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NEWS of the Day - September 21, 2012
on some LACP issues of interest

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NEWS of the Day - September 21, 2012
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 Google News

Amish Sect Leader and Followers Guilty of Hate Crimes

by ERIK ECKHOLM

Samuel Mullet Sr., the domineering leader of a renegade Amish sect, and 15 of his followers were convicted on Thursday in Cleveland of federal conspiracy and hate crimes for a series of bizarre beard-and hair-cutting attacks last fall that spread fear through the Amish of eastern Ohio.

The convictions of Mr. Mullet, along with several relatives and others from his settlement who carried out the assaults, could bring lengthy prison terms. The verdicts were a vindication for federal prosecutors, who made a risky decision to apply a 2009 federal hate-crimes law to the sect's violent efforts to humiliate Amish rivals.

Defense lawyers in the case and an independent legal expert had argued that the government was overreaching by turning a personal vendetta within the Amish community, and related attacks, into a federal hate-crimes case. But the jury accepted the prosecutors' description of the attacks as an effort to suppress the victims' practice of religion, finding Mr. Mullet and the other defendants guilty on nearly all the charges they faced of conspiracy, hate crimes and obstruction of justice.

The victims “simply wanted to be left to practice their own religion in their own way in peace,” Steven M. Dettelbach, the United States attorney for the Northern District of Ohio, said in a news conference after the verdicts were announced. “The defendants invaded their homes, physically attacked these people and sheared them almost like animals,” Mr. Dettelbach said.

Mr. Mullet, 66, the founder of a community near Bergholz, Ohio, and 15 followers, including six women, were tried for their roles in five separate attacks last fall, involving assaults on nine people whom Mr. Mullet had described as enemies. The jury, which had no Amish members, heard three weeks of testimony and deliberated more than four days before reaching a verdict at midday on Thursday.

Although Mr. Mullet did not directly participate, prosecutors labeled him the mastermind of the assaults, in which groups of his followers invaded the homes of victims, threw them down and sheared their beards and hair. Among the traditional Amish, men's long beards and women's uncut hair are central to religious identity.

Prosecutors argued that the attacks were intended to humiliate those who questioned Mr. Mullet's cultlike methods, which included forcing errant followers to sleep in chicken coops and pressing married women — including his own daughter-in-law — to accept his intimate sexual "counseling."

Some of the victims had angered Mr. Mullet by refusing to honor his shunning decrees against his foes, calling them an improper use of his power as a bishop and accepting those he sought to banish into their own churches. Other victims had moved out of his settlement and attacked him as a cult leader.

The peculiar attacks first drew national attention last fall when several men from the Bergholz settlement were arrested on state kidnapping and burglary charges. The assaults, and then the public trial, were a searing experience for the region's Amish, who normally lead placid and intensely private lives, without electricity or cars, and try to settle disputes peacefully without involving law enforcement.

The testimony included an elderly woman's account of her terror as six of her children and their spouses made a surprise late-night visit, with the men holding down her sobbing husband as they hacked off his beard and hair and the women cut her waist-length hair to above the ears as she prayed aloud.

During the testimony, the 16 defendants, in traditional attire, and their lawyers sat around four tables that took up half the courtroom. In the gallery sat dozens of Amish supporters of the victims, including several of Mr. Mullet's elderly siblings, who shook their heads as witnesses described his unorthodox methods. Also in the gallery was Mr. Mullet's wife, who sat impassively as a woman who used to live in Bergholz spoke of how Mr. Mullet pressured her to come to his bed.

The stakes for the defendants were raised when federal prosecutors stepped in to charge Mr. Mullet and 15 others, including several of his children and other relatives, with federal conspiracy and hate-crime charges that carry potential sentences of several decades. Judge Dan Aaron Polster scheduled sentencing for Jan. 24.

The defendants did not deny their roles in the attacks, which were carried out with battery-powered clippers, scissors and razor-sharp shears that are designed to trim horse manes. Rather, the case turned on the motives for the attacks and whether it was appropriate to make them into a major federal case under a 2009 hate-crimes law.

To prove the most serious charges, the jurors had to be convinced that the defendants had caused “bodily injury,” which could mean “disfigurement,” and that the attacks were based mainly on religious differences. Lawyers for the defense argued that cutting hair was not disfigurement and that the attacks resulted from family and personal differences, including a bitter custody battle involving a daughter of Mr. Mullet's, as well as disputes over the “true” Amish way.

During the trial, Edward G. Bryan, Mr. Mullet's lawyer, said that his client might have known about the attacks but did not order them. According to testimony, Mr. Mullet stayed up late to greet attackers when they returned to the compound after one of the assaults, accepting a bag of shorn hair as well as disposable cameras used to record the victims' humiliation. The prosecutors argued that his followers would not have acted without Mr. Mullet's approval, citing what one of his sisters called the zombielike obedience of Bergholz residents.

Mr. Bryan said Thursday that Mr. Mullet planned to appeal, in part on the grounds that the federal law had been misapplied.

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/21/us/jury-convicts-amish-group-of-hate-crimes.html?pagewanted=all&_moc.semityn.www

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Detroit officials tout community policing effort

by Mark Hicks

Detroit — City authorities are touting the success of a pilot community policing program as a way to curb crime.

Results released Thursday from an initiative the Detroit Police Department launched in June with residents and business owners in the Grandmont-Rosedale community and law enforcement, courts and researchers found a dramatic drop in home invasions.

In the first 120 days of the program, home invasions dropped 32 percent compared to the same period in 2011 northwest side neighborhood. Citywide, there was an 8.5 percent decrease.

Key to the initiative was a regular police presence in the area. Officers made 650 "proactive contacts" with residents.

"The community was talking with us … to the point where they were pointing out suspicious vehicles that were ours," Insp. Vicki Yost said.

In addition, Corrections Department officials conducted more than 250 home visits with ex-inmates on probation and parole living in the project area. None committed crimes there during the 120-day period. Police made 11 felony arrests and one misdemeanor arrest, which officials said were tied to citizen tips.

"We are committed to making our city safe and these are very promising results," Police Chief Ralph L. Godbee Jr. said in a statement. "Our approach of community policing responds to the needs of citizens with compassion, commitment, and persistence."

Other agencies involved include Wayne County Sheriff Office, Greater Detroit Centers for Working Families and Manhattan Institute for Policy Research.

Police are hoping to expand it to other areas of the city.

http://www.detroitnews.com/article/20120921/METRO01/209210371/Detroit-officials-tout-community-policing-effort

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Philadelphia Police Department tries more personal policing strategy

Last week, the PPD began what it is calling a “quality-of-life blitz” — a modified form of community policing

by Caroline Meuser

Policing in West Philadelphia is getting personal.

Last week, the Philadelphia Police Department began what it is calling a “quality-of-life blitz” — a modified form of community policing. Police officers and volunteer clergy members are going door-to-door discussing with residents ways to improve neighborhood security.

After finishing the 19th District last Thursday, police knocked on doors in the 18th District, which includes the Penn campus, last night. They will follow with the same procedure in the 12th district next Thursday. These three districts are identified as areas of high crime.

The 19th District, though it has not seen any recent increase in crime, does have more violent and property crime than surrounding areas, according to Philadelphia Police Inspector Dennis Wilson.

However, Wilson was surprised to find that over 20 vacant properties in the district that had previously been sealed by police had since been burglarized.

He expects to see similar vacant properties in the 18th and 12th districts. Police will return to the properties to seal them again, he added.

Though Penn's campus is situated in the 18th District, students living off-campus did not have police officials knocking on their doors last night.

According to Vice President for Public Safety Maureen Rush, Penn is not one of the “hotspots.”

“That is the beauty of Penn Police,” she said. “We are like a boutique police department.”

DPS and the PPD both believe in the effectiveness of community policing.

Aside from handing out literature and educating citizens of new programs during the blitz, PPD is mainly trying to make the community feel more comfortable with its local police force.

Wilson said the volunteers and officers were very well received at residents' homes. “Everyone was very happy to see us,” he said.

According to Rush, any form of community policing can help “break down the walls that get in the way of the community speaking with the police department.”

“Some people have problems and they are afraid to come forward,” Penn Police Captain Joseph Fischer said.

There are several ways in which DPS reaches out to the Penn community in the same way PPD is reaching out to West Philadelphia residents. For instance, DPS has liaison programs for college houses and fraternity and sorority houses so that each house has an assigned officer.

According to College sophomore Lina Bader, Penn Walk is also a resource that creates a relationship between students and police and, in turn, a more secure environment.

“[Penn Walk] gives me peace of mind when I have other things to worry about,” she said. “Similarly, I think the ‘quality-of-life blitz' is a strong step forward to make Philly residents more at ease. Once I learned I could trust the Penn officials, I felt much safer.”

http://www.thedp.com/article/2012/09/philadelphia-police-department-tries-more-personal-policing-strategy
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