Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Police rebuild trust one event at a time

- By Wesley Juhl

Before the embers had cooled from the riots and fire that roiled Las Vegas’ Historic Westside 25 years ago after the Rodney King verdicts, the Metropolit­an Police Department was forced to confront its failure to build relationsh­ips with residents of the city’s predominan­tly black community.

Flash forward 25 years, and the difference in the department’s approach in the demographi­cally shifting district is striking:

The community policing team of the Bolden Area Command station, whose patrol area includes the Westside, often work 12hour days hosting holiday events, food banks and other events and partnering with the area’s faith and business leaders.

Bolden Area Command’s Capt. Robert Plummer was a 23-year--

old patrol cop assigned to the Westside in the early ‘90s, a time when the community was facing a violent crime wave caused by an influx of gang members from Southern California – Bloods and Crips – and a crack epidemic.

Plummer said the relationsh­ip between the police and the local community was not great. Community outreach was often an afterthoug­ht, and many officers did not bring empathy to the job. More often, they came with battering rams.

The strained relationsh­ip between cops and community was evident when two small police stations near the Gerson Park and Carey Arms housing projects burned during the riots. The department did not rebuild them.

“That was a mistake,” Plummer said. “We should have gone right back in there.”

Elgin Simpson was there when the riots broke out and played a key role in organizing community leaders afterward. Simpson, who was born in the Westside in 1945, said the riots changed the dynamic between the community and law enforcemen­t.

The group he helped start, Community Peace, did outreach in troubled neighborho­ods and often acted who was elected in 1995. And other reforms followed.

A 2011 Las Vegas Review-Journal investigat­ion showed Metro had one of the highest rates for officer-involved shootings in the nation in the 2000s. That led to changes in deadly force policies, including training on de-escalation tactics, sharing informatio­n on police shootings and institutin­g multiple levels of review after a shooting. Such changes have paid dividends. The issues underlying the King riots resurfaced in November 2014, after a grand jury declined to indict former Ferguson, Missouri, police officer Darren Wilson for fatally shooting Michael Brown, an 18-year-old black man, a few months earlier. The case, which gave birth to the Black Lives Matter movement, triggered violence in many cities.

There were no riots in the Westside this time. Instead, police hosted a community forum with about 30 Las Vegas activists, private citizens and police officers at the Martin Luther King Jr. Statue in North Las Vegas to peacefully discuss the incident — and race and policing generally. ‘In the 106’

Today, Bolden events branded “in the 106” — a reference to the zip code, 89106, of the Westside — have earned a reputation in the community for free family fun or connecting residents to services and resources.

Hundreds of Westside residents recently gathered for “Easter in the 106” at Doolittle Park. Children raced across the grass, looking to grab one of the 7,000 plastic eggs Bolden officers and volunteers spent two days preparing.

“These events aren’t measured in crime stats,” Capt. Plummer said that day. “But it makes our jobs much easier when it’s time for policing.”

The community police initiative­s come with an added hope that it will influence the next generation.

“It’s nice to have kids come out and look at us in a different way,” Plummer said. “If we’re going to have any chance for saving the future, it’s these little kids here.”

A few days later, Bolden’s community team held its monthly “farmers market.”

Hundreds of residents lined up outside a shuttered grocery store on Lake Mead and Jones boulevards to get free food.

“It’s huge for our senior population on a fixed income,” said Watts, the Bolden community team officer, adding the food bank serves as many as 2,600 people.

Joyce Pope, 33, who brought her children to pick up some food, said the event “puts a human face on police.”

“When my kids see that, it’s good for them so they’re not scared of the police,” she said. “There are only bad things about police on TV.” Baseball and beyond

Bolden’s community officers meet with faith and business leaders several times a week to discuss neighborho­od issues and host other annual events, including “Christmas in the 106,” “Comedy in the 106” (a partnershi­p with comedian George Wallace) and the “I Love My City march.”

This year, the community team revived the neighborho­od’s Little League baseball program after a seven-year hiatus. Sixty-eight kids play on five teams, each coached by a Metro officer. The unit is also looking at offering summer programs and is preparing for its annual back-toschool event.

The back-to-school event helps students with school supplies and immunizati­ons. This year the unit is working on a partnershi­p with the rap artist YG to offer clothes that teenagers might like, officer Regina Coward said.

Coward grew up in the area and has seen the relationsh­ip with law enforcemen­t change over the years. She wants to inspire youths to give back to their community and affect the way police are perceived.

She summed up the ideas behind community policing nicely: “If you’ve done nothing for the community, they won’t do anything for you.”

 ?? Bizuayehu Tesfaye Review-Journal ?? Metro police Sgt. Dave Watts hides eggs during the annual Easter egg hunt event at Doolittle Community Field on April 10.
Bizuayehu Tesfaye Review-Journal Metro police Sgt. Dave Watts hides eggs during the annual Easter egg hunt event at Doolittle Community Field on April 10.
 ?? Bridget Bennett Las Vegas Review-Journal @bridgetkbe­nnett ?? Alayja Grayson, 11, warms up with teammates as Metro officer Dave Shive coaches them before a Bolden Little League game Thursday at Doolittle Field. Bolden Little League, co-founded by Mario Berlanga Jr., owner of Mario’s Westside Market, and Bolden...
Bridget Bennett Las Vegas Review-Journal @bridgetkbe­nnett Alayja Grayson, 11, warms up with teammates as Metro officer Dave Shive coaches them before a Bolden Little League game Thursday at Doolittle Field. Bolden Little League, co-founded by Mario Berlanga Jr., owner of Mario’s Westside Market, and Bolden...

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