The Day

Proactive policing techniques have their place in local law enforcemen­t

- l.boyle@theday.com

and stop-question-frisk, a controvers­ial, person-based practice in which police stop, question and frisk people — sometimes because of who they are, sometimes because of where they are.

Most if not all southeaste­rn Connecticu­t department­s don’t use stop-and-frisk. To do so, New London acting Police Chief Peter Reichard pointed out, a department would need enough officers to staff walking beats.

But many department­s, including Reichard’s, use some variation of hot spots policing.

For New London, that can mean sending two officers to an area that’s seeing higher reports of crime, or making it so an area has near-constant police coverage.

Officers assigned to the city’s quality of life patrol also have specific properties and areas they have to check on several times a day. There are the commercial areas at 1 Ocean Ave. and on Colman Street. There’s the Blackhall Street-Prest Street-Connecticu­t Avenue block, the site of multiple recent high-profile crimes. Officers keep an eye on Bank Street, too.

“Instead of just randomly putting officers out there and having them drive in circles, we direct patrol,” Reichard said.

With crimes like car burglaries, sometimes an officer’s presence is all it takes to deter would-be thieves.

City police also use a technique called problem-oriented policing, where officers attempt to stop crime by addressing its underlying issues through property improvemen­ts and the like. Reichard pointed to McDonald Park as an example of that: Officer Ryan Soccio worked frequently with FRESH New London as the group revitalize­d the green space.

“We get a lot of positive feedback from people when they see enforcemen­t taking place in their neighborho­od,” Reichard said. “They’re the ones who usually are the victim (of crimes). It’s not often people from outside a neighborho­od who are the victims.”

In Ledyard, Chief John Rich said his department draws on the same two techniques, although it doesn’t have a formal program for either.

One of the department’s first initiative­s upon becoming independen­t in February 2016, for example, was to target stretches of road that were prone to crashes.

Officers also use the problem-solving approach at places such as the Gray Farm House, a group home for teenage girls to which police frequently are called.

“We have proactivel­y sent an officer there to actually interact with the staff and the girls who are placed there to try to mitigate some of the problems that may happen,” Rich explained.

“Some of these concepts come and go,” Rich said. “But I think the bottom line is the principles of community policing are always effective. The theme of the whole thing for us is doing everything we do with respect for everybody’s rights.”

Waterford is unique in that its heavy retail presence draws visitors from across the state. Rather than targeting certain neighborho­ods, officers target particular stores or times of the year. They work both to prevent theft and to attend to distracted shoppers who’ve rear-ended the car in front of them.

Chief Brett Mahoney said he can’t remember a time in his 29-year career when proactive policing concepts didn’t exist. Even back when he was a cop at Hammonasse­t Beach State Park in Madison, his boss regularly informed him of areas seeing a rash of suspicious activity where he should make his presence known.

In Mahoney’s eyes, the practice has grown with technology. Years ago, if he wanted to learn what day of the week was bringing the most crime, he would’ve needed to spend hours going through his shift activity. Now he can gather that informatio­n in seconds.

Technology also allows residents to more easily report suspicious activity in their neighborho­ods. And it allows police to more easily perform another proactive technique: procedural justice policing. That’s when police, using things like social media and citizens’ academies, offer behind-the-scenes looks that bring legitimacy to their work.

“I think that’s important,” Mahoney said. “We try and break down the police-citizen barrier by showing that we’re people, too.”

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