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Yesterday was a big day for our favorite drug-dealing hot spot at Putnam and Grand. First, the New York Sun ran a big story by Brad Hope about the escalating problems on the corner that we thought did an excellent job of framing the historical problems as well as the current resolve of community members to solve them. (As it is subscription only, we provide the entire text on the jump.) At the same time, as detailed at greater length over on the Brooklyn Record, members of the 88th Precinct were closing off the block, posting fliers and parking themselves right outside the drug dealers’ doors. After all the lip service given to the topic at last week’s town hall meeting, we were certainly encouraged by the show of force. It shows that the police can marshall the resources when they want to (or if DA Hynes wants them to, as the case may be). As many readers who don’t live in the area may be disappointed to hear, we’re going to keep holding them accountable to the extent that we can. Let’s hope this is the start of a real sea change in action and attitude.

Addendum: We just heard from a reader who spoke to one of the cops this morning who told her they’ll be there for months! Go, cops. We’ll be sending over coffee and donuts. We suspect that DA Charles Hynes deserves a lot of credit for getting this moved up the priority list.
Police Pledge Crackdown in Clinton Hill [NY Sun]

By BRADLEY HOPE – Staff Reporter of the Sun
June 28, 2006

Responding to mounting community pressure in Clinton Hill, the 88th precinct is today launching an initiative to clean up quality-of-life crimes on the Grand Avenue corridor, sources said yesterday. One of the hot spots police will target is the corner of Putnam and Grand avenues – a dusty triangle between the neighborhood’s streets of ancient mansions and brownstones, where neighbors said drug dealers openly make hand-to-hand trades and gamblers play illegal dice games. At the beginning of June the spot had its first slaying in three years, which has served as a rallying call for the neighborhood in recent weeks.

Though crime in the area is down significantly in all the major crime categories during the last decade, the Brooklyn neighborhood has already seen four slayings this year, according to Compstat reports. There were no murders last year. Reports of rape, burglary, felony assault, and grand larceny are also up slightly from the same period last year. Shooting incidents have risen to 12 this year from six last year, the reports show.

“It’s a complete open-air drug market that everyone is aware of,” a Clinton Hill resident and local business owner who would be identified only as Karl said. “There are drug dropoffs every morning. There are bicycle delivery people that you continually see riding about. You just avoid that corner.”

The neighborhood complaints culminated last week with a meeting hosted by Concerned Residents of Grand Avenue, where the 88th precinct’s commanding officer, Captain John Cosgrove, and the Brooklyn District Attorney, Charles Hynes, appeared. Captain Cosgrove told the audience that several dozen of the precinct’s officers had been moved to other more problematic precincts in the borough, making it harder to fight the qualityof-life crimes on street corners, according to a report of the meeting at Brownstoner.com. Mr. Hynes said he would pay special attention to the block.

The precinct¹s new initiative will likely involve flooding the Grand Avenue corridor with police officers, sources said. Community organizers are pushing for surveillance cameras to be installed in crime hot spots. “There is high unemployment at that corner, so unfortunately individuals believe the best recourse is for them to engage in the drug trade,” the neighborhood’s City Council member, Letitia James, said. ³It¹s also the fastest and quickest way for them to get incarcerated.”

Using the nuisance abatement law, the city is also trying to close down the Lefferts Hotel, a source of community complaints about illegal activity, Ms. James said. A manager of the hotel declined to comment. A former president of the Grand Avenue block association was allegedly threatened by drug dealers to stop his campaign to clean up the neighborhood several years ago, leading him to quit his post and the association to fold, an organizer and local resident, Stephanie Gillette, said. With renewed interest in the problem, Ms. Gillette said she hoped the authorities would make a long-term commitment to the problem. “There has been a lot of lip service in the past,” she said.


Comments

  1. Not only have I read about it, I can spell it. It’s TUSKEGEE.

    Not that it has anything to do with this discussion, other than to prompt your one-man fan club into cheering you on with nonsensical piffle about ‘racist crackers.’

  2. Right on 10:06PM! Most of the regular posters on this site are, at the end of the day, racist crackers, only with a veneer of courtesy. And in saying this I especially mean to include Brownbomber.

  3. the greater good of the neighborhood is to inform people. i read the nyts and am so happy that they told me about what the president is doing with bank accounts. perhaps you agree with the president and vice president and do not think that people should be informed, but i on the otherhand along with my husband believe that knowledge is power.

    i also am african american and perhaps you can believe what the government tells you? as a black person in america, i know what the government does without telling us–have you read about the tuskeegee experiment?

    what do you care? right?

  4. this was not a drug raid, so they could have notified us that the street was going to be blocked off. if it were a spontaneous drug raid then fine, i understand. this, however, was not and is not the case!

    how could they notify tenants if their names are not in the city records? my name is in the records, as i get the tax bills. to insult me, to think that i don’t think is ridiculous. my husband and i have too many degrees and are people who probably think way too much and that is why we wanted to be notified as to what is going on in our community and on our block.

  5. I don’t know about your block, but on mine some of the owners ARE the drug dealers. Makes block association meetings a little tense – they show up to find out whether there are any anti-drug initiatives in the works. So no, any serious effort at law enforcement in this area should definitely NOT notify the owners. What makes you think all owners are law abiding citizens?

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