The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

How Camden, New Jersey, reimagined its department

- By Maryclaire Dale

CAMDEN, N.J. » To Scott Thomson, changing the culture of policing in America is a relatively simple process.

It’s just not an easy one. Thomson led a tumultuous police department makeover in Camden, New Jersey — a poor city of mostly brown and black residents just across the river from Philadelph­ia — in 2013.

After state officials disbanded the old department and started anew, Thomson transforme­d policing in Camden from the lawand-order, lock-’em-up approach of the 1990s to a holistic, do-no-harm philosophy that’s put the longmalign­ed city in the spotlight during the national reckoning over race and police brutality.

While police elsewhere clashed with Black Lives Matter protesters outraged by the latest death of a black man detained by police, Camden officers marched calmly with residents and activists.

“Our actions can accelerate situations. What we should be trying to do is de-escalate them,” said Thomson, a past president of the Police Executive Research Forum who retired from the Camden job last year. “The last thing we want is for the temperatur­e to rise, and for situations to go from bad to worse because of our failed tactics.”

But if the recent protest was peaceful, the county takeover of the Camden Police Department was cataclysmi­c. More than 300 officers lost their jobs. Only half joined the new force.

Along with the switch to community policing came a reliance on high-tech, city-wide surveillan­ce, more patrols, and younger, cheaper, less diverse officers who often aren’t from Camden. Their average age today is 26.

“That is a very different vision of what a new police force looks like than we’re hearing from protesters, who want less policing,” said Stephen Danley, a professor of public policy at Rutgers University-Camden.

Ashly Estevez-Perez, 21, has spent most of her life in Camden, which is now about half Hispanic and 40% black. She remembers when children were rarely allowed to leave their front stoops given the threat of gunfire.

“The new police force came in, and you saw cars everywhere . ... Everyone was kind of taken aback,” she said of what some would call “over-policing.”

“Growing up in the city, I don’t see what other alternativ­e works,” said Estevez-Perez, a recent RutgersCam­den graduate.

Activist and entreprene­ur Sean Brown, 37, who is black, said the surveillan­ce solves the wrong problem.

“If we had economic justice in our community, where anybody who needed a job could get a job, we would be in a different space,” said Brown, who is raising two young sons in the city.

Once a busy manufactur­ing town, Camden in the past few years has added enviable luster to its commercial corridor as generous state tax breaks lured Subaru, American Water and the Philadelph­ia 76ers (who built a practice facility) to town.

They join earlier developmen­t that transforme­d Camden’s downtown and southern waterfront, including a concert venue. The estimated $3 billion in developmen­t attracts suburbanit­es and employs some Camden residents. But locals debate just how many.

“I don’t know one person who works in any 76er job, any Holtec (Internatio­nal) job, any Subaru job,” said teachers’ union president Keith Eric Benson. “Neighborho­ods have looked really similar today as they did 10 years ago.”

The police changeover followed state budget cuts that had forced Camden to slash municipal services in 2011. Nearly half of its 360 officers were laid off. Crime surged.

Then-Gov. Chris Christie, R-N.J., joined local Democratic power brokers in engineerin­g a plan to eliminate the department, shed its costly union contract and create the Camden County Police Department.

Thomson remained at the helm.

Over time, his philosophy evolved from a “broken window” approach that famously saw the department cite people for failing to have bicycle horns to a friendlier approach that sends officers into the community to host barbecues, hand out ice cream and shoot hoops.

“I think we’re received a lot better than we used to be,” said Sgt. Dekel Levy, 41, as he helped distribute diapers to a steady stream of young mothers Thursday afternoon at Guadalupe Family Services in North Camden.

The neighborho­od, long one of the city’s poorest and most dangerous, shows signs of progress. The state prison that dominated the nearby waterfront has been replaced with a park. Aging schools have been spruced up.

Crime rates have fallen — whether due to the police engagement, the increased investment, the booming Philadelph­ia economy or the national decline in violent crime.

According to police department data, Camden’s annual homicide tally has fallen from 67 in 2012 to 25 last year; robberies from 755 to 304; and assault with a gun from 381 to 250. The city, with about 73,000 residents, spends $68 million per year on policing, far more than some comparable cities.

“There is no doubt that Camden is safer than it was in the austerity era. There’s a lot of doubt about whether that’s directly due to the new police force,” Danley said.

 ?? MATT SLOCUM — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Lourdes Sherby, center, with Guadalupe Family Services, hands diapers to Louisa Peralta in Camden, N.J. “I think we’re received a lot better than we used to be,” said Sgt. Dekel Levy, 41, as he helped hand out diapers to a steady stream of young mothers Thursday afternoon at Guadalupe Family Service.
MATT SLOCUM — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Lourdes Sherby, center, with Guadalupe Family Services, hands diapers to Louisa Peralta in Camden, N.J. “I think we’re received a lot better than we used to be,” said Sgt. Dekel Levy, 41, as he helped hand out diapers to a steady stream of young mothers Thursday afternoon at Guadalupe Family Service.

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