Dayton Daily News

Springfiel­d Police to receive more than $300K in crime reduction grant funding

Funds will cover dozens of cameras in violence ‘hotspots.’

- By Sydney Dawes Contact this reporter at Sydney.Dawes@coxinc.com.

The Springfiel­d Police Division will receive a more than $300,000 from the Ohio Violent Crime Reduction Grant Program to purchase dozens of surveillan­ce cameras and other technology.

The funding comes at a time when reports of gunfire have doubled in recent years in Springfiel­d, and there have been three homicides — including a mass shooting — so far this year.

Gov. Mike DeWine announced the third round of the grant funding at Springfiel­d City Hall Monday morning. Sixteen law enforcemen­t agencies in the state will receive a portion of $3.9 million in this funding round.

The Ohio Violent Crime Reduction Grant Program, created last year, aims to provide more resources to communitie­s to address violence. DeWine said the nature of how gun violence presents itself throughout the state is changing, with more young people committing and dying by gun violence.

“Springfiel­d is not immune to what we’re seeing,” DeWine said. “We really target violent crime. We’re seeing our cities become shooting galleries, and people have the right to be safe in their neighborho­ods and live in peace.”

Springfiel­d’s $305,206.94 allotment will cover the cost of more than 40 surveillan­ce cameras to be placed in “hotspots” of violent activity, Springfiel­d Police Division Chief Lee Graf said Monday.

Graf said that a picture is worth a thousand words, as the adage goes, but video can “fill a whole novel.”

“It can give us the ‘how’ and ‘why,’” Graf said.

Clark County Prosecutor Dan Driscoll agreed, saying surveillan­ce footage may assist in telling the stories of victims and help “fill in the blanks” of what happened when witnesses are not coming forward.

The surveillan­ce technology

will operate much like security cameras for homes and businesses.

“The job of proving someone guilty has become more and more complicate­d,” Driscoll said.

Grant funding will also cover the purchase of technology­that automatica­lly read license plate numbers.

In the first five months

of the year, the Springfiel­d Police Division has received more than 500 calls related to shots fired or in regard to firearms, according to the police division.

Graf said that the national rise in gun violence reverberat­ed in Springfiel­d: the city saw shots fired incidents double from 2019 to 2020.

The city has seen three homicides so far this year: in March, 16-year-old Melvin Belle died following a shooting at an event venue on South Yellow Springs Street. In April, 37-year-old Joshua Tackett was killed near Springfiel­d Soup Kitchen. Markeese Brown, 19, faces charges of tampering with evidence, carrying a concealed weapon and dischargin­g a firearm into a habitation in connection to the death of Tackett.

Most recently, a young woman in May was killed in a shooting where four others were injured. The death of the Springfiel­d woman, De’Arion Welliford, 23, remains under investigat­ion, and Graf said her death was “tragic and senseless.”

“As a community, we need to do everything we can to stop gun violence,” Graf said. “Officers are responding to calls daily and patrolling the community.”

Grants announced in the third round are all funded through the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA), according to DeWine’s office. Several agencies in Franklin, Mahoning, Washington, Harrison, Lake, Scioto, Cuyahoga, Mercer and Meigs counties were also awarded in this grant cycle.

To date, $9.6 million has been awarded to Ohio’s law enforcemen­t agencies through the grant program.

 ?? BILL LACKEY/STAFF ?? Gov. Mike DeWine talks about the funding for local law enforcemen­t agencies as part of the Ohio Violent Crime Reduction Grant Program.
BILL LACKEY/STAFF Gov. Mike DeWine talks about the funding for local law enforcemen­t agencies as part of the Ohio Violent Crime Reduction Grant Program.

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