I think if I needed them really, really bad, they'd be  there," she said.

She walks her dog, Benji, every day and likes to  garden.

Like many longtime residents, Norma won't leave, even  though the 
neighborhood has changed.

Down the street, at the housing complex,  round-the-clock activity 
brings a steady stream of  visitors, some of whom make their living 
breaking the  law.

More shootings, assaults, and thefts are concentrated  at the complex 
than anywhere else in Anniston. In April  2005, police found Demond 
Quortez Curry, 25, and  Kenneth Sheppard, 31, riddled with bullets in 
one of  the Constantine apartments.

Elm Street residents know of the assaults. They hear  the shooting. 
They say that one way or another, they're  addressing crime in their own ways.

"All our guns are legal," said Tatu, a leather-clad  spokesman for 
the Devil's Disciples.

"I'm not going mess with them down there," he said,  gesturing toward 
the east end of Elm Street and  Constantine Homes.

He said he has seen illegal rifles in the hands of some  of his neighbors.

"But if somebody slaps me," he said, "I'm gonna be  hitting back pretty hard."

Administrators and residents say the people who live at  Constantine 
Homes aren't the source of the street's  crime. Most of it is 
committed by outsiders who  congregate around the Constantine complex.

"It's the baby daddies coming in here making trouble,"  said Tia 
Ford, 25, mother of two small boys and a  resident of the complex. 
"They're just crazy."

The complex has more residents than any other public  housing 
facility in the county. There are 176  apartments with 462 residents. 
A majority of those  renters, who all had to pass a criminal and drug 
background check, are single women aged 19 to 28.

Ford said that when some girls get pregnant as  teenagers, they go to 
the housing authority office and  say, "I want a project," so that 
they can live alone,  away from their parents' authority.

With so many single young women in one place, young men  are 
attracted to the area.

"It's like putting out honey for flies," said one city  housing 
official, who didn't want to be quoted by name.

Some of the women have children with different fathers,  and those 
fathers sometimes fight, the housing official  said.

"The majority of the crime going on down there is from  outside the 
housing (complex)," said Sam Jones,  director of the Anniston Housing 
Authority. "We've  tried just about everything."

Tatu and his friends chased three burglars away from  Norma's house 
last year by firing shots into the air  and riding their Harleys.

Norma won't move despite her children's pleas for her  to relocate to 
White Plains.

Biker parties sometimes shake the china cabinet in her house.

"I called over there once when it was too loud and  asked to speak to 
the man of the house," she said. "But  as far as trouble, no, mainly 
they're not."

The Devil's Disciples' headquarters, which looks a lot  like a blue 
fraternity house, has been raided three  times in the past three 
years, Tatu said, by ATF and  FBI officers who arrived in helicopters.

"They're after us because we're a big, bad motorcycle  gang," Tatu 
said, his words tinged with sarcasm.

Anniston police Chief John Dryden said his department  has had only 
two confrontations with the Devil's  Disciples since they moved in 
nine years ago - once  over a rowdy party and once when police 
received a tip  that a fugitive on the Ten Most Wanted list was there.

Dryden said he wouldn't label one place as being the  spot for crime, 
but he said that his department has to  concentrate on Constantine 
Homes recently more than  ever.

"Rather than sporadic, it's become constant over there  in the past 
10 years," he said. "There's been more  people living there, which is 
the number one thing."

Constantine Homes, situated near Hobson City and Oxford  on 
Anniston's far southern edge, is prime real estate  for the drug trade.

Crack is the most popular drug, Jones said.

"Kids walk to school, and they see the drug dealers  selling drugs," 
Ford said, holding her 4-year old son's  hand. "They think it's cool 
that they're making money."

She said she wants to move.

On any given day, runners beckon to passing cars.

Lt. Rocky Stemen, an investigator at the Anniston  Police Department 
who also heads the Anniston Housing  Authority Police Unit, said it 
isn't fair to look at  Elm Street's crime statistics without taking 
the  population density and numbers into account.

"There is no other street in Calhoun County that has  462 people 
living on it. It's comparing apples to  oranges," he said. "The per 
capita crime rate might be  a different story."
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman