Sentinel & Enterprise

Wave of shootings highlights police challenges

- By Alanna Durkin Richer and Colleen Long

Thirty shot, two fatally, at a block party in Baltimore. At least three killed and 10 wounded at an annual July Fourth bash in Louisiana. A 7- year- old shot dead in Tampa after two groups gathered along a causeway for Independen­ce Day started to fight. Nine others injured when bullets sprayed from a car in the nation’s capital.

A rash of shootings as the U. S. celebrated the Fourth of July is spiking fears in communitie­s across the country and highlighti­ng the challenges police face in preventing such violence as temperatur­es warm and festivitie­s move outside. Policing such events is a delicate balance for law enforcemen­t, who must weigh the right of revelers to gather with the threat of violence that looms in public and private spaces in a nation awash with guns.

“In many ways, their hands are tied because these types of events are often on private property and people may not do anything to violate the law until someone brandishes a firearm and starts shooting,” said Tom Nolan, who was a Boston police officer for nearly three decades. “So can the police do anything to prevent that? I just think it’s an extraordin­ary challenge for them to be all places at all times and anticipate things that none of us are expecting.”

Violence often surges in the summer months, when teens are out of school and there are more social events that can quickly turn deadly when tempers flare. Curfews for young people and increased police presence on the streets are among the strategies cities have historical­ly used to try to combat summer violence.

Police can prepare for parades and other large annual events by monitoring social media chatter ahead of time, requiring a law enforcemen­t presence for permitted events and changing up their coverage plans depending on how many people are expected when. Ideally, police work with communitie­s who want the protection.

But it’s impossible for law enforcemen­t to monitor every block party or holiday gathering. Vacations can also lead to police department­s being thinly staffed over holiday weekends and summer months, which means calls for loud music and other disturbanc­es can get backed up while police deal with more pressing matters, Nolan said.

“During the time when their services are most in demand, they are stretched far more thinly than they would like to publicly admit,” said Nolan, who was a shift commander in the patrol division.

The gun violence that flared this week in Washington, D.C, Louisiana, Florida, Philadelph­ia, Texas and Baltimore left more than a dozen dead and almost 60 wounded — including children as young as 2 years old.

White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-pierre condemned the gun violence Wednesday, urging Congress to pass a ban on socalled assault weapons and placing blame on the proliferat­ion of guns in the U.S.

“Lives are at stake here, folks. Lives are at stake in communitie­s, the lives of our kids,” she said.

In Baltimore, police knew about the block party at the Brooklyn Homes last year and sent squads to the area to monitor for any potential violence, police said. There wasn’t any.

This year, police officials didn’t discover Sunday’s event was happening until the day of. It wasn’t advertised on social media and no one in the community told officers, so law enforcemen­t officials weren’t properly prepared when violence broke out, interim Baltimore Police Commission­er Richard Worley told reporters. He said police are looking at whether they could have done anything better to make sure something like that doesn’t happen again.

“These are events that are about celebratio­n, about coming together, that are intergener­ational and should be sacred to our communitie­s. When a few decide to go and literally create a mass shooting, it’s completely unacceptab­le,” said Baltimore City Council President Nick Mosby, urging members of the public to work with police to find those responsibl­e.

The 28 injured in Baltimore ranged in age from 13 to 32, with more than half of them younger than 18, officials said. Folding tables and plastic cups were scattered on the street, apparently left behind when people ran from the gunshots.

And police can do everything right but still won’t be able to find every gunman who wants to do harm.

The annual celebratio­n in Shreveport, Louisiana, where a gunman opened fire late Tuesday had gone on for a decade with no trouble. Shreveport police said that officers who arrived on the scene had a hard time reaching victims because of the volume of parked cars.

 ?? HENRIETTA WILDSMITH — THE SHREVEPORT TIMES VIA AP ?? Shreveport, La., police search the scene of a shooting Wednesday morning. At least three people were killed and 10 others wounded late Tuesday, Shreveport police Sgt. Angie Willhite said.
HENRIETTA WILDSMITH — THE SHREVEPORT TIMES VIA AP Shreveport, La., police search the scene of a shooting Wednesday morning. At least three people were killed and 10 others wounded late Tuesday, Shreveport police Sgt. Angie Willhite said.

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