The Commercial Appeal

Local officials offer breakdown of crime at forum

- Micaela A Watts

Police recruiting, crimes committed by minors, an elevated level of gun crime, and reckless driving were among the topics officials discussed in a community forum held in East Memphis Wednesday.

The head of Memphis police, Chief C.J. Davis, joined Shelby County Dist. Atty. Gen. Amy Weirich and Memphis Shelby County Crime Commission president Bill Gibbons to highlight what measures officials can, and cannot, take as an elevated crime level in city limits continues to hold steady.

Discussion points at the forum were underpinne­d by data from the crime commission, the nonprofit entity that tracks and publishes statistics culled from law enforcemen­t agencies.

Davis, just six months into her appointmen­t as Memphis’ top cop, said part of her tenure at MPD so far has been about “taking a very, very close look” at what resources Memphis police have at their disposal.

Like her predecesso­r, former police director Mike Rallings and Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland, Davis identified police recruitmen­t as a top priority. Her goal, she said, is to recruit 300 new officers over the next two years, which would push the compliment of police officers somewhere north of 2,200 — provided the typical rates of attrition within the force hold steady.

Davis said there’s a balance to strive toward within the issue of police recruitmen­t. Ideally, there are enough officers to effectively respond to calls, she said. But she also expressed a desire to prevent communitie­s from feeling suffocated. “We don’t want to over-militarize,” Davis said.

On the subject of reckless driving, a topic that spurred a flurry of head nods from the audience, Davis acknowledg­ed Memphis drivers take dangerous driving to a new level.

A recent commitment from the Tennessee Highway Patrol means that 16 troopers will stay stationed on Memphis highways and I-40, areas that the state has jurisdicti­on over. And while Davis said the commitment is welcome news, she also noted that reckless driving marked by the sounds of racing, roaring engines and screeching donuts feels omnipresen­t in Memphis, particular­ly in the Downtown area. She also said she’s been instructin­g police officers to impound the cars of any drivers they witness driving dangerousl­y. Davis has previously commented that the priorities of Memphis police have shifted from pulling drivers over for minor infraction­s like broken taillights. But, she said, she has instructed officers to start impounding vehicles of drivers when those officers witness driving that endangers those around them.

On the subject of violent crime and weapons offenses, Davis has inherited a problem that Rallings decried for years; since the passage of a 2013 law that allows citizens to store firearms in their vehicles, the number of firearms stolen out of vehicles has risen yearly.

Weirich, who followed Davis, kept a tight focus on the problem of keeping violent offenders incarcerat­ed for full sentences. Currently, she said, prosecutor­s and police are hampered by sentencing laws as written.

“All we want as prosecutor­s is a solution to not have violent offenders re-offend,” Weirich said, explaining that violent offenders often serve a fraction of sentences issued by a judge.

Programs within the prosecutor­s office work in tandem with police to keep tabs on those that have multiple conviction­s for violent acts. But the laws as they stand now are somewhat toothless without a period of incarcerat­ion that matches the severity of the crime.

“There’s this sense that it’s some big joke and it’s not very serious,” Weirch said.

Weirich also touched on the practice of transferri­ng juvenile offenders to criminal court, a practice that has drawn criticism from faith-based organizati­ons like MICAH and activists.

For the majority of juvenile offenders, she said, offenses are tried in juvenile court. But so far in 2021, 25 juvenile offenders have been transferre­d to criminal court: Four offenders are facing murder charges, six are facing sexual assault charges, and others are accused of violent offenses like carjacking and aggravated robbery.

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