NEW YORK: FROM DANGEROUS AND DESTITUTE TO SAFER AND MORE STABLE
The punctuating blare of Spanish music blasted throughout Washington Heights on a sunny day. A young food vendor chopped a plantain with a large knife. Constant foot traffic moved through the bustling thoroughfares, dotted with hair salons, bodegas, Caribbean restaurants and linen shops. Patrons congregated around upscale taverns and trendy coffee shops.
On a recent warm, late-summer weekend, this Upper Manhattan neighborhood, once a violence-ridden epicenter of the illegal drug trade in the Northeast, experienced not a single shooting — a remarkable turnaround from when drug customers flocked there from well-to-do suburbs.
"You could buy a kilo of heroin on a car hood on 163rd," recalled Chicago police Superintendent Garry McCarthy, a Bronx native who oversaw the area in the 1990s as a New York police commander.
Washington Heights is just one of many New York neighborhoods that over the past two decades has gradually gone from dangerous and destitute to safer and more stable, part of a growing wave of urban renewal that helped lead to a dramatic drop in crime. Much of the gentrification coincided with a shift in law enforcement focus to shutting down illegal drug markets, flooding the most dangerous parts of the city with cops and holding its police leaders more accountable for crimes committed in neighborhoods they managed.
Many of Chicago's neighborhoods have undergone demographic shifts of their own and police have brought in many of the same strategies that were hailed during McCarthy's days in New York, but the two cities have seen markedly different results.
In the last quarter century, New York City has experienced an 85 percent reduction in homicides, by the far the biggest turnaround of any large U.S. city. In 1990, during the nationwide crack epidemic, 2,262 people were slain. Last year, the city recorded 333 homicides.
Chicago, meanwhile, a city more than three times smaller than New York in population, ended 2014 with 407 homicides. While that marks an impressive reduction in violence since the mid-1990s, when homicides peaked at more than 900 a year, police efforts to eradicate drug markets and reduce violence in impoverished and racially segregated parts of the South and West sides have lagged New York.
Experts say it's difficult to pinpoint why New York has achieved so much success at reducing violence. Criminologists have pointed to a diversified economy and gentrification as factors. Some law enforcement officials credit police tactics like the longtime "broken windows" policy that targets quality-of-life crimes such as prostitution and vagrancy in order to prevent more serious violence.
———
Washington Heights was so violent in the 1990s that the New York Police Department added a second precinct, the 33rd, to the neighborhood to address the problems.
A hub of drug activity stretched along 163rd Street between Amsterdam Avenue and Broadway. To control the violence, McCarthy, then the 33rd Precinct's commanding officer, posted officers on each end of 163rd Street — for 24 hours a day, seven days a week for several weeks. Dozens were arrested during the effort, which became known as the "Model Block Program" and marked the beginning of a new strategy.
Floodlights shined over the block at night. Blue barricade horses were set up on each end. Officers checked IDs. If you lived on the block you'd be allowed in. If you didn't, you better have a good reason to be there.
"The idea was to make (drug dealers) understand that the violence is bad for business," McCarthy said in a recent interview. "And as soon as there's violence, we're going to come down on you and shut down your operation."
The impact has been material — and lasting. In 1990, the 34th Precinct had 103 homicides, the third most of NYPD's 75 precincts, police statistics show. In 2014, the 33rd and 34th precincts combined had just three killings.
When William Bratton first became the city's top cop in 1994, the NYPD began a cultural transformation by holding commanders accountable for quelling violence in their precincts.
He also targeted open-air drug markets, a catalyst for hundreds of homicides that occurred each year during the crack wars. During his first stint as commissioner, 8,000 open-air drug markets operated throughout the city, said Bratton, now in his second stint as New York's top cop.
Bratton more than doubled the NYPD's narcotics units — a move that helped put a lid on drug-related violence and crippled the open-air markets.
"You have to really look to find a very visible drug market," Bratton told the Tribune in an interview. "So by taking back the streets ... (that) reduced the amount of violence where they're killing each other over a corner."
For all its successes, the road has been bumpy at times for the NYPD. Its "stop, question and frisk" practices that were widely credited by many for bringing crime down in the 2000s were ruled unconstitutional by a federal judge for unfairly targeting African-Americans and Latinos.
The 2014 chokehold death of Eric Garner exposed distrust that many in the African-American community held for the police. His death started out as a "broken windows" arrest for selling loose cigarettes.
Still, Bratton continues to champion many of the same strategies he did the first time around.
"We're controlling behavior, criminal behavior, to such an extent we're changing it, so that we have a much smaller population of criminals to deal with," he said.
———
In Chicago, McCarthy is trying to replicate the Model Block Program on the West Side, where much of the drug trade takes place in open-air markets that fuel the violence. It's been part of an initiative that has been running in three of the Police Department's 22 districts over the last few years.
The strategy calls for undercover officers to buy as many drugs from as many dealers as possible within a two- to four-week period. Police then swarm the area and arrest all the dealers. From there, uniformed officers saturate those areas to try to keep them free of drug-dealing.
McCarthy admits the strategy hasn't shown the same success as in New York. Last year the West Side's Harrison District, traditionally one of Chicago's most violent, led the city with 51 homicides. Overall, homicides and shootings in the three districts haven't shown any drastic changes since 2011 when McCarthy came to Chicago.
"The West Side, we've had a huge problem getting it done because we're just not getting the support," McCarthy said. "Sometimes it's because of lack of community support, sometimes it's because maybe we don't execute it well. You know, our performance can definitely improve."
Just last June, Chicago police and federal authorities arrested more than 30 people who ran an open-air drug market in the 3700 block of West Grenshaw Street in the North Lawndale community. After that, officers were assigned to the block 24/7 to keep tabs on people coming and going.
"The problem is (that) right up the block, there's still a big problem," the superintendent said.
McCarthy cited one key difference with New York that so far has yet to take root in some Chicago neighborhoods.
"The people who lived there changed their mindset," he said of Washington Heights.
The Rev. Ira Acree, a West Side pastor whose church is in one of the initiative districts, said he's not surprised McCarthy would say he's struggling to get community cooperation because there's nationwide distrust between the police and the African-American and Latino communities.
But Acree also said another reason McCarthy isn't getting the results he wants is because New York's gang problem pales in comparison to Chicago's.
"Chicago is a unique animal," said Acree, who heads Greater St. John Bible Church in the heavily African-American Austin community. "And sometimes when you try to put a circle in a square peg, it's really tough."
Bratton agreed with McCarthy that Chicago has been hurt in its fight against violence by lax gun laws that too often result in probation for offenders.
"You are much more likely to serve jail time here and Los Angeles than you will in Chicago," said Bratton, who also headed the Los Angeles Police Department for seven years.
New York has also been aggressive in going after the illegal supply of guns. In 2006, the city sued more than 20 gun shops from out of state as the top sources of illegal weapons traced to crimes in New York. As part of the legal settlement, a court-appointed monitor oversaw safeguards at the shops, including videotaping sales and training employees to prevent illegal purchases. According to a later study, the crackdown sharply dropped the flow of illegal guns from the shops.
While Chicago's violence is primarily driven by gang strife, gangs in New York have never been as organized, Bratton said. In many respects, gang members in New York are what he called "wannabes" who copy on a much smaller scale more established gangs in Chicago and Los Angeles.
"LA has an estimated 40,000 what they describe as 'documented gang members' in the city and over 100,000 in the county of 10 million people," Bratton said. "We have 8 1/2 million people in New York, I damn sure don't have 100,000 gang members in New York."
Chicago's gangs — estimated at 110,000 strong by Chicago police — have been heavily influenced over the decades by the racially segregated public housing projects. Their destruction allowed gang members to stir up new rivalries in different parts of the city. By contrast, New York has a large number of public housing complexes to this day, but some of the housing is mixed-income and many of its high-rises are not far from more economically stable neighborhoods.
"Both then and now, concentrations of public housing in New York were never as socially isolated as it was in Chicago," said David Kennedy, a professor at New York's John Jay College of Criminal Justice.
New York's gentrification has spread to historically African-American neighborhoods, including Harlem, another neighborhood in Upper Manhattan that also had massive drops in violence over the last 20 years. Most of Chicago's historically African-American neighborhoods, however, have seen limited economic improvement, and unabated violence.
Robert Gore remembers playing football at age 11 on a dusty, rocky field in a park along Patchen Avenue in Bedford-Stuyvesant, a black community in Brooklyn ravaged by the drug trade in the 1980s and 1990s. There was no grass, just metal debris from old car parts, garbage, discarded shoes and empty drug vials.
Today, some of Bed-Stuy's trademark brownstones and row houses are worth as much as $3 million. The dilapidated field where Gore spent part of his youth has been replaced by lush green turf. The people walking through the neighborhood are also different. Much different.
"You just saw a middle-class white guy walk down the street with his daughter," Gore, now an emergency room physician, told the Tribune as he stood outside the old park. "He didn't look like he was coming to buy drugs. He was with his family."