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NEWS of the Day - December 22, 2011
on some NAACC / LACP issues of interest

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NEWS of the Day - December 22, 2011
on some issues of interest to the community policing and neighborhood activist across the country

EDITOR'S NOTE: The following group of articles from local newspapers and other sources constitutes but a small percentage of the information available to the community policing and neighborhood activist public. It is by no means meant to cover every possible issue of interest, nor is it meant to convey any particular point of view ...

We present this simply as a convenience to our readership ...

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From Los Angeles Times

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Squatters say foreclosed homes beat homeless shelters

They may lack heat and a consistent water supply, but the vacant dwellings aren't as 'depressing,' as one New York mother puts it. Advocates say the number of squatters nationwide is rising.

by Tina Susman, Los Angeles Times

December 21, 2011

Reporting from New York

Slips of paper are pasted to the broken door of the corner row house, violations for the garbage piled near the front steps. The stench of trash wafts up the dark interior stairway, where an ashtray filled with cigarette butts sits like an abandoned potted plant on the second-floor landing.

Nobody lives here, at least not officially.

But as you climb the narrow stairs to the top floor, a door opens into an airy apartment that is home to Tasha Glasgow, who is part of a largely invisible population of squatters occupying vacant homes across America. Given their clandestine lives, it's impossible to say how many people are squatting in this country, but with more than 1.3 million homes in foreclosure and hundreds of thousands of people homeless, advocates say it's safe to assume the number is growing.

"You have these abandoned dwellings that are sitting there vacant, sometimes for many months," said Patrick Markee of the Coalition for the Homeless in New York, where shelters are reporting record numbers of residents. "It's not an issue of whether squatting is right or wrong. The fact is that people are desperate for places to live, and they're going to do what they need to do."

New York would seem to offer an ideal setting for squatters, with its ubiquitous apartment blocs providing safe hiding for people who can't afford the sky-high rents or stomach life in the shelters. The cutoff of funding this year for a program called Advantage, which helped needy renters pay for housing, has deepened the dilemma for people like Glasgow, 30, who has two children, one of them autistic.

Her 9-year-old girl and 5-year-old boy have been taught to adapt to the idiosyncrasies of life in a squat, which is a bit like life during wartime.

There is no heat. Empty jugs sit on the kitchen counter, waiting to be filled when the water comes on. Toilet-flushing and bathing are timed according to the faucets' erratic flow. Bare bulbs jut from ceiling fixtures, the wood floors are bare of carpeting, and tattered drapes cover the windows. There are none of the signs of regular family life: no dishes in the sink from the last meal, no dining table, no mail to be opened.

Still, it's better than a shelter. "I didn't want to be in a shelter. It was depressing. I wasn't getting support trying to find a place to live," said Glasgow, who has occupied this apartment near the ocean, on the foggy tip of Queens, on and off since 2007.

Glasgow probably is not who most people have in mind when they envision squatters. With her shy smile, cropped curly hair, youthful face and earnest demeanor, she seems more like a grad student than a struggling mother.

At first, she was in this apartment legally, her rent covered mostly by the Advantage program. When the building's owner stopped paying the mortgage a couple of years ago, she had to leave and ended up in a shelter with the children. Glasgow's hopes of getting another apartment with city help faded after Advantage was canceled. She heard that her old apartment was empty, so she moved back in earlier this year.

If all goes well, Glasgow and the children soon will move to another, better squat — a vacant Brooklyn house. The children's father, Alfredo Carrasquillo, entered it Dec. 6 as part of a nationwide effort by homeless advocates to highlight the housing crisis, which included public occupations of bank-owned properties. He won't move the rest of the family in until he has made it more suitable for habitation.

"Honestly, we just thought it would be a great opportunity," Carrasquillo said of taking over the vacant house in a public manner, which included a march through the neighborhood and a party on the quiet street, complete with balloons and housewarming gifts. "This is for everyone who doesn't have a house right now — to show people they can fight back."

There's no guarantee Carrasquillo will be able to remain in the house long enough to fix it up for Glasgow and their kids. But if the cases of squatters elsewhere are any indication, it won't be easy dislodging Glasgow or Carrasquillo now that advocacy groups — galvanized by the momentum created by Occupy Wall Street — have gained confidence in their battles with the banks.

"I wouldn't say it's the new normal yet, but I think it's coming close to that," activist Ryan Acuff said of people occupying vacant homes, or refusing eviction orders from their own homes. Acuff is a leader in Take Back the Land-Rochester, part of a nationwide network of activists. Its goal, Acuff said, is to publicize the housing crisis through confrontational tactics such as the occupation — or "liberation" — of foreclosed houses. He said officials have been reluctant to move against squatters when the spotlight is on them.

Realtors contracted to sell foreclosed homes sometimes offer cash to squatters to get rid of them quietly. Glasgow said she'd heard a rumor that someone might offer her $2,000 to leave the Queens apartment.

Bank of America said it had no immediate plan to move against Carrasquillo, even though he is openly squatting in the Brooklyn house. "The foreclosure has not been completed so we are not in a legal position to take any action," spokeswoman Jumana Bauwens said of the house.

She added that it was the bank's policy "to protect and secure our properties for the investors who own them" and that foreclosure "is always our last resort."

In the case of Catherine Lennon, in Rochester, N.Y., Bank of America backed off amid a high-profile foreclosure effort. Lennon, 50, was evicted from her home in March after Bank of America accused her of defaulting on her mortgage — something Lennon denies. Take Back the Land-Rochester moved her back into the empty house in May, staging protests and news conferences on the front lawn that seemed to discourage another eviction. Lennon remains in the house.

"It's not a mansion, but it's mine," Lennon said of the sparsely furnished gray house, where she and her late husband were married in 2008, shortly before he died of cancer.

In Chicago, activists moved Martha Biggs into a foreclosed property in June. The mother of four had been living in a minivan with her children.

"There's always a way around something," said Biggs, who helped activists renovate the house to make it comfortable. "My goal was to get my kids to a better place, just to call home, so we don't have to keep running from place to place."

For now, at least, both women seem safe in their homes, which is all Carrasquillo and Glasgow said they want.

"I'm just trying to find a place for my family," said Carrasquillo, adding that the Brooklyn house makes perfect sense. "It's a building and nobody's there, and we're homeless."

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-squatters-20111222,0,5121151.story

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Reputed Mexican drug cartel czar charged in killing of U.S. agent

A reputed Mexican drug cartel leader was charged in federal court in Washington in the ambush slaying this year of a U.S. immigration officer in Mexico — a killing that set off a massive search on both sides of the Southwest border for several assailants after it was learned that one of the weapons was illegally purchased at a gun store in the Dallas area.

Julian Zapata Espinoza, an alleged chief with the Zetas cartel, pleaded not guilty in a brief court appearance Wednesday in the murder of Immigration and Customs Enforcement Special Agent Jaime Zapata on Feb. 15. He and another agent, who was wounded, were ambushed in their car by a convoy of vehicles in the Mexican state of San Luis Potosi.

The 30-year-old Espinoza, also known as “El Piolin” or “Tweety Bird,” was arrested by Mexican officials a week after the slaying, and authorities in that country identified him as the director of a Zeta assassination cell who confessed to the slaying.

Others arrested, however, said the assailants thought they were ambushing a rival gang's vehicle and that Zapata and fellow agent Victor Avila were shot by mistake.

The charges against Espinoza, including murder and attempted murder of two U.S. officers, carry a potential life sentence with no parole.

U.S. authorities said Espinoza “participated” in the shootings but did not elaborate on whether he actually was at the scene of the roadside hit or had ordered it from afar. U.S. Atty. Ronald C. Machen Jr., whose office in Washington will handle the case, said “this prosecution exemplifies our unwavering effort to prosecute those who committed this heinous offense against U.S. law enforcement agents.”

Espinoza was secretly indicted in Washington last April 19, but it was not until this week that he was extradited from Mexico to this country to stand trial.

U.S. authorities thanked Mexico for their cooperation and noted that this is not a death-penalty case. Mexico does not have capital punishment.

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/nationnow/

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From Google News

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Arizona's Sheriff Joe Arpaio's Officers Turn In Badges

Jail officers working for Arizona Sheriff Joe Arpaio handed in their federal credentials during a news conference in Phoenix Wednesday, a day before civil rights attorneys will be in federal court to seek a ruling in a lawsuit that alleges Arpaio systematically discriminated against Latino residents in conducting traffic patrols and so-called "crime suppression sweeps.".

Arpaio spoke at the same news conference, saying he's going to hold the federal government to its promise to send 50 federal agents to do such screening in his jail. But he predicted there will be undocumented immigrants in jail who won't be deported and will be put back on streets.

"I want to see how many agents are going to be coming to our jail," the sheriff said. "I want to see how long it will take for 50 agents from across the country to work in our jails."

The Department of Homeland Security announced Dec. 15 that more than 90 of Arpaio's Maricopa County jail officers could no longer check whether inmates were undocumented immigrants.

The decision followed the release of a scathing Department of Justice report that said Arpaio's office has a pattern of racially profiling Latinos, basing immigration enforcement on racially charged citizen complaints and punishing Latino jail inmates for speaking Spanish. The sheriff has denied the allegations.

Homeland Security officials had no immediate comment on Arpaio's comments on Wednesday, but later pointed to a Dec. 21 letter that Immigration and Customs Enforcement sent to a county official, saying federal agents will staff the county's jails on a 24-hour, seven-day-a-week basis and that immigrants who pose public safety threats will be taken into federal custody and won't be released, Morton said in the letter.

On Monday, the agency said in a letter to U.S. Sen. Jon Kyl that it would send immigration agents to screen jail inmates in Arizona's most populous county. Arpaio's aides say only one Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer has worked at the county jails since last week.

Homeland Security's decision wasn't the first time Arpaio's federal immigration powers were cut.

In October 2009, Immigration and Customs Enforcement stripped Arpaio of his power to let 100 deputies make federal immigration arrests, but still allowed his jail officers to determine the immigration status of people in jail.

http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/news/2011/12/22/arizonas-sheriff-joe-arpaios-officers-turn-in-badges/

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Maryland communities ranked nation's 5th most secure

12/22/2011

WASHINGTON -- A new ranking lists the Frederick-Gaithersburg-Bethesda area as one of the most secure metropolitan places to live nationwide.

In its eighth annual ranking of areas with more than 500,000 residents, Farmer's Insurance Group lists the heavily-populated Maryland area as the fifth most secure place to live.

Frederick Mayor Randy McClement was pleased with the ranking and gives a lot of the credit to the police department.

"Our police department has been proactive," he says. "It's a community policing concept, they try to get out and into the community, and I think that's what you're seeing in this recognition."

Frederick Police Chief Kim Dine agrees.

"The men and women of the Frederick Police Department are doing an outstanding job. And, frankly, we do have a very organized, comprehensive and cohesive crime-fighting plan and we believe it's working," Dine says.

Dine gives a lot of credit to a program the police department uses called NCR LINKS, which links up the databases of a number of police departments in the region.

No. 1 on the most secure list was Pittsburgh, which moved up 10 slots from the year before. Next came Rochester, N.Y., El Paso, Texas and Syracuse, N.Y.

To compile the rankings, experts at bestplaces.net looked at crime statistics, extreme weather, natural disaster risk, housing depreciation, foreclosures and job loss numbers, to name a few. In total, they studied 379 municipalities.

McClement says he thinks one other factor may have contributed to the recognition.

"Our city has a reputation of being a very friendly city. It's probably one of the biggest compliments we get," he says.

http://www.wtop.com/index.php?nid=1035&sid=2679405

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