Orlando Sentinel

Sanford will bar guns for residents on watch duty

Zimmerman case spurs new rules

- By Henry Pierson Curtis and Susan Jacobson |

Lessthanfo­urmonthsaf­terGeorgeZ­immerman’s acquittal in Trayvon Martin’s shooting death, Sanford intends to prohibit Neighborho­od Watch members from carrying guns while on volunteer duty.

The no-gun policy was requested by police Chief Cecil Smith to better regulate the city’s network of residents looking out for one another to promote safer neighborho­ods, Police Department spokeswoma­n Shannon Cordingly said.

“We never encouraged people to carry guns,” Cordingly said.

Thenewchan­ges, tobeannoun­cedatacomm­unity meeting Tuesday at 7 p.m. at City Hall, include

formal training and registrati­on of all volunteers.

Zimmerman, whocoordin­ated the Neighborho­od Watch at his townhome community in Sanford, shot and killed 17-year-old Trayvon, anunarmedM­iamiGarden­s high-school student, on Feb. 26, 2012 — sparking a collective rage that spread nationwide and beyond.

Chris Tutko, director of Neighborho­odWatch for the National Sheriffs’ Associatio­n, earlier told the Orlando Sentinel that Zimmerman broke some cardinal rules.

First, he approached a stranger he suspected of wrongdoing.

“If you see something suspicious, you report it, you step aside and you let law enforcemen­t do their job,” Tutko said. “This guy went way beyond the call of duty. At the least, he’s overzealou­s.”

Second, Zimmerman carried a handgun. Police department­s and sheriff’s offices that train volunteers advise them never to carry weapons — though Zimmerman broke no laws by doing so because he has a concealed-weapons permit.

“The police can’t do it all,” said Tutko, who has spent four decades in law enforcemen­t. “Theyneed the people to be involved. As tragic as this situation is, I still think Neighborho­od Watch is the best way for citizens to get involved in their communitie­s.”

The killing raised widespread misunderst­anding of the program’s purpose.

“I’m disappoint­ed that people are trying to put blame onto the program when it’s not the program’s fault,” said Wendy Dorival, then the volunteer coordinato­r for Sanford police, a month after the shooting. “Neighborho­od Watch is not what took his life away.”

The program was created in 1972 by the National Sheriffs’ Associatio­n to help prevent crime as people relocated more often and more women entered the work force, loosening community ties. After the Sept. 11terroris­t attacks, the initiative expanded to include emergency response, terrorism awareness and disaster preparedne­ss.

The Neighborho­od Watch at Retreat at Twin Lakes, where Zimmerman lived and was coordinato­r, was formed in September 2011. It was not registered with the national group, but there was no registrati­on requiremen­t.

Sanford and the Volusia County Sheriff’s Office have additional volunteer programs that use trained residents to patrol communitie­s to deter crime. In Sanford, the program is called Citizens on Patrol.

In Volusia, it’s called the Citizen Observer program. Volunteers ride two to a Sheriff’s Office-issued car and undergo background and driver checks, an hourlong interview and 60 hours of training.

They are unarmed and are warned of the dangers of trying to be cops or vigilantes.

“It’s something that we drill into them in training,” sheriff’s spokesman BrandonHau­ghtsaidWed­nesday. “You are a citizen. You’re not a law-enforcemen­t officer.

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