The Reporter (Vacaville)

LA, NYC killings spark anger, raise risk for homeless

- By Stefanie Dazio and Camille Fassett The Associated Press

Three random killings — a woman pushed in front of a train, another punched at a bus stop and a third stabbed to death while working alone in a store, all allegedly committed by homeless men — have reignited anger, fear and frustratio­n with the intractabl­e issue of homelessne­ss in New York and Los Angeles.

Advocates fear public outrage about the crimes has left a vulnerable population even more endangered.

Heidi Marston, executive director of the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority, called the killings tragedies. But she said it’s important not to blame the entire homeless community for the violence or conflate the homelessne­ss epidemic with the attacks.

“It’s not going to bring justice to the victims of these crimes,” she said.

Eric Tars, legal director for the National Homelessne­ss Law Center, said labeling all homeless “as people we should be afraid of, rather than have compassion for, actually sets them up for hate crimes and vigilante violence and other mistreatme­nt.”

Tars and other advocates and experts say a homeless person is much more likely to be a victim of violence, particular­ly a fatal attack, than they are to be a perpetrato­r. Data to back that up is spotty because often police department­s don’t include in their reports whether a person is homeless. One reason may be that the FBI does not ask for housing status informatio­n when it compiles data from law enforcemen­t agencies.

The Associated Press contacted police department­s in LA and New York, as well as agencies in six other major cities with significan­t homeless population­s: Chicago, Honolulu, San Francisco, Seattle, Portland, Oregon, and Washington, D.C., to see if they track the housing status of homicide victims and suspects. All except the Los Angeles Police Department either said they do not collect the data or required a formal records request to make it public or determine if it even exists.

In LA, the homeless population is estimated to be 40,000, or 1% of the city’s 4 million residents. Last year, homeless people were suspects in 43 of the city’s 397 homicides, nearly 11%. They were victims more than twice as often — 90 fatalities, nearly 23%. In 27 of the killings, homeless people were the victim and the alleged perpetrato­r.

In the last five years, the percentage of LA homicides in which a homeless person was the suspect has ranged from 6.5% to 12.9%, according to an AP analysis of LAPD data. Yet the frequency of cases where a homeless person was killed was 10% in 2017 and has risen every year since.

With rare exceptions, the murder of a homeless person receives scant attention, while the killings in which they are the alleged suspects often garner headlines.

“People’s deaths should be important,” said Donald H. Whitehead Jr., executive director of the National Coalition for the Homeless. “We should be mourning the loss of life, whether the person is in a suite in an executive building or if they’re in an encampment because they’re homeless.”

The National Coalition for the Homeless tracks violent hate crimes against homeless people using media reports and informatio­n from homeless advocates and service providers, an imperfect system that doesn’t capture all the incidents.

“We need to do a better job when it comes to compassion for homeless people,” Whitehead said. “According to the general public, who cares if someone died in an encampment?”

The random attacks in New York and Los Angeles generated national media attention and an outpouring for the victims. The first two occurred Jan. 13.

Sandra Shells, a 70-yearold nurse on her way to work was waiting at a downtown LA bus stop early in the morning when she was punched and fell to the ground, fracturing her skull. Across town, Brianna Kupfer, a 24-year-old University of California, Los Angeles, graduate student, was stabbed to death as she worked alone at a furniture store.

Two days later in New York, Michelle Go, a 40-yearold woman who worked at a consulting firm, was pushed in front of a subway at the Times Square station.

The sister of the man accused of killing Go told The New York Post he’d been diagnosed with schizophre­nia and the condition worsened after their mother died more than two decades ago.

A judge ordered the defendant, 61-year-old Martial Simon, to undergo a psychiatri­c evaluation.

Kerry Bell, 48, and Shawn Laval Smith, 31, are charged in the slayings of Shells and Kupfer, respective­ly. Both remain jailed ahead of their court appearance­s next month and have not yet entered pleas. It was not clear whether they had attorneys who could speak on their behalf.

“This is not only about bringing that person who committed this crime to justice, but at its core, making the community safer and ensuring that it never happens again,” Kupfer’s family said in a statement read aloud by a city councilman at a recent news conference. The statement did not mention that Smith, who had not yet been identified as the alleged perpetrato­r at the time, is unhoused.

Simon, Bell and Smith are listed as Black in online jail records. People who are Black or Indigenous are overrepres­ented in the homeless population compared to the country’s general population, according to a report by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t.

 ?? YUKI IWAMURA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A person holds a candle during a vigil in New York’s Times Square in honor of Michelle Alyssa Go, a victim of a subway attack several days earlier.
YUKI IWAMURA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A person holds a candle during a vigil in New York’s Times Square in honor of Michelle Alyssa Go, a victim of a subway attack several days earlier.

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