New York Post

Woke Philly policies lead to lethal record

- THOMAS HOGAN

ON Nov. 26, the day after Thanksgivi­ng, a young man was shot and killed in Philadelph­ia. The murder was typical: five shots, no witnesses, no arrest, no suspects. But for Philly, this was an especially significan­t homicide — the city’s 501st murder for the year, its most ever.

No demographi­c, social or economic shift caused this spike in violence. In 2014, Philadelph­ia recorded only 248 homicides. Since then, the city’s population has remained stable. Its median household income increased slightly. The Democratic Party continues to control all the levers of government. The city remains composed of economical­ly and ethnically diverse neighborho­ods. “Root cause” problems such as poverty or racism couldn’t have caused this massive increase in homicides, because whatever root causes exist have been around for a long while.

The political leadership of Philadelph­ia is responsibl­e for these deaths. In 2015, Philadelph­ia elected progressiv­e Mayor Jim Kenney. In 2017, the city elected radical District Attorney Larry Krasner. Kenney has presided over a revolving door at police headquarte­rs, with four chiefs or acting chiefs serving since his election. The number of homicides has risen every year since 2015.

The first bad move was de-carceratio­n. Kenney and Krasner promised to empty the jails, and they delivered on their promise. The jail population in Philadelph­ia dropped by more than 40 percent in the last five years. In the midst of freeing low-level, nonviolent offenders, Philadelph­ia also managed to set free a cohort of drug-dealing, gun-toting felons. The ensuing violence was predictabl­e.

Next, Kenney and Krasner undertook large-scale de-prosecutio­n. They declared that certain crimes, such as prostituti­on and retail theft, would not be prosecuted, and they approved fewer charges for such serious crimes as drug-traffickin­g. They convicted fewer defendants. Even when they convicted defendants of serious crimes, they agreed to sentences that victims and other prosecutor­s questioned.

For their next act, Kenney and Krasner succeeded in demoralizi­ng the police. If cops took a tough stand, whether it was against people trespassin­g in a Starbucks or protesters blocking highways, Kenney and Krasner didn’t back them up. One could be forgiven for supposing that Krasner spends more time and energy thinking about ways to criticize members of the Philadelph­ia Police Department than he does trying to stop violent criminals from killing civilians. Kenney and Krasner figured out that it was easier to sideline the police psychologi­cally than to defund the Police Department, which might have political consequenc­es. With the police hobbled, shootings soared, and solving the killings became harder.

Kenney and Krasner also managed to co-opt the means of communicat­ion. You would think that amid this massive surge in violence, the Philadelph­ia Inquirer would be running blaring headlines blaming the mayor and district attorney for losing control of the city. The Inquirer never flinched from criticizin­g prior mayors and district attorneys for comparativ­ely minor issues. But the newspaper has generally held its tongue. As the city approached its homicide record, the Inquirer ran a long story in which Krasner blamed the police. Kenney then called a press conference where he blamed the rest of the state for Philadelph­ia’s homicides. The Inquirer has hardly treated the new homicide record as the blockbuste­r it

is. Meantime, the national press can’t get enough of Krasner, touting him as the future of prosecutio­n, even giving him a fawning multipart special on PBS in the middle of an election season.

Kenney and Krasner have sent a message to the streets that the criminal-justice system in Philadelph­ia is closed for business. Criminals are not tone-deaf — they listen to what Kenney and Krasner say. When that message hits the streets, shootings and homicides are an inevitable result — victimizin­g all Philadelph­ians, especially blacks, and rendering the city’s poorest neighborho­ods even more dangerous.

Philadelph­ia can serve as a cautionary tale for other cities. Follow its recipe and your city, too, can achieve a historic number of homicides. Kenney and Krasner are now the deadliest mayor and district attorney in the history of Philadelph­ia. That is their legacy to the City of Brotherly Love.

Thomas Hogan has served as a federal prosecutor, local prosecutor and elected district attorney. He currently is in private practice. From City Journal.

 ?? ?? GRIM TOLL: Homicides have hit a record 501 in Philadelph­ia this year, thanks to its soft-on-crime progressiv­e leaders: DA Larry Krasner (right, top) and Mayor Jim Kenney.
GRIM TOLL: Homicides have hit a record 501 in Philadelph­ia this year, thanks to its soft-on-crime progressiv­e leaders: DA Larry Krasner (right, top) and Mayor Jim Kenney.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States