Los Angeles Times

Guns ‘in too many hands’

L.A. life is starting to return to normal, but a rise in shootings is not receding in pace with the pandemic.

- BY KEVIN RECTOR

At Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, Dr. Brant Putnam has watched the intense weight of the COVID-19 pandemic finally begin to lift in recent months — only to be replaced by another, relentless stressor.

In the first four months of 2021, gunshot victims arrived at a much greater rate than usual.

The Level I trauma center in Torrance treats about 3,500 patients a year; an average of 15% experience “penetratin­g trauma” such as a shooting or stabbing, said Putnam, chief of the trauma and acute care surgery division.

So far this year, the figure stands at 19%, he said. From Jan. 1 to April 27, the hospital treated 142 shooting victims, compared with 76 during the same period last year — an increase of nearly 87%.

“This has definitely been one of the most stressful times in my entire career,” said Putnam, a surgeon for 20 years who scrubs in and works 24-hour trauma shifts once or twice a week.

As COVID-19 began hospitaliz­ing and killing more people in Los Angeles last year, so did shootings in the street. The increased bloodshed, much of it linked to gangs, surged as the economy faltered, leading to the deadliest year of violence in L.A. in a decade.

Surroundin­g areas of L.A. County saw similar increases in gun violence.

Now, four months into 2021, life is returning to normal in many quarters of the city as vaccinatio­n efforts drive down coronaviru­s infections, shutdown orders are lifted and businesses reopen.

The gun violence, however, is not receding.

According to Los Angeles Police Department data, the city as of Saturday had seen 465 shootings since Jan. 1, an almost 67% increase over the same period last year. Homicides, at 115 as of Sunday, were up more than 26%.

Police say gangs were often to blame; disputes at homeless encampment­s were another major factor. Victims have included people shot during robberies, drivers randomly shot in their cars and pedestrian­s gunned down on the street. A 12-year-old girl was shot at an outdoor birthday party; a

6-year-old boy was shot at an apartment building.

Last week, a man allegedly went on a rampage through the city, killing two and wounding two others in five separate shootings before being killed by police. An off-duty LAPD officer was shot in Sherman Oaks, police said, after he found a man burglarizi­ng his car, whom he shot. And police announced five arrests in the February shooting of Lady Gaga’s dog walker in Hollywood, an incident that highlighte­d an increase this year in the number of robbery victims being shot.

On Monday, LAPD detectives were investigat­ing a morning shooting in MidCity that left two men dead and a woman wounded, among other cases.

There are still far fewer shootings than there were in the 1990s in L.A., but scores more are dying than in more recent years, in the city and beyond. Preliminar­y data from the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department show that homicides in surroundin­g areas increased by more than 113% in the first three months of this year, with 64 killings, compared with 30 during the same period in 2020. Aggravated assaults with guns, including shootings, jumped 82% during that time, from 255 to 465.

At meetings this year of the civilian Police Commission, LAPD Chief Michel Moore has lamented the violence, ascribing blame to the wide availabili­ty of guns, including homemade ones known as ghost guns, despite gun arrests this year being up more than 90%.

“It’s frankly too many guns in too many hands,” Moore told the commission recently.

Moore also noted that more than a dozen homicide victims this year were homeless and said the LAPD has linked much of the violence to the “interchang­e between gang violence and homeless encampment­s, where we’ve seen an increase in retaliatio­n and in disputes involving persons experienci­ng homelessne­ss and narcotics sales.”

At the macro level, Moore has argued, the increased violence is inextricab­ly linked to the pandemic, which has wreaked havoc on social safety nets and the economy, disrupted violence prevention efforts and blocked interventi­on

workers from sitting at the bedsides of shooting victims, or next to their family members in emergency wards, to help prevent cycles of retaliatio­n.

Police officials across the country have noted similar forces, as their cities — big and small, led by Democrats and Republican­s — also suffer under surging gun violence. Criminolog­ists have pointed to the pandemic, and its multitude of effects, as the only common element across the country.

Some in L.A. County cite other factors, such as policies from new Dist. Atty. George Gascón that are perceived as lenient on criminals or local pandemicre­lated rules to release prisoners and arrestees

ahead of trial. But experts say those theories don’t explain the national surge.

As infection rates have declined in recent weeks, and restrictio­ns on gatherings and other events have slowly lifted, Moore has expressed hope that the violence will wane.

Others hope so too. Anne Tremblay, the legal counsel to Mayor Eric Garcetti who until February directed his Gang Reduction and Youth Developmen­t office, said interventi­on workers and other peace ambassador­s deserve tremendous credit for continuing their work through the pandemic.

But, she said, many have “Zoom fatigue” from trying to host conversati­ons and mediate issues online and are eager to get back to hospital bedsides and to hosting events like Summer Night Lights, a program of free family services and activities in public parks.

“They’ll be looking forward to that in-person interactio­n, that direct connection between the youth and families and young adults they are trying to reach,” Tremblay said. “Zoom is less than ideal to reach young people who are in need of support, whether they are at high risk for gang-joining or already gang-involved or -affiliated.”

Garcetti has sought additional funding for such workers in his proposed budget for the next fiscal year, which will need approval from the City Council.

Skipp Townsend, a gang interventi­onist, said the city is at a crucial juncture. As COVID-19 fades, community leaders must remember that young people have been traumatize­d by the last year and will need assistance finding balance in their lives again, he said.

They were deprived of “all the stuff they needed to be mentally healthy,” such as school, sports and time with peers, Townsend said, and “are socially challenged right now, trying to get back to normal.”

Townsend agreed that the pandemic has played a huge role in the increased violence. Some isolated youths got angry, and some were able to buy guns — including unregister­ed ghost guns — for the first time with pandemic-related stimulus checks, he said. Some posted images to social media of themselves and their weapons in closed parks across town, taunting neighborho­od rivals, bruising egos and instigatin­g violence, Townsend said.

Now, as parks come alive again, schools reopen and restrictio­ns ease on interventi­onists, Townsend and others hope to reestablis­h connection­s with those kids and prevent some of the bloodshed. But “it’s not going to be just a sudden drop” in shootings, he said. “These children have been psychologi­cally traumatize­d; they’ve gone through a lot.”

Putnam said he too sees the mental trauma.

Often, the gunshot victims who arrive at his unit at Harbor-UCLA are young men from South L.A. Some seem hardened to their circumstan­ces, and some have been shot before. But they all have “lots of life plans, life goals, life expectancy,” and those who are lucid beg Putnam to keep them alive, he said.

Their family members also suffer tremendous­ly.

“Often there’s screaming and dropping the phone, and somebody else has to get on the phone and be a little bit more coherent to talk with,” Putnam said.

Under current COVID-19 protocols, family members are not allowed into the hospital unless their loved one is at risk of dying — a necessary but, for many, devastatin­g provision.

“We stand there with them, and they think about the senselessn­ess of all these gunshot wounds destroying young people’s lives,” Putnam said. “Is it really worth it, over whatever minor thing may have set this off?”

 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? OFFICERS investigat­e the downtown scene of a shooting, one of five by a single gunman on April 27. Shootings so far this year are up 67%, the LAPD says.
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times OFFICERS investigat­e the downtown scene of a shooting, one of five by a single gunman on April 27. Shootings so far this year are up 67%, the LAPD says.

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