Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

City on track for another deadly year

- Staff Reporter Adam Smeltz contribute­d. Liz Navratil: lnavratil@post-gazette.com, 412-263-1438 or on Twitter @LizNavrati­l.

station on the city’s North Side. Cmdr. Lavonnie Bickerstaf­f, who headed the station for much of the year until she transferre­d recently to the Major Crimes Unit, said the violence seemed to escalate in the spring and summer.

Police said much of that violence appeared to be driven by people who did not live in neighborho­ods where the crimes were occurring. Though police did not say precisely where those people were coming from, arrest documents from some cases have hinted at feuds between groups of juveniles in North Side and East End neighborho­ods.

Cmdr. Bickerstaf­f said zone officers worked closely with detectives in the bureau’s Group Violence Interventi­on Unit, anchored in its headquarte­rs, to try to pinpoint people who were involved in most of the violence. Chief McLay said the bureau focused on people based on their criminal history, associatio­ns with other known criminals and tips from residents.

Cmdr. Bickerstaf­f said the group — known as a Violent Crime Response Team—often sent officers to arraignmen­t hearings or called judges handling arraignmen­ts for people on their list of those who might be driving the crime. The goal, Cmdr. Bickerstaf­f said, was to “make sure that their bond was strong enough to keep them ... locked up so that we would have a little bit of a time where we could develop cases on the individual­s.”

After that team began working, police said, all of the North Side neighborho­ods experience­d decreases in homicides or had them at the same rate — except for Northview Heights, where there was an increase.

Police said they also saw a drastic increase in crime in the Zone 2 station, which covers Downtown, during the month of August — when many large events took place. Chief McLay said he plans to meet Oct. 11 with officials from various local offices, including the U.S. Attorney’s Office, school officials and others, to discuss plans for violence there. He said police have been working with Allegheny County juvenile probation and school police to try to curb violence in Zone 2, some of which has been driven by feuding teenagers.

“Our goal is to take away their anonymity,” he said, noting that he hoped that would encourage them to behave.

Kevin Acklin, chief of staff to Mayor Bill Peduto, has been involved in some of the meetings about Downtown safety. He said residents should expect to see “probably as soon as next week an update on what we’ve been doing to address some of the issues relating to the perception of safety in Downtown Pittsburgh.”

It’s unclear how other violent crimes compared to previous years. The chief’s presentati­on included statistics on homicides, shootings and aggravated assaults in which someone used a gun. It did not include numbers for other other aggravated assaults, rapes and robberies, among others.

Chief McLay and Public Safety Director Wendell Hissrich both said the bureau does track those crimes, but they did not have the statistics with them. The chief said the bureau plans to announce “further crime data transparen­cy efforts” in “the very near future.”

 ?? Pam Panchak/Post-Gazette ?? Police Chief Cameron McLay talks about violent crime trends Friday at Pittsburgh Police headquarte­rs on the North Side.
Pam Panchak/Post-Gazette Police Chief Cameron McLay talks about violent crime trends Friday at Pittsburgh Police headquarte­rs on the North Side.

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