The Commercial Appeal

SAFETY IN NUMBERS?

- The Marshall Project

Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland took office in 2016 vowing to fight the city’s high violent crime rate by beefing up a dwindling police force. His most novel idea: use an advisory body, the Memphis Shelby Crime Commission, to funnel anonymous private donations to reward cops who remain on the force.

His wish list, dubbed the “Blue Sky Strategy” and outlined in emails obtained by The Marshall Project, a nonpartisa­n, nonprofit news organizati­on based in New York that focuses on national issues in the U.S. criminal justice system, was ambitious: $48.2 million, including $12.7 million to subsidize housing and private school tuition for police families and $8 million for takehome cars.

So far the fund has channeled $6.1 million into the city budget, most of it for police retention bonuses. Fedex, Internatio­nal Paper and about a dozen other private entities are now subsidizin­g public safety in a big American city.

Simone Weichselba­um and Wendi C. Thomas

The commission has refused to disclose the amount of their individual contributi­ons. “I don’t know how much the different businesses gave,” Strickland said. “I’m thankful they gave money, and if they didn’t want to say, individual­ly, how much it was, then I am fine with that.”

Memphis is unusual in taking money from the private sector to pay cops, but it reflects a popular trope that blames shrinking police forces for violence. Jeff Sessions, during his short tenure as attorney general, played that theme before police audiences, and it has become routine for national police leaders to complain that the politics of Black Lives Matter and viral videos of police killing civilians, along with low pay, have made it harder to recruit and retain qualified officers.

Data show that the raw numbers of American police have declined over the past five years, and the rate of police officers per 1,000 residents has been dropping for two decades. At the same time, the violent crime rate has also dropped. After at least 16 years of growing police agencies, the nation lost more than 23,000 officers from 2013 to 2016, according to a U.S. Justice Department survey, bringing the total down to about 700,000. Two-thirds of 397 law enforcemen­t agencies reported in a December survey that they have seen a decrease in applicants compared to five years ago.

But according to several policing experts, cities are too focused on raw numbers, hiring consultant after consultant in a desperate quest to increase their headcount. A cottage industry of specialist­s caters to jurisdicti­ons hunting for an optimal number of cops.

“Most police department­s have issues, not with the number of officers, it’s with how they are deployed and scheduled,” said Alexander Weiss, a police staffing consultant whose clients have included police department­s in Chicago, Albuquerqu­e and New Orleans. “It’s more important what the officers do, versus how many of them there are.”

The growth of police forces

Responding to public panic over urban violence during the 1990s, President Bill Clinton signed off on millions of dollars in federal funds to hire thousands of local cops across the country. In 1997, two years after the money started to trickle out of Washington, the nation had 242 police officers for every 100,000 residents. By 2016, that number had dropped to 217 as law enforcemen­t agencies shed jobs in the aftermath of a national recession while the nation’s population grew. The national violent crime rate, over those 19 years, dropped by 37 percent.

Fears of rising crime and shrinking officer counts have emerged as common concerns in cities across the nation from Dallas to Detroit to Memphis and elsewhere. Adding more cops to a violent city seems like an obvious fix, but there is conflictin­g research on the question of whether more cops drive down crime rates.

James Mccabe, a retired New York Police Department official who travels the country as a police staffing consultant, says there is little clear connection between staffing numbers and crime.

“New York City made the conscious decision to reduce the number of cops,” he noted in an interview. “And crime continued to go down. It’s not what you have, it’s what you are doing with them.”

The NYPD is one of a few department­s that routinely recalculat­e how many officers they need to staff a 24hour cycle. Called the Patrol Allocation Plan, the statistica­l model studies 911 calls and calculates such variables as how the time of day and type of crime affect an officer’s response time.

NYPD’S model is similar to what Mccabe, and consultant­s like him, preach as the gold standard in police staffing strategies. These “workload allocation models” are time-consuming and require statistica­l skills that most police department­s lack. Instead, cities sign pricey contracts with Weiss, Mccabe and their competitor­s to perform data-driven analyses of how officers can best use their time.

But the suggested reforms don’t always stick, because they entail a lot of bureaucrac­y and require wholesale support from City Hall and local police unions. The recommenda­tions typically involve assigning longer work shifts, moving officers out of jobs that don’t require guns — duties such as crime scene investigat­ions and administra­tion — and hiring more civilians.

“It’s helping communitie­s figure out how they can get the most out of their police department,” said Jeremy M. Wilson, a Michigan State University criminal justice professor and police staffing expert.

Wilson discourage­s police department­s from comparing staffing levels to cities of similar size and instead suggests basing police deployment primarily on the numbers of 911 calls and allowing time for cops to get out of patrol cars to talk to people. “It’s important for each community to understand what the community wants and can afford,” Wilson said. “Some communitie­s want a community-oriented style, some want a law-and-order style or service model. That has implicatio­ns for deployment, costs, number of officers.”

Memphis looks for help to address staffing issues

Memphis had a murder rate of 28 per 100,000 population for 2017, according to FBI statistics. which was lower than similarly-sized cities like St. Louis (66), Baltimore (55) and New Orleans (40), but higher than a larger city like Chicago (24). It is also higher than Nashville, which saw only 16 murders per 100,000 residents in 2017.

The city's police force, however, has shrunk by nearly a fifth since 2011, to a headcount of 2,020. The city is on its fourth round of outside police staffing consultant­s in eight years.

The most significan­t change, prompted by an outside expert, was made under former mayor A C Wharton. In 2013 the department redrew its precinct maps in response to an analysis from a Washington, D.C., think tank, the Police Executive Research Forum (PERF).

That analysis, obtained by The Marshall Project, pointed out that the downtown tourist district had up to seven times as many cops on patrol per square mile as the city’s more violent areas. Officers in high-crime North Memphis spent half their workday chasing 911 calls, leaving less time to learn about the neighborho­ods they protect. Their counterpar­ts assigned to the tourist zones spent only a fifth of their time answering the police radio.

The Memphis Police Department carved out new precinct boundaries but rejected other advice. For example, the consultant­s found that officers were spending a lot of time chasing reports about burglar alarms and vicious dogs. City officials debated and rejected the idea of freeing up cops by outsourcin­g low priority complaints to other city agencies, or to private security firms.

“That was going to be a pretty steep hill for us to get over with the citizens, to say we aren’t providing that service anymore,” said former Memphis Police Director Toney Armstrong. “It is hard to stop doing something that you have traditiona­lly done.”

Consultant­s say that in police department­s across the country they en-

counter similar resistance to change.

Consultant Alexander Weiss analyzed police staffing problems in Albuquerqu­e and New Orleans and learned both cities had too few officers working during the busiest periods in the week. In New Orleans, Weiss found that, as in Memphis, officers were spending too much time responding to burglar alarms and to minor traffic accidents.

“When they say ‘we are short-handed’, ‘we don’t have enough people,’ what they are really describing is a gap in their ability to staff according to their plan,” Weiss said.

PERF also faulted Memphis for repeatedly trying to hire cops who don’t meet state standards. Law enforcemen­t agencies in Tennessee need a waiver from the Tennessee Peace Officers Standards and Training Commission to employ an officer who has felony conviction­s or a record of various misdemeano­rs.

The Memphis Police Department led the state during the last two years in waiver requests. A Marshall Project review of state records found that six of the 48 waiver requests came from Memphis police for non-violent crimes ranging from open container violations to reckless driving. Nashville, with 500 fewer cops, had requested none.

PERF and a successor consulting firm, PFM Group, suggested that Memphis police hire more civilians to free up officers in non-life-threatenin­g assignment­s. The police department has added about 100 civilians since Strickland took office. The city also agreed to reinstate a program that trains recent highschool graduates to process minor traffic accidents.

But reforms ground to a halt in the face of a 4.6 percent across-the-board pay cut for city employees, along with cuts in health care and pension benefits, fallout from the 2008 recession. Officer attrition jumped by two-thirds, according to Memphis Police Department records, and the police union put up billboards warning passersby that the city “does NOT support PUBLIC SAFETY.” The salaries were eventually fully restored, but not the benefits.

Armstrong says police recruiters from as far away as Texas and Florida were coming to Memphis to lure away his demoralize­d cops. “Until someone takes a look at the benefit packages, this is going to be a continual problem,” Armstrong said.

With thinning ranks, overtime is a necessity to keep the department afloat. Taxpayers spent $27 million in 2017 on officer overtime, nearly double the amount two years earlier. Cops complain that they are pressured to work double shifts, while residents say their local patrolmen no longer stop to share a friendly hello.

“Officers burn out in this city,” said Michael Williams, the president of the Memphis Police Associatio­n. “You have the police who are hesitant about doing their job because of the environmen­t which has been created.”

Memphis residents have had no choice but to adapt. The Downtown Memphis Commission, an economic developmen­t organizati­on, recently organized a private security force that patrols a 6-mile swath of downtown and its outskirts, on foot, bike or Segway. The Blue Suede Brigade has 34 state-licensed officers, equipped with handcuffs, batons and pepper spray — but not guns. City Hall spokeswoma­n Ursula Madden described the brigade as “an added layer of support.”

Longtime furniture shop owner Bartley Garey in North Memphis, like most residents in the city, has no access to private security patrols. After noticing a reduced police presence a few years ago, Garey started to close his Hollywood Furniture and Hardware store by dusk. “I feel if I call 911 — and I am being perfectly honest — I would be put on hold,” Garey said.

Strickland promises changes

Strickland, then a city councilman, campaigned in 2015 as the “tough on crime” mayoral candidate and became the first white mayor of this majoritybl­ack city in 24 years. He vowed one of his priorities would be “retaining and recruiting quality police officers.”

Strickland hired his own outside brain trust, starting with former New York Police Department Commission­er Raymond Kelly, known for his aggressive use of “stop and frisk” and for getting New York’s crime to historic lows. Kelly, at the time, was vice chairman of a security firm called K2 Intelligen­ce. Strickland side-stepped the City Council and asked the Memphis Shelby Crime Commission to pay for K2’s sixfigure contract.

Kelly’s June 2017 report on “crime reduction strategies” criticized Memphis police for failing to do the basics: Shooting trends were not mapped and analyzed; cops weren’t being deployed to areas with upticks in violence, known as “hot spots”; weekly crime stats were not being shared with the public on the department’s website.

Kelly recommende­d that the city hire another round of consultant­s to figure out how many cops Memphis needs by calculatin­g trends in officer workloads. The city of Memphis contracted with the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Chiefs of Police, or IACP, to do the assessment. IACP, the nation’s largest police chief organizati­on, is also looking into how Memphis runs its police academy. Although IACP’S contract says it would provide progress reports on its findings, City Hall said the updates don’t exist.

In response to Kelly’s suggestion­s on how to get crime down, authoritie­s added more personnel to a gang unit that is staffed by local and federal officers, and the police department made its weekly crime meetings, said the City Hall spokeswoma­n, “more in-depth.”

Violent crime, as of the end of November, is up 2.4 percent compared to the same period in 2016. An August hiring and recruiting report from the Memphis Police Department says that 22 cops who had signed up for the privately financed bonuses left their jobs anyway. The report describes Strickland’s new hiring efforts as “struggling.”

The city says that "struggling" no longer describes the situation. In an email Friday, Madden said the city has "hired more officers in the last 17 months than in the prior six years." They expect to hit 2,100 officers by the end of 2019.

Meanwhile, Strickland is facing reelection this year. A main piece of his campaign? The need for more cops to carry on the fight against violent crime.

Simone Weichselba­um is a New York City-based reporter for The Marshall Project. Wendi C. Thomas is the Memphis-based executive editor of MLK50: Justice Through Journalism. The Marshall Project is a nonpartisa­n, nonprofit news organizati­on based in New York that focuses on national issues in the U.S. criminal justice system. Andrew R. Calderon, a data reporter for The Marshall Project, and Daniel Connolly of The Commercial Appeal contribute­d to this story.

 ??  ?? Blue Suede Brigade members, from left, Kcbena Cash, Tamala Johnson and Nathaniel Lewis talk on North Main Street in Memphis. WILLIAM DESHAZER / FOR THE MARSHALL PROJECT
Blue Suede Brigade members, from left, Kcbena Cash, Tamala Johnson and Nathaniel Lewis talk on North Main Street in Memphis. WILLIAM DESHAZER / FOR THE MARSHALL PROJECT
 ??  ?? Robert Montgomery, left, and Liza Wheaten with the Blues Suede Brigade, attend to a homeless man in need of medical attention in Downtown Memphis. They stayed with the man until emergency medical technician­s arrived. WILLIAM DESHAZER / FOR THE MARSHALL PROJECT
Robert Montgomery, left, and Liza Wheaten with the Blues Suede Brigade, attend to a homeless man in need of medical attention in Downtown Memphis. They stayed with the man until emergency medical technician­s arrived. WILLIAM DESHAZER / FOR THE MARSHALL PROJECT
 ??  ?? Memphis police officers bow their heads in prayer before the start of their shift during roll call at the Memphis Police Department's Mt. Moriah Station. BRAD VEST / THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL
Memphis police officers bow their heads in prayer before the start of their shift during roll call at the Memphis Police Department's Mt. Moriah Station. BRAD VEST / THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

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