North Precinct

Friends of Portland man shot by police say he was 'not the type to have guns'

Let's hope this won't turn out to be "the nightmare scenario"...
FROM THE OREGONIAN

By Lynne Terry, The Oregonian
May 14, 2010, 6:59PM
Portland police officers gather at the scene of Wednesday night's shooting in the Lloyd District. A police officer was wounded and the young man who shot him was killed.

Friends of Keaton Dupree Otis expressed shock and dismay on Friday that the quiet, mild-mannered man they remembered was the same 25-year-old who was killed in a shootout with Portland police.

"He was a wonderful man," said Chalise Lewis, 24, a childhood friend. "He's not the type of person to have guns or harm anybody."


Two members of the Hotspot Enforcement Action Team, which focuses on preventing gang violence, tried to pull Otis over near Northeast Grand Avenue and Holladay Street for traffic infractions. Instead of stopping, Otis kept driving, police say. They trailed him, with their siren and lights on while blasting the air horn, in a pursuit that ended at Northeast Sixth Avenue near Halsey Street.

READ THE ARTICLE

Portland Police leadership toppled: North Portland's Chris Duffy reacts

- A Public Safety Activist with over 20 years experience in NoPo gives her views on Rosie “The Down” Sizer

- Is the PPB Chief’s office cursed?

- What are folks in NoPo more concerned about: police misconduct or lack of cops? 

- Is Adams up for running the Police Bureau?

Chris Duffy is a native Portlander who’s lived in NoPo for over 20 years. She’s been Chair of the Arbor Lodge Neighborhood Association since 2006. She is currently involved with North Portland’s ‘go to’ gathering for all things community policing, the Peninsula’s Public Safety Action Committee or (PSAC). I called her to find out what she thought of the Mayor’s swift toppling of the Police Bureau Leadership this morning.

Do you think it was a good idea to fire Rosie Sizer?

Yes, I do.

Why?

She’s had four years. She’s had a tough time with threats of precinct closures from the very beginning, then budget crisis in recent years, along with continued problems between citizens and police. Now she’s been dealing with rising crime rates along with complaints with how police handled situations...Perhaps it’s time for someone with a different perspective to pick up the challenge.

Adams fires Chief of Police, yanks job from Police Commissioner

FROM THE OREGONIAN

Two days after police Chief Rosie Sizer blasted the mayor's proposed police budget, Mayor Sam Adams fired her and replaced her with Mike Reese, who recently served as East Precinct commander.

Adams also took control of the Portland Police Bureau from Commissioner Dan Saltzman. The mayor said he wants to take the Portland Police Bureau in "a new and different direction."

He said the relationship between the police and the city of Portland "is not what it should be."

Today's announcement follows a tumultuous week, with the mayor and the chief publicly quarreling over the bureau's budget on Monday followed the next day by an announcement that the city had agreed to pay James Chasse's family a record $1.6 million to settle their wrongful death suit against Portland police.

SEE THE ARTICLE

VIDEO BELOW THE CUT 

Community: Don't Cut North Portland Police Officers

Portland's top priority is the delivery of water and sewer services. Next is public safety. Priority budgeting would demand that the bureaus responsible for water, sewer and public safety get full funding first then everything else. The city of Portland cannot and should not try to provide every public service known to man to its citizens. Like every business and household living within a budget the city of Portland must pay for what it needs and cut merely what it wants. Portland's wants to needs ratio seems out of balance and out of budget.

Mayor and Chief Sizer scuffle over police budget gap

As reported by the Sentinel March, the Portland Police Bureau has been wrestling with overspending. Promised savings from last year's closure of North and Southeast Precincts have not stemmed the bureau's financial woes. Yesterday, Police Chief Rosie Sizer announced that budget cuts suggested by the Mayor's Office would mean cutting 25 officers from the police force.  The mayor reacted with incredulity. Mayor Adams stated did not understand why his cuts would result in layoffs. The public sparring may reflect growing frustration between the Mayor's office and the Chief's office. In recent months, the besieged Police Bureau has had to battle misconduct charges, no confidence accusations and flagging support at City Hall. 

PHOTO BY JASON E. KAPLAN FROM JANUARY PSAC MEETING REGARDING THE AFFECTS OF NORTH PRECINCT CLOSURE

FROM THE OREGONIAN

Portland Police Chief Rosie Sizer went on the offensive Monday, questioning Mayor Sam Adams' pledge that "no one will be walking out the door at the Police Bureau" under his proposed budget.

Actually, Sizer said, his proposal would result in layoffs of 25 sworn officers and 12 nonsworn bureau staff; reduced public access to two precincts at night; the scrapping of the Cold Case Homicide Unit, Mounted Patrol and Portland's regional narcotics investigators; and four fewer neighborhood response officers.

Sizer, surrounded by her command staff at a news conference, expressed frustration that now that the Police Bureau has hired up to full strength, at the council's direction, it's being asked to cut street officers.

MAYOR WEIGHS IN
Adams, the first mayor in a generation not to serve as police commissioner, appeared blindsided by what he called Sizer's "staged" news conference, saying he crafted his budget under the impression that the Police Bureau cuts would be reached by not filling vacancies. 

READ THE ARTICLE 

Overtime eats away at savings in Police budget

The closure of North and Southeast Precincts last summer was supposed to save the Portland Police Bureau nearly $3 million and make a significant dent in the Bureau’s spending.

Instead, PPB is the only city bureau in danger of spending its full budget this fiscal year, using $1.6 million more than was budgeted  to pay for overtime and hiring new staff without adequate funds to do so.

SUMMARY JUDGMENT - Public safety: Citizens have more work to do to keep streets safe

The very first story The Sentinel printed when publisher Cornelius Swart came on board in September 2004 was about a day in the life of a neighborhood police officer who was leaving the beat.

We followed officer Cliff Bacigalupi as he walked the street, talking with neighbors and trying to track down a local counterfeiter.  Since then, we’ve made police coverage one of our primary focuses:  We’ve devoted an edition to crime prevention almost every year and provided what seemed to be day-in, day-out updates on the various moves to close or consolidate North Precinct over.

Many newspapers run with the adage “If it bleeds, it leads.”  However, our readers made it clear they did not want that kind of coverage from their community news service.  We set out to cover crime from a prevention- and solution-oriented angle, with an occasional story of truly exceptionally strange crimes (a bomb found at Peninsula Elementary School, January 2009) and coverage of what sadly seems to be an increasing number of cases that raise questions about police misconduct. Tension between the police and the policed has been a constant tightrope.

Teens busted in St Johns buglaries

From KGW

Last month the Sentinel reported that since North Precinct moved out of St Johns, the area has seen a spike in residential and commercial break-ins.  Could they all have been conducted by two teenagers?  Probably not, but someone should take these punk kids and give them a good boxing on the ears.

Scene of the crimes: more cops don’t calm safety jitters

Part of a series on North Precinct
At a standing-room-only Public Safety Action Committee meeting in late January, Chris Duffy addressed North Portland’s concerns about crime.

“No matter what the crime numbers seem to be on paper, people are not seeing our police on the streets,” said Duffy, the chair of the Arbor Lodge Neighborhood Association. “The police are dashing from one end of the peninsula to East County and back again, and people are not getting the day-to-day communication with officers they expect.”

While the number of Portland police officers is currently greater than in recent years, Portland Police Bureau representatives have been saying for months that overall crime rates are down. Statistics from the PPB website and the bureau’s crime analysts corroborate those statements. But property crime in certain North and Northeast neighborhoods is up, and residents reeling from the loss of the old North Precinct in St. Johns are feeling increasingly vulnerable within the new police structure.

Meet Angela Wagnon, your new North Portland Crime Prevention Coordinator

In the wake of mounting community concern about crime in North and Northeast Portland, and in advance of tonight's Public Safety Action Committee, North Portland is getting a new Crime Prevention Coordinator. 

Angela Wagnon (at right) joins Mark Wells at the North Portland Crime Prevention Office on North Denver Avenue in Kenton, where she spoke by phone with The Sentinel on her first day at the office since being reassigned from East Precinct earlier this month.

"It was a bit bittersweet," said Wagnon of leaving the neighborhoods she had worked with since joining the city's Crime Prevention Team in early 2009. "But for my fellow coordinators, it would have been a tougher move," since several of her cohorts in East had worked there for many years. Wagnon had the added benefit of hands-on experience working in the North Portland office as an intern in the summer of 2008.

Crime rising on Peninsula, declining in Albina

Tonight, Jan. 27 at 7 p.m., Portland Police Chief Rosie Sizer, Commissioner Dan Saltzman and the North Portland Public Safety Action Committee will convene at Life Fellowship Church at 3935 N. Lombard St. At the meeting, the Portland Police Bureau will address “community policing in the new North Precinct” and mounting Fifth Quadrant concerns, particularly in St. Johns, that crime has risen since the consolidation of precincts last summer.

Six months after the consolidation of North and Northeast Precincts, Part 1 crime – larceny, burglary, rape [See attachment below]– appears to be up in the North Portland Peninsula, while the same class of crimes continue a multi-year decline in inner North and Northeast, according to a statistical analysis in part using the PPB's website Crime Mapper by the Sentinel. 

North Portland Business Association Prez, VP weigh in on N/NE crime, precinct consolidation

 We've been reporting recently on the spike in property crime in North and Northeast Portland, which has coincided with the consolidation of the North and Northeast police precincts. Jim Ferraris, commander of the "new" North Precinct, claims that residents' perception of crime is higher than normal even though the overall crime rate is down in N/NE from levels seen in recent years. (Numbers from the Portland Police Bureau's CrimeStats website back this up, though there are certain neighborhoods — St. Johns in particular — where the number of residential and commercial burglaries from June-October 2009 appeared to increase over the same time period in 2008.)

As if to echo that sentiment, a pair of emails sent to our Inbox by the North Portland Business Association express extreme unease with the current policing situation — crucially, without blaming the police themselves, but rather the dismal economy and the resulting PPB budget cuts (and, implicitly, the precinct consolidation). Below is the full text of the emails, sent by NPBA President and VP Jim Schaller and Mike Salvo, both of whom urge N/NE community members to attend the Public Safety Action Committee (PSAC) meeting on Jan. 27.
(see below the cut)

North Portland Public Safety Action Committee meets Jan. 27 at Life Fellowship Church


(oh, if only PSAC had action figures...)

On the heels of our stories about the police precinct consolidation and spike in property crime in North and Northeast neighborhoods, the North Portland Public Safety Action Committee (PSAC) is holding a meeting this month called "Public safety and community policing in the new North Precinct." An all-star cast of safety-minded Portland public officials - from North Precinct Commander Jim Ferraris to Police Commissioner Dan Saltzman - will be on hand to address the status of the new North Precinct, impending budget challenges, and ways citizens can be involved in protecting their neighborhoods from would-be criminals. 

When: Jan. 27, 7-8:30 p.m. Where: Life Fellowship Church, 3935 N. Lombard St. For more information: contact Mark Wells, North Portland Crime Prevention Coordinator, (503) 823-4098. 

(slideshow photo courtesy of OregonLive; blog image courtesy of USC)

Break-ins, burglaries batter businesses

[From our upcoming January Street Edition, out Jan. 6}
Part of a series on North Precinct: After the Fall

North Precinct Commander Jim Ferraris notes that while the perception of crime is up in North and Northeast neighborhoods, "Empirical data and facts tell me otherwise." Indeed, overall crime is down locally and regionally, with statewide property crimes at their lowest numbers in decades.

Try telling that to the business owners on Northeast Alberta Street and North Mississippi Avenue, where the list of locations hit by break-ins and burglaries grows longer every day. At least six Alberta Street businesses have been broken into or burglarized this fall. Add that to a trio of recent burglaries on North Williams Avenue and numerous break-ins on Mississippi — including businesses that have been hit twice or more — and you have a commercial community fighting for survival at a time when the recession has already battered their bottom lines.

North Precinct: After the fall

Part One
As winter sets in, crime doesn’t cool

“Typically in Overlook we’ve averaged a couple car break-ins a year,” says North Portland crime prevention coordinator Mark Wells from his Kenton office on a rainy November afternoon. “In the past six weeks, we’ve had 10 or 11.”

Shoplifting is up on Mississippi Avenue. Robberies have plagued Alberta Street businesses in recent weeks. Just last month, a serial “cat burglar” hit 19 homes on or near North Lombard Street. And St. Johns has seen an uptick in criminal activity. 

As service cuts continue to bear down on North/Northeast, and last summer’s police precinct consolidation stretches officers and resources to their limits, neighbors are more concerned than ever about crime. However, residents are beginning to rally as they realize that they must take a more active role in public safety.

The meaning behind the North Precinct de-commissioning ceremony

~ Cornelius Swart and Becca Bartleson
Closing ceremony steeped in tradition and meaning

The June 7 de-commissioning ceremony of North Precinct was steeped in police and military tradition fitting the historic importance of the building.  A four-piece brass band from the U.S. Army’s 234th Division played the national anthem to begin the ceremony. Commander Donna Henderson shook the hand of every precinct officer, giving them each a coin embossed with the image of the first officer from the city of St. Johns to start a patrol from the building.

Slideshow: Inside the new North Precinct

| Image 1 of 7 |

 

Training Division moves into St. Johns' former town hall. Heritage Society Museum fate unclear. What of the much talked about 'community room'?

~ Cornelius Swart

Training Division almost all moved in

On Friday, June 19, I made an unannounced visit to the St. Johns Historic Town Hall, aka North Precinct, or what the Portland Police Bureau calls "The North Building." Currently the term North Precinct now refers to former Northeast Precinct at 449 NE Emerson at Northeast Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. (precinct map download)  Lt. Sara Westbrooke was nice enough to give me a tour of "The North Building."  The Training Division is almost completely moved in. 

There are two sides to the Training Division, one for new recruits, the other for veteran officers.  "We haven't all been together in years," said Westbrook.

It's final - North Precinct is officially closed

~ Report and video by Becca Bartleson

The North Portland Police Precinct was officially decommissioned late Sunday afternoon. The ceremony recognized each individual officer who served there while over 50 community members watched from the concrete plaza.

Commander Donna Henderson addressed the crowd after every officer had walked forward to shake her hand and marched back into formation at the base of the stairs.

Henderson said in her opening remarks that this was the end of an era.

North Precinct to be decommissioned June 7th, 4pm, end of an era

The Sentinel will have a web report and video of the ceremony, as the community bids fairwell to a century long St Johns tradition. Slightly coffee stained flyer below:

What effect will closing North Precinct have?

Increase in crime and reduction of police presence
63% (50 votes)
Probably won't change police service much
14% (11 votes)
Shot to the pride more than anything else
23% (18 votes)
Total votes: 79
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