Imperial Valley Press

Manhattan eases up on subway fare jumpers

- BY COLLEEN LONG

NEW YORK — Fare beaters who hopped over grimy subway turnstiles back in the early 1990s were the first targets of a policing strategy that went after the smallest offenses and was credited with helping to drive crime down to record lows.

So now, a new policy to halt the prosecutio­n of turnstile jumpers in Manhattan has some city officials and riders questionin­g it as a foolhardy turning back of the clock.

“The New York transit system is facing major problems already,” said Dottie Jeffries, 67, a daily subway rider who was just getting off the train in Greenwich Village. “And not caring about whether someone pays ... sets a tone of permissive­ness that could cause more trouble.”

Metropolit­an Transporta­tion Authority Chairman Joseph Lhota wrote in a letter to the Manhattan District Attorney this week that “allowing ever more widespread fare-beating ... unquestion­ably sends a loud and clear signal to those who would flout the law.”

Going after fare beaters was a pillar of the “Broken Windows” theory implemente­d in the early 1990s. It argued that ignoring smaller quality-of-life crimes only cleared the way for bigger ones to happen. Critics said the strategy became a pretense to unfairly target poor minorities.

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance Jr. said his policy, which took effect Feb. 1, doesn’t prevent officers from stopping turnstile jumpers, and that those found to have weapons or an open warrant will be arrested and prosecuted. But a review by his office found that two-thirds of all those arrested in Manhattan for the crime had no prior conviction­s, and a judge posed no criminal sanctions on those who pleaded guilty, Vance said.

Most turnstile jumpers aren’t arrested anyway. The penalty is a civil citation, similar to a traffic ticket, the accused can either pay a $100 fine or fight the case in the Transit Adjudicati­on Bureau. Last year, of 33,000 turnstile jumpers in Manhattan, 25,000 got summonses and 8,000 were arrested.

Police will still be able to write those tickets in Manhattan. It’s just that violators won’t be taken to jail.

“The criminal justice system should be reserved for people who endanger public safety,” Vance wrote.

The policy applies only in Manhattan, because the city’s other four boroughs have different district attorneys.

Subway rider Rhona Harrison, 36, said it was a waste of money to prosecute such low-level cases.

“Why are we tying up our criminal justice system for this, spending so much more money when we could just fine someone who doesn’t pay?”

Police Commission­er James O’Neill Police said he plans to meet with prosecutor­s over an apparent “gap” between what his office and Vance’s office considers a public safety risk. Officers noted that in at least five cases this week, prosecutor­s declined to prosecute turnstile jumpers who had long rap sheets, including one with 52 prior arrests for various crimes.

“It’s important to control access to the subway,” O’Neill said. “It’s how we keep people safe.”

Even the city’s liberal Democrat mayor, who has pushed policing reforms including the decrease in criminal arrests of low-level marijuana possession, is opposed the policy shift. Mayor Bill De Blasio says farebeatin­g isn’t necessaril­y motivated by poverty.

“A lot of people who commit fare evasion and the police encounter have a lot of money on them,” the mayor said.

 ??  ?? New York City police officers observe commuters using turnstiles at a Harlem subway station in New York on March 3, 2016. New York City police and transit officials say a new policy not to prosecute subway fare jumpers could embolden criminals and...
New York City police officers observe commuters using turnstiles at a Harlem subway station in New York on March 3, 2016. New York City police and transit officials say a new policy not to prosecute subway fare jumpers could embolden criminals and...

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