Archive for the ‘8th District’ Category

2nd District Email Blast, 10/04/07

Thursday, October 4th, 2007

Email Blast
NOPD 2nd District

Please look at the story on the following link:

http://www.wwltv.com/local/stories/wwl100107tpyouth.12ba8b64e.html

Bonds and Davis are known to frequent the 2nd District area. Please be aware of your surroundings and call 911 immediately if you see any of these suspects.

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Joshua Davis Ryan Johnson Terrell Bonds

Captain Kirk Bouyelas
Second District Commander
New Orleans Police Department
504.658.6020 (Office)
504.658.6499 (Fax)

NOCrimeLine, 6/27/07

Wednesday, June 27th, 2007

The night time is the right time…

If you’re a crook, I guess. But if you live in the French Quarter or Marigny Triangle, it’s the wrong time to be on the streets. The latest three crimes this week prove the point:

4:50 a.m. Sunday: We already told you about the woman who was robbed of $400 and her fancy purse and wallet in the 1000 block of Gov. Nicholls Street in our NOcrimeline Crime Alert on 6.25.07.

2:20 a.m. Monday: A woman and her boyfriend were at the intersection of Bourbon and Toulouse streets when a black guy came up from behind them and grabbed her purse off her shoulder. Nothing in the report to indicate what the thief got away with as he fled up Toulouse toward N. Rampart Street (where else?). He was described as 20-25 years old, 5′10″ tall, 160 pounds, with a “low hair cut” (is that the same thing as “short hair”?), wearing a white tank top and blue jeans. Perhaps you’ve seen him.

5:15 a.m. Monday:A 39-year-old black man had his car stolen by another black man in the 200 block of Burgundy Street (y’all ought to know by now that’s not a good place to park, no matter who you are). The victim noticed the perpetrator walking toward him on the sidewalk as he was going to his car. When he got to the car door, the guy asked him if he had a cigarette. When the victim told him “no” the crook took a step back and pointed a chrome semi-auto handgun at the victim’s face. He told the victim to give him his wallet and car keys. The victim complied and was told by the gunman to “say nothing and I won’t kill you.” The thief drove off in the car, down Burgundy and turned onto Bienville Street toward, you guessed it, N. Rampart Street.

The car was a 2006 Honda Accord, silver in color, with Louisiana license plate ODD852. The thief also took the man’s wallet containing 3 credit cards, and his cellphone.

The thief was described as 20-30 years of age, 6′ tall, 180 pounds, thin, clean-shaven, and light complexion, wearing a black NY Yankees ball cap, white T-shirt and dark jeans.

Video update: We’re getting more reports of video surveillance cameras being mounted on residences in the Quarter now that homeowners know they are not illegal. We would still like to hear of more installations from residents and businesses. Businesses have been particularly lax in contacting us, though the new Omni Bank alerted us to cameras on the exterior of its building at Chartres and Conti streets.

One encouraging thing we’re hearing is from residents who seem to be interested in installing security cameras outside their homes. We’ve sent an inquiry to Roger Jones, the 8th District’s “quality of life” officer, to see if he can provide any technical information and perhaps the names of contractors who work locally, but have heard nothing back yet. If any of you who already have cameras can offer advice on reliable contractors who could install a system and secure the necessary Vieux Carre Commission permits, please let us know.

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Please forward this message to anyone interested in the quality of life in the French Quarter and Marigny Triangle. To be added to our email list, send your FULL NAME and HOME ADDRESS to: NOcrimeline@gmail.com.

As always, your comments and suggestions are welcome.

Thom Kahler

NOCrimeLine, 6/25/07

Wednesday, June 27th, 2007

Be careful out there…

Summer muggies?: We all agree you should be able to walk the streets of the French Quarter or Marigny Triangle any time of the day or night. But you shouldn’t. Here’s another reason why:

Early Sunday morning (6.24.07), just before 5 a.m., a 47-year-old woman walking in the 1000 block of Gov. Nicholls Street, between Burgundy and N. Rampart streets, was mugged and robbed. She passed a black man who turned and struck her from behind, knocking her to the ground. He grabbed her purse and fled.

Besides a $75 Tagnello purse and $40 Liz Clairborne wallet, she lost $400 in cash, a credit card, her driver’s license, and cellphone.

She was unable to give a description of the perpetrator, other than he was a black man. Enough said.

Two too close to home: Their murders didn’t happen in the 8th District, but their connection to the Quarter was unmistakable. Two weeks ago on June 11, Robin Malta, co-owner of Salon d’Malta in the 1200 block of Decatur Street, was killed in his home in the Marigny. Then less than a week later on June 17, Chris Roberts, who worked at Fiorella’s restaurant in the 1100 block of Decatur, was gunned down at his home in the 1900 block of Esplanade Ave.

I had just spoken briefly with Chris about 4:30 p.m. that Sunday afternoon; the police put his time of death at around 8:30 p.m. I didn’t know him well; he was impressed I remembered his name from an earlier conversation. I had told him then that he bore an uncanny resemblance to Jay Thomas, a New Orleans boy who went on to be a famous DJ and actor on numerous sitcoms. Chris was embarrassed he didn’t remember my name and said he had to work on his memory. Here’s to his memory.

If it can happen in their neighborhoods, it can happen in ours. All the more reason to report anything that doesn’t look right, like a stranger lurking on your street or someone following you. And all the more reason to take precautions, like not going walking in the wee hours or taking a taxi if you have to go into the most dangerous areas of the Quarter.

And it’s gained national attention. Sen. Patrick Leahey noted in his opening remarks at the Senate hearing this past Wednesday (6.20.07) on the rise of crime since the storm:

* “Violent crime in New Orleans has reached near-epidemic proportions and emerged as the most serious threat to its recovery since the storm. In the first three months of this year, violent crime is up more than 100 percent compared to the same time a year ago.”

* “The murder rate per capita is now the highest in America, more than 20 percent higher than in the any other major city. At its current rate, New Orleans has 12 times as many homicides as New York City, 3 times as many as Philadelphia, and twice as many as Washington, D.C.”

* “Last year, there were more than 160 murders in the city, and so far, only one murder case has led to a conviction — just one. The police have only brought a quarter of those cases to the district attorney to be charged, and the office has accepted only half of those for prosecution.”

As I said, be careful out there.

***
Please forward this message to anyone interested in the quality of life in the French Quarter and Marigny Triangle. To be added to our email list, send your FULL NAME and HOME ADDRESS to: NOcrimeline@gmail.com.

As always, your comments and suggestions are welcome.

Thom Kahler

NOCrimeLine, 6/22/07

Wednesday, June 27th, 2007

Everybody talks about crime, but…

Nobody does anything about it, to paraphrase Mark Twain: You might say that applies to video surveillance cameras. At last week’s NONPAC meeting, Lt. Eddie Selby told how valuable the NOPD has found video cameras mounted outside businesses or residences to be in solving crimes, noting he’d like to have a database of citizens in the French Quarter and Marigny Triangle who have surveillance cameras. NOcrimeline agreed to poll our subscribers to try to compile such a database. Out of nearly 500 subscribers, we got exactly ONE response locating a camera.

Does this mean no one really cares about crime? Does it mean they’re too lazy to respond? Or are we all overestimating the number of video surveillance cameras in the Quarter? One person suggested that owners are reluctant to come forward because such cameras are prohibited by the Vieux Carre Commission.

That may have been true at one time, but in April the VCC, recognizing that “security cameras have proliferated” in the Quarter and “serve a wide variety of security functions, and, if selected and located properly, will intrude minimally upon the historic streetscape,” adopted a policy “designed to limit the intrusive nature of these fixtures and to outline compatible equipment and methods for their proper installation.”

The regulations don’t seem to be too onerous, but Lary P. Hesdorffer, executive director of the VCC, notes that “a permit is required BEFORE cameras are installed (or replaced).” (That “or replaced” sounds like an out for those who put up cameras before obtaining VCC permission.) The easiest way to go if you want to install surveillance cameras might be to look in the Yellow Pages under “Security Control Equipment” and hire a contractor who could supply and install the equipment, after first getting the necessary VCC permit for you. If you’re handy and want to do it yourself, one person who does have a camera installation in the Quarter says Wal-Mart has a good system. If you want a of copy the VCC regulations, NOcrimeline can send you those in PDF format–just email us your request.

But if you ALREADY have surveillance cameras installed, how about letting us know so we can supply that information to the 8th District NOPD. Your cameras might help solve a crime–isn’t that what this is all about?

Another saying…: You know how they say a criminal always returns to the scene of the crime? Well, that did one crook in the other night.

It had been one of the quietest weeks in recent memory, crimewise, until Wednesday evening ( 6.20.07) just after 9:30 p.m. A man and woman, who live in the 1200 block of Esplanade Avenue, were walking on Esplanade Avenue near Royal Street, when they were robbed. Three black boys, all 16 years old, rode up behind the white couple on bicycles and surrounded them. One of the punks told them, “Y’all know what this is about–give it up!” The woman gave one of the kids her wallet and another kid asked the man for his wallet. The man said he didn’t have anything other than his cellphone.

The perpetrators fled on their bikes with only the woman’s wallet, but one quickly turned around and came back and asked the man for his cellphone so he couldn’t call the police. He didn’t have to–an off-duty sheriff’s deputy arrived on the scene and nabbed the crook who came back to the scene of the crime.

The other two robbers were picked up later in the 200 block of Bourbon Street. They were all charged with simple robbery, and one was found in possession of crack cocaine. All were from Uptown (2400 block of Louisiana Avenue, 2400 block of Amelia Street, and 200 block of S. Johnson Street). What the hell were they doing in the Quarter? And at what time does the curfew law kick in? It seems like an awfully lot of perpetrators are using bicycles to rob and run–maybe it’s time for “bicycle checkpoints” to nab some of these punks.

Rough and tumble robbery: A man is in serious condition at University Hospital with a fractured skull and possible broken neck after being robbed just after 3 a.m. Friday morning (6.22.07) in the 300 block of Bourbon Street. He and several friends (Capt. Hosli, please fix the computer so we can get more information about victims) were walking on Bourbon toward Canal Street when they were approached by 6 or 7 black men who tried to sell them Ecstasy. The victim started to walk away when one of the men pick-pocketed his wallet. The victim tried to get it back when the perpetrator slugged him with his fist on the left side of the head. The victim fell backward and landed on the concrete, suffering the injuries that landed him in the hospital.

The robber and his accomplices fled with the man’s wallet. The attacker was a black man, described as 18-20 years old, 5′11″ tall, 185 pounds, with ear-length dreadlocks, wearing blue jeans with a white T-shirt that had a colored print logo on it.

Be careful out there: You hate to be suspicious of everyone who doesn’t look like you–but you know who the robbers are. If you see a driver in a car with temporary tags, or boys cruising aimlessly on bicycles, or someone following you while you’re walking, don’t hesitate to call 911 and have them checked out. Some might tell you to use the NOPD’s non-emergency number–but it’s better to assume you have encountered the enemy and stop them before harm’s done.

***
Please forward this message to anyone interested in the quality of life in the French Quarter and Marigny Triangle. To be added to our email list, send your FULL NAME and HOME ADDRESS to: NOcrimeline@gmail.com.

As always, your comments and suggestions are welcome.

Thom Kahler

8th District NOcrimeline, 5/24/07

Thursday, May 24th, 2007

Cops and Robbers

They’ve got their guns out again: The bad boys are running lose again, robbing three people in the French Quarter and Marigny Triangle in the last 3 days. Again, these are expurgated accounts, since Capt. Edwin Hosli, commander of the NOPD’s 8th District, continues to censor the victim’s name, address, age, sex and race (more on that later) from the police reports made available to us:

* Bienville and Clinton streets, Sunday, 5.20.07, about 2 a.m., a black man coming out of a bar said he was robbed by another black man who took $80 in cash from him and 2 silver chains, one valued at $4,000 and the other at $8,500. The report is so abbreviated it doesn’t list a description of the perpetrator.

* 1917 Burgundy St., Monday, 5.21.07, at about 8:30 p.m. the victim, a deliveryman for China Wall restaurant, was making a delivery when he was approached by a black male, who pointed a dark handgun at him and stated, “Give me all the money”. The victim complied and handed the perpetrator $5. A witness, who was awaiting the food delivery, came out of his residence and asked the perpetrator what he was doing. He heard the perpetrator ask the victim for money to eat. The perpetrator then looked at the witness and fled on Burgundy towards Pauger Street. The witness noticed the deliveryman was visibly upset and asked him what happened. The deliveryman, who spoke very little English, stated,”He had a gun, he took my money”.

The perpetrator was described as a black male, 5′8″ tall, athletic build, 19-25 years of age, short hair, dark s kin.

A canvass of the area by police located a camera attached to the house at North Rampart and Pauger streets. A follow up revealed it was not working at the time of the incident. Duh? Great crime prevention.

* 700 block of Dumaine Street, Monday, 5.21.07, about 10 p.m. the victim was walking home when a black male on a mountain bike wearing all dark-colored clothing stopped along side of him and pointed a black semi-automatic handgun at him and ordered the victim to empty his pockets. The victim took out less then $20 and some credit cards from his pockets and dropped them to the ground. The perpetrator picked up the money and told the victim to pick up his credit cards. The perpetrator rode off towards Rampart Street. The victim walked on home and called the police.

St. Mary’s Church (?) purse snatching: There’s conflicting information about this case: Lt. Eddie Selby reported a purse snatching at Ursulines and Chartres streets on Tuesday, 5.23.07, about 1 p.m. Detective Elizabet Garcia’s report the incident occurred just after noon while the victim was walking in the vicinity of Gov. Nicholls and Chartres streets. Citizens on the scene reported a man had grabbed a woman’s purse while she was standing on the steps of St. Mary’s Church in the 1100 block of Chartres, which is between Gov. Nicholls and Ursulines.

Based on eyewitness accounts, police stopped a suspect in the 1100 block of St. Bernard Avenue, about 8 blocks from the scene of the crime, about 15 minutes later. One witness positively identified him as the perpetrator, but because the victim hadn’t reported the crime, the suspect was released. When the victim reported the robbery 2 hours later, a warrant was issued for the arrest of Stephen J. Butler, a 39-year-old black man whose last known address is 1019 Kerlerec St., on a charge of simple robbery and he was booked into Central Lockup a little after 2 a.m. on Wednesday, 5.23.07.

How rumors get started: A subscriber asked, ” What’s this I hear about assaults and robbery on females around the NOAC area? The truth is there was a lone purse snatching reported at Iberville and Burgundy streets, around the corner from the New Orleans Athletic Club on 5.12.07 at about 8 a.m. A 57-year-old white woman was walking from her home in the French Quarter to NOAC, which she does 2 to 4 times a week, when she was accosted from the rear by a black man who grabbed her purse and pushed her to the ground. He fled on Iberville toward Rampart Street. He was described as 25-30 years old, about 5′6″-5′8″, approximately 165-185 pounds, short hair and clean appearance, wearing a black shirt and pants.

This is the only purse snatching reported recently in that area, but it is a neighborhood with perpetual problems and bears watching if you must walk in that area.

Pickpockets on the prowl: Black women, perhaps working in a team, are targeting late night denizens of the street, who may or may not be tourists (if only we had information on the victims!), offering sexual favors. Nothing particularly amazing in that, but here’s how they operate: in one case, the woman perpetrator hollered at a guy near the casino and followed him into his hotel, where she grabbed his privates–while extracting his wallet from his pants. Another woman was even smoother as she approached a guy in the 300 block of Royal Street and offered her favors, which he declined. But when he got back to his hotel, he realized his wallet was missing.

Both of the women were black, one was described as age unknown, about 5′4″ tall, weighing 100 pounds, wearing a light green tank top and blue jean skirt, and a blue “do” rag on her head. The other was estimated to be 32 years old, 5′4″ tall, 130 pounds, wearing a red T-shirt, shorts, and white tennis shoes. Police are pretty sure they aren’t dealing with college coeds, considering one of the perps reportedly shouted to her female accomplices, “he doesn’t not want to” when the victim declined her advances.

Auto thefts abound: There were 13 more auto thefts last week, with most in the CBD or Upper Quarter. On top of that, there were 18 car break-ins. What’s going to deter that? A good reason to show up at NONPAC meetings (second Thursday of each month at 5:30 p.m. at the Omni Royal Orleans) and query Captain Hosli.

Speaking of which: One disgruntled NOcrimeline subscriber, responding to my exhortation to attend NONPAC meetings, wrote:

“I have been going to the meeting month after month. I’m tired of hearing the same thing each month. I feel like the police are giving us the same old standard lip service. We complain about the same thing each month and get the same old response, yet nothing changes in the neighborhood. Sure, police react when called on 911, but you’d think that if they continue to be called out to the same corner for the same problems on a regular basis they might just make that one of the places the officers would patrol regularly. But they don’t!

“I have done my part by showing up to make my complaints known. And the police respond. They should do their part by doing what they say they will do to address/correct the issues. But they don’t! Sure ,Lt. Selby gave us his cell number to call him. But I feel that if I come to the meeting to address issues and he tells me this will be taken care of, then I shouldn’t have to nag him by making calls at all hours.

“Sorry, I don’t have time to waste and I’m just discouraged with the results.”

Another subscriber feels the meetings are held too early:

“I would like to offer one suggestion about the NONPAC meetings. I would very much like to attend the meetings, but I do not leave my office until 5:30 p.m., sometimes 6 p.m. I am sure there are others out there who would also like to attend, but 5:30 is too early to be practical, especially for those of us that work out of the French Quarter, or who work past 5 p.m. Would it be possible to set the meetings for 6 or 6:30?

What subscribers think about details on victims: Several subscribers weighed in on Capt. Hosli’s censorship of information about victims from the police reports the 8th District releases to NOcrimeline. Here’s what they had to say:

* “I can understand not using the victim’s name, but I agree with you that male or female, how old, what race, and whether a tourist or local makes a difference in how we evaluate the risk of certain crimes happening to us.”

* “I think it is just as important as the descriptions of the criminals, i.e. whether a female was walking alone or with a group, whether couples, loners, or the elderly seem to be the targets of the criminal du jour, and as in Gregg & Belinda’s (the Hubers) case, whether the targets are white women. It helps us to know that information, and I think most victims would not care if their descriptions and names were revealed (as you said, it makes it more human and in many cases advises friends and neighbors who may not know, and can offer aid to their friends). Perhaps Capt. Hosli should add that question to the report form: if it’s okay to reveal their name in a crime email.”

* “Stripping the name and addresses is fine, but the sex, gender and age is important, relevant data. This sort of data is what helps my girlfriend and I formulate safety policies for given streets and times. For example, if we know single women are targeted, but a women and man together are not, then we will modifier our behavior accordingly.”

Still would like the input of other subscribers to let Capt. Hosli know what you think about the expurgated police reports with no information on victims, where they live, their age, their sex or race.

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Please forward this message to anyone interested in the safety of the French Quarter and Marigny Triangle. To be added to our mailing list, send your name and email address to: NOcrimeline@gmail.com.

As always, your comments and suggestions are welcome.

Thom Kahler

8th District NOcrimeline, 5/19/07

Tuesday, May 22nd, 2007

Some reports, some arrests…

Capt. Hosli reporting: Nothing in our last update ( 5.9.07) should have implied a lack of willingness on the part of the NOPD’s 8th District to give information–it merely reflected our frustration in getting crime reports in a timely fashion. As Capt. Edwin Hosli, commander of the 8th, reported at the NONPAC meeting on 5.10.07, “the procedure has been worked out–now we’ve got to get all our people on the same page.”

Lt. Eddie Selby, commander of the 8th’s investigative unit, has routinely been calling NOcrimeline when his guys have collared a criminal, filling in details even before a report has been filed. Can’t get any faster service than that.

Your emails to the Captain saying you wanted information on crimes reported to NOcrimeline were effective. What I didn’t realize was they all went to his Blackberry–and he was still fielding calls at home until 2 a.m. “I got THE message,” Capt. Hosli conceded.

The Captain told the meager audience (more on that later) at NONPAC, “My goal is to be as transparent as possible and give out all that I can.” However, he added, “Not victims’ names–that’s sensitive.”

Early on, Capt. Hosli and I agreed NOcrimeline wouldn’t use the names of victims. (In the couple of cases we did, the names were obtained from other sources and used with the victim’s permission.) But the Captain has been redacting the names from the reports we get, along with the address, sex, race and age of the victims. “I don’t even read that information on the reports I get–they’re all the same to me,” he explained to me. I’d argue that it might be well being that egalitarian in his approach to solving crime, but knowing whether the victim was male or female, how old, what race, and whether a tourist or local, makes the victim a real person–not just a statistic reported to the FBI. In the tight-knit neighborhood that is the French Quarter and Marigny Triangle, where everyone seems to know everyone else, information on victims does creep out–albeit sometimes inaccurately. The lack of information from official sources is a breeding ground for rumors. Let me know what you think.

Where were you? Once again, the crowd–hard to call it that–at the monthly NONPAC (New Orleans Neighborhood Policing Anti-Crime Council ) meeting 5.10.07 was only about two dozen citizens. It seems like it takes a major crime wave to bring residents of the 8th District out in force to question what is being done about the latest affront to public safety. I must admit in the past I’ve been discouraged from attending by just hearing a recitation of statistics from the current commanding captain. But Capt. Hosli and his staff seem to be genuinely concerned about your complaints and try to come up with answers to your queries. If nothing else, it’s a good opportunity to be face-to-face with the guys you expect to keep your neighborhood safe. And to show you really care about safety issues in the French Quarter and Marigny Triangle.

NONPAC meetings are the second Thursday of every month at 5:30 p.m. at the Omni Royal Orleans, 621 St. Louis St.

Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? Lt. Selby and his men and women of law enforcement have been hauling bad boys off the street at a pretty good clip in the past 10 days or so–faster, in fact, than I can write them all down. They’ve arrested:

* Malcolm Patton, a 27-year-old black man whose last known address was 1512 St. Anthony St., may not have seen all this trouble coming when he allegedly tried to rob the DejaVu Bar at 400 Dauphine St. on 5.10.07 at about 8:30 a.m. He supposedly handed the woman tending bar a note which said, “I have a gun, give me your money”. The bartender told the subject “get the f*** out of here, there are cops all over.” He left empty-handed and fled down Conti Street, where in the 1000 block he attempted to take the purse of a 68-year-old woman who was going to work at the Wax Museum. She screamed and a man who was parking his car came to her aid, wrestling Patton to the ground where Patton allegedly bit the citizen on the finger. Patton was finally subdued with the help of a second man who helped hold Patton until the police arrived.

Patton, described by Capt. Hosli as “a crackhead”, was taken to University Hospital, where he received treatment for a fractured sinus and cuts and scrapes; doctors there confirmed he was a known HIV patient. According to the Detective Jerusha Hillman, Patton “repeatedly apologized for committing the crimes” and stated “he was forced to do these crimes by two unknown black men who are harassing him constantly. Patton stated the people who told him to do these crimes, beat him with a pipe and pistol whipped him to make him do it.” The detective observed no marks on Patton.

Patton was charged with attempted armed robbery, simple battery, purse snatching, crimes against a victim over 65, and intentional exposure to AIDS. He is being held on $97,500 bond, awaiting a hearing on 5.25.07.

* Odell Flagg, a 17-year-old black man whose last known address was 1408 Hancock St., Gretna, was charged with simple robbery on 5.14.07. The victim and a friend were walking in the 600 block of Conti Street by the Hotel Monteleone garage about 11:55 a.m. when two black men came up behind them. One grabbed her clutch purse containing about $25 and the duo fled. After a description of the perpetrators was broadcast, officers in just moments spotted men matching the description in the 100 block of North Peters Street. Flagg was apprehended but his accomplice eluded capture.

Flagg is being held on $15,000 bond, awaiting a hearing on 7.14.07.

* Jason J. Ruiz, a 24-year-old white man, was charged with simple battery and aggravated assault. The police report is incomplete, but according to Lt. Selby officers arrested Ruiz and confiscated a gun after shots were fired into the air at Julia and S. Peters streets about 2 a.m. on 5.13.07.

* Peter J. Burke, a 29-year-old white man, was arrested Saturday (5.18.07) and charged with four counts of business burglary. His arrest may solve the rash of burglaries that have plagued Decatur Street businesses this month. According to Lt. Selby, detectives set up surveillance on a Decatur Street building about 1 a.m. Saturday and by 2 p.m. observed Burke attempting to enter the building. He said efforts will be made to link Burke with other business burglaries in the 8th District.

His bond was set at $200,000 pending a hearing 7.17.07.

* A warrant has been issued for Joshua Williams, a black male born 11.16.84, in connection with an armed robbery in the 1000 block of Conti Street “two or three weeks ago,” according to Lt. Selby.

Where’s your car? Auto thefts are soaring in the 8th District with 28 in the last 2 weeks and a total of 42 since the beginning of April. On top of that, there have been 15 car break-ins since 5.6.07. While a good number of the thefts occur in the CBD and closer to Canal Street in the Upper Quarter, there’s been an increase in them in the more residential Lower Quarter.

It’s probably one of the hardest crimes to defense against. Capt. Hosli didn’t respond to a query with any thoughts he might have on preventing your car from being stolen. At least one officer suggested using something like The Club, a bar that locks across your steering wheel. It’s not impervious to theft, but if thieves see it there they might think you’re serious about security and look for an easier target.

If your car is stolen, don’t wait for the police to find it, suggests one of our readers who has had her car stolen. She says, “Don’t wait and think someone is out there looking for your stolen car, the police do not have time–it is best to go and look for yourself if you really want the car back.”

She says: “The favorite dumping spots for stolen cars after they have been stripped are: 1) in the area between St. Bernard at Rampart and St. Roch, one block away from the river paralleling Rampart. (I think it is called St. Claude at that point); 2) across the Industrial Canal and the first and second streets from the canal and to the left of St. Claude.”

Not all cars reported stolen are. Every commander of the 8th I’ve talked with over the years has lamented the number of drunks who report their cars stolen when they can’t find them after emerging from a watering hole. Capt. Hosli at the last NONPAC meeting told of security cameras showing one owner who reported his car stolen driving it out of a parking lot. “We’ll arrest him when we find him,” he stated.

Re: Huber robbery: The defendant in the brutal robbery of Gregg and Belinda Huber pleaded not guilty at his arraignment Thursday (5.17.07). Ronald J. Martin, 30, was charged with second-degree battery and 2 counts of aggravated armed robbery on 3.13.07 for the robbery 2.28.07 at Gov. Nicholls and Burgundy streets. He is being held on $425,000 bond. His accomplice who was driving the vehicle used in the robbery is still at large.

***
Please forward this message to anyone interested in the safety of the French Quarter and Marigny Triangle. To be added to our mailing list, send your name and email address to: NOcrimeline@gmail.com.

As always, your comments and suggestions are welcome.

Thom Kahler
nocrimeline@gmail.com