Wednesday, August 29, 2012

The show is about to start...

Its football weather again and in Greenville that means Pirates. 

It's also downtown weather again and in Greenville that means college students and out-of-town visitors at downtown restaurants and nightclubs into the early hours of the morning.  

For those people who visit Greenville's downtown district, here are a few tips on how to safely enjoy the businesses, atmosphere, and show that is the weekend in a college-oriented town:

  • Please do not binge drink:  Moderation is the key to enjoying yourself and your friends
  • Lock your cars and remove anything that appears valuable:  There are those people who will walk along testing for unlocked cars and things to steal.  Don't be a victim
  • Bring a friend:  By using the buddy system you can watch out for each other and keep each other safe
  • Obey the rules:  Please listen and obey any directions given to you by law enforcement.   If you are not old enough to legally buy alcohol, please don't attempt it.   Alcohol Law Enforcement and ABC officers will be concentrating on nightclubs and underage sales, and Greenville Police officers will be enforcing the laws, too.
The Police Department will again be employing its downtown deployment plan, which is intended to create and maintain a safe environment for visitors by establishing public behavior expectations.  That means if you break the rules, you can expect to get a ticket.  

Police officers will be patrolling the downtown area on foot and in cars trying to keep things safe for all of us.  The Greenville Police Department wants visitors to enjoy the people and atmosphere that is part of Greenville.  But when the nightclubs and restaurants close,  then it's time to go home.  Please do not loiter about on the sidewalks and in the parking lots after hours. 

If you are blocking the sidewalk or standing in the streets, police officers may approach you and ask you to move along, because things can get pretty crowded and people need to be able to move about on the sidewalks.  Hanging out in the parking lots can create problems, so please don't loiter.

There is a lot to see downtown, and people watching can be quite a show.   It's great to watch the show, but you don't want to be a star in that show, if you know what I mean...


Monday, August 27, 2012

A quiet week in lake wobegon...

Here is a summary of last week for those of you who missed it:  

On Thursday August 23, the Traffic Safety Unit conducted another all out effort to enforce traffic safety laws.  The TSU worked the intersection of East 14th Street & Greenville Blvd and wrote 113 traffic tickets in an 8-hour period.  The TSU will conduct enforcement again this week, on Thursday, concentrating on the residential subdivisions.  We emphasize the goal of these enforcement efforts is to gain voluntary compliance with traffic safety laws.

On Friday August 24, police investigated the report of larceny from Kohl's Department Store.  2 suspects stole $339 worth of tennis shoes.  Officer R. O'Brien has obtained an arrest warrant for Shaun Dontrell Cratch in the case.  He was seen putting several pairs of shoes down into his pants.  His female accomplice concealed shoes in her purse.  Cratch will be arrested soon.

On Saturday afternoon August 25, officers from C-Platoon responded to the report of a man exposing himself to children in a local shopping center.  Parents and witnesses chased the man through the area until police arrived.   Officers set up a perimeter and used a police dog to find the man hiding in woods near Lynndale subdivision.  He is 58 year old Edward E. Watson from Washington, NC.  He was charged with indecent exposure and taken to jail.

On Sunday morning August 26, officers responded to the River's Edge Apartment complex in reference to a mental commitment.  Officers have dealt with this person in the past.  In this particular incident, the young man was damaging property and cutting himself.  Police had to use a non-lethal taser to subdue him and get him to the hospital.

Friday, August 24, 2012

It's more than a sign...

Community Watch is neighbors looking out for each other.

We all have busy lives. Between soccer and football and dance and gymnastics: between school and work and church and grocery shopping: between the doctor and the dentist, tweeting, facebook, barnes & nobles, Judge Judy and Modern Family, who has time to be the neighborhood watch block captain?

A community watch doesn't have to be a complicated thing.

Get to know your next-door neighbors.  Get to know the neighbors across the street.  Watch out for them, and let them watch out for you.  Those are the basic practices of Community Watch, and that is really all it takes to have an effective community watch program for your neighborhood.

You and your neighbors are the people who know what is happening on your street and in your neighborhood.  By cooperating with each other, you can fight crime and make our community safer.

Community Watch is more than just a sign

By watching out for each other and by calling the police whenever you see something that doesn't seem right, you can reduce the criminal's opportunity to commit crimes.

The Greenville Police Department wants to help you.  We offer home security surveys designed to help you make your community a tougher target for thieves.  We will come to your house and check your home while you are away.   We will help you meet and greet your neighbors and get your Community Watch started.

Remember, criminals will go to places where people don't pay attention to them.  Like cockroaches, they will scatter and run when the light shines on them.

Call the Greenville Police Department at 252-329-4372 for help getting your Community Watch started.



  

Friday, August 17, 2012



Check out our archive photos  on the Greenville Police Department's FaceBook Page, when you get the chance.


Here's the web-link:



Welcome back...

Welcome back students to Greenville and East Carolina University.   As you begin your 2012-13 school year, please take a moment to consider a few safety tips:

1.  Call the Police first.   Too often students will text a friend and tell them about a problem, then call the police.   The Greenville Police Department is here to help and protect you.    Call the Police First, whenever you see or experience a problem relating to your safety.  Ask the police officers to meet with you so you can tell them about the problem face to face.

2.  Use the buddy system.   Find and get to know your friends and look out for each other.  Keep each other safe.

3.  Lock your apartment every time you leave, including your windows.  Close your blinds.   Too many college-age people leave their apartments unlocked at all hours of the day, for all kinds of reasons.  Thieves know this, and they go around apartment areas just pulling on door handles to see what's open.

4.  If you're at a party and it seems to be getting out of hand,  leave immediately.  Don't try to get involved in a lot of drama at a party.  Alcohol and drama at parties is like gasoline on a fire sometimes.   

5.  Take turns being the designated driver or sober friend.  Somebody needs to be in charge and be watching out for the group.

6.  Never, Never, Never accept rides from strangers.    College students seem to trust everybody, and unfortunately we can't trust everybody in today's world.

7.  Lock your car and remove book bags, GPS units and other electronics, and anything that  may even appear valuable.  Thieves love to break into cars..especially unlocked ones.

8.  Don't let strangers into your apartment.   We all want to believe in the good of others, but unfortunately,  not everyone has the same good-intentions as we do.  Please don't invite strangers into your home.

9.  Get to know your Apartment Manager.   Report any maintenance problems to them promptly and get them to fix things like exterior lighting, broken locks, overgrown bushes, etc..

10.   Please don't binge drink.  You are much more likely to become a victim if you are drunk or under the influence of some impairing substance.

We at the Greenville Police Department want you to have a great school year.  Enjoy your college experiences.  Meet new friends.  Learn and grow.  

Old granddad used to tell me,  "A college education is something that nobody can ever take away from you."   Grand-dad was right..

Stay safe.


Thursday, August 16, 2012

Thirsty thursday...

The Greenville Police Department's Traffic Safety Unit has been out in force today.  As previously advertised on this blog and in press releases from the Department,  the TSU will be doing concentrated enforcement at selected streets and intersections from time-to-time.   Today the TSU is concentrating on SW Greenville Blvd and Memorial Drive.  They've been going strong since before 8am, and from the steady radio traffic, it sounds like they are writing a LOT of tickets.

Traffic tickets aren't the objective of this job, though.  The Greenville Police Department stresses voluntary compliance by the motoring public with our traffic safety laws.  With the return of students at East Carolina University and Pitt Community College, and with the public schools about ready to begin their fall semester,  obediance to the traffic laws is so very important to the safety of all of us.   

Every so often we see and hear news reports of terrible car crashes,  sometimes fatal ones.  

The Greenville Police Department asks our community to please slow down.  Ease back off from that car in front of you.  Don't try to beat that red light.  Wear your seatbelt.  Drive defensively and watch out for pedestrians, motorcycles, and other drivers.

Let's stay safe out there.  


Monday, August 13, 2012

In the act...


Between 3 and 4am Monday morning, August 13, 2012 Greenville Patrol Officers from A-Platoon caught and arrested 2 suspects who were actively breaking into cars at South Square Apartments.   Prior to this,  on the same night, patrol officers found a man attempting to break into the Trade-Wilco Gas Station on SW Greenville Blvd.  That man, too, was caught and arrested.

Catching suspects "in flagrante delicto" is relatively unusual.  It can be a combination of timing, alertness,  and some luck.  But it is always rewarding for a police officer to have prevented a crime and captured a criminal.

Too often, officers arrive to the scene of a crime after an event has occurred.  As for preventing crimes, one can never know how many offenses are truly prevented by timely patrols, traffic stops or business checks.

Sixty years ago this week,  on August 16, 1952,   Greenville Police Officer Jesse E. Mills was checking businesses on his assigned beat when he came on 2 men breaking in to the New Deal Cleaners on Dickinson Avenue.

Officer Mills found a ladder pushed up against the building.  One man was on top the roof.  Another was hidden inside a doorway.   As Officer Mills found and confronted the 2 men, one of them pulled a revolver and shot Officer Mills at least 3 times from near point blank range.  

Officer Jesse Mills became the first Greenville Police Officer to be felonously killed in the line of duty.  When his body was found,  he was still wearing his cap and glasses.  His pistol was a lying few feet away.  His flashlight was in his hand, still shining.

A week long manhunt finally located and identified the 2 men who murdered Officer Jesse Mills.  They had come to Greenville earlier that day from Jacksonville and their car had broken down.   The 2 had just previously broken into another laundromat and their attempt at breaking into the New Deal Cleaners appears to have been done in order to get money to fix their broken car.

The men were convicted of murder and sentenced to long prison terms.  

To catch a criminal in the act requires being in the right place at the right time.  But as the death of Officer Jesse Mills clearly demonstrates,  there is also a chance of being in the wrong place at the wrong time. 

.   

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

hang up and drive...


The Greenville Police Traffic Safety Unit is focusing on speed limit and traffic safety enforcement this week in the following areas:
  • W. Arlington Blvd between W. 5th Street and Memorial Drive
  • Firetower Road between S. Evans Street and E. Arlington Blvd
  • N. Memorial Drive between the Tar River and the intersection with Hwy 903.
Please slow down and obey your traffic rules and regulations.  Our goal is voluntary compliance with traffic safety laws, so everyone travels and arrives safely at their destination.

Please avoid distracted driving!   Unmarked cars and motorcycle units are alert for drivers who text or use handheld devices while trying to drive at the same time.


Remember, you may save a life by slowing down and by paying attention to your driving instead of looking at a smart phone. 

You may also avoid a ticket.

Monday, August 6, 2012

In and out...

The Greenville Police Department arrests enough people each year to fill up the Pitt County Detention Center 10 times.   More than 5,000 people. 

What happens to all these people after thay are convicted and sentenced?   Many of them convicted of non-violent crimes are  given credit for their time already served in jail waiting for trial.  They are then released.  They may be ordered to pay a fine, or they may be ordered to serve probation,  either supervised or unsupervised.    Some of these people served short sentences in the local jail, and are then released to serve time on probation.  

Those persons covicted of violent crimes, or some repeat offenders, may be sentenced to serve more time in prison.  They are then often transported to a State-run prison facility somewhere in the State of NC,  depending upon where a facility may have open space and depending on what type of crime and level of security is needed for that particular person.

As fast as people are being put into jail,   it is important for the public to remember there are just as many people being released from jail,  and they are coming out and coming back to our community, just about as fast as the others are going in.

The average person can find out who is being released from prison by searching the North Carolina Department of Corrections Website. 

This is the web link:    http://www.doc.state.nc.us/

On that website is a another link to search "Inmate Releases."  Any person can search this link and find out who has been released back into their community.   Using this website, we found that 47 offenders were released back to Pitt County in July 2012.  Almost everyone who was released had completed their required prison sentence.  Beside the name of each person being released is listed the crimes for which they were jailed.

A quick search tells us that on average about 50 people are released to Pitt County each month.  Pitt  County is only 1 of 100 counties in North Carolina.

What is truly unfortunate about the release information is the fact that many of these people are repeat offenders and will return to prison again.  But that is a topic for another day.

As a side note,  there is also a link on the NC DOC website about the death penalty in NC, with listings and details about nearly every person on death row, and the death penalty in NC.  

A person can learn a lot of stuff on the internet.







Friday, August 3, 2012

Today's history lesson...

Sir Robert Peel
In 1829 the Home Secretary of Great Britain, Sir Robert Peel, created the first police force for London.  These constables were soon nicknamed, "Bobbies."  And they are still called that today.

Peel later became the British Prime Minister in the mid 1830s.

With an interest in the law, Sir Peel also established his nine principles of policing, which i have listed below.  As we examine these principles, we find they have not become outdated even in the 21st century.  Perhaps they are more relevant than ever in today's world.

As you read and consider these  principles, think about events and issues regarding modern policing.  Consider the emphasis being placed on the concept of Community-Oriented Policing.  Reflect on the importantance of community partnerships, and building relationships between your police department and your community members.

I think you will see that Sir Robert Peel was a dang smart fellow.
 1 - “The basic mission for which the police exist is to prevent crime and disorder.”
 2 - The ability of the police to perform their duties is dependent upon public approval of police actions.”
 3 - Police must secure the willing co-operation of the public in voluntary observance of the law to be able to secure and maintain the respect of the public.”
4 - The degree of co-operation of the public that can be secured diminishes proportionately to the necessity of the use of physical force.” 
 5 - Police seek and preserve public favour not by catering to the public opinion but by constantly demonstrating absolute impartial service to the law.” 
6 - “Police use physical force to the extent necessary to secure observance of the law or to restore order only when the exercise of persuasion, advice and warning is found to be insufficient.” 
 7 - “Police, at all times, should maintain a relationship with the public that gives reality to the historic tradition that the police are the public and the public are the police; the police being only members of the public who are paid to give full-time attention to duties which are incumbent on every citizen in the interests of community welfare and existence.” 
 8 - “Police should always direct their action strictly towards their functions and never appear to usurp the powers of the judiciary.”
9 - “The test of police efficiency is the absence of crime and disorder, not the visible evidence of police action in dealing with it.”

Thursday, August 2, 2012

For the children...


The Greenville Police Department Police Athletic League (PAL) chapter was recently awarded a grant from the Greenville Noon Rotary Club in the amount of $1,500. 

This grant money will fund the annual PAL Shop With A Cop event, which is an outreach event where Greenville Police Officers take underprivileged and at-risk children back to school shopping for their school uniforms.  

Shop With A Cop will take place on Saturday August 4, beginning at 7:00 am, with a breakfast for the children donated by the Chick-Fil-A restaurant at University Commons Shopping Center. 

The Greenville PAL program will partner with the Salvation Army and select 30 kids to go shopping for their 2012-13 school uniforms at JC Penney’s in the Greenville Mall.  Members of the Greenville Noon Rotary Club will also participate.


JC Penney’s will open their doors early especially for the children involved in this outreach event. 


Shop With A Cop is an annual event that has been in effect for 3 years.  Meghan Butler is the PAL program coordinator for the Greenville Police Department.  For more  information, contact Meghan at 252-329-4384.

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Pay attention when you hear it...

We've seen it on TV and heard it on the radio, but what is an AMBER Alert and how does it work?

Most people know the AMBER Alert is an announcement in the media about a missing or abducted child.   Did you know the word, AMBER is an acronym for America's Missing: Broadcast Emergency Response?  The acronym was created to honor a third-grader named Amber Hagerman, who was kidnapped and killed in 1996 while riding her bicycle in front of her grandparents' home in Arlington, Texas.

The North Carolina Department of Crime Control and Public Safety administers NC's AMBER Alert program, through the NC Center of Missing Persons.  The program was established in 2002.  NC's first AMBER Alert was issued for an abducted infant in Charlotte, who was taken during a vehicle theft in August, 2003.  The child was located and recovered safely.

From time-to-time,  parents of runaway teenagers request that police issue an AMBER Alert for their child.  Due to the nature of the AMBER Alert program and submission criteria, runaways are not eligible to be considered for AMBER Alert notifications.

In order to issue an AMBER Alert, the follow circumstances must exist:
  1. The child must be 17 years old or younger
  2. You must believe the child was abducted
  3. The child cannot have been taken by a parent, unless the child's life is in danger
  4. The child is not a runaway or missing voluntarily
  5. You must have filed a report with your local law enforcement
The North Carolina Center for Missing Persons is the only agency that can activate an AMBER Alert.  It will do so only at the request of  a law enforcement agency.

Before an AMBER Alert is issued, the Center  will determine whether there is sufficient information to justify AMBER Alert activation. For instance, there must be sufficient descriptive information on the child, and on the abductor and/or abductor's vehicle. This is required in order for the public to be on the lookout for something. It does no good to activate an AMBER Alert if there is insufficient information available to the public. 

Furthermore,  if AMBER Alerts were activated every time a juvenile went missing or ran away from home, there would be hundreds of alerts  out there and they would likely lose their sense of urgency and effectivenes.   

Because the criteria for issuing an AMBER Alert is so stringent, It is important for the public to know that when they hear an AMBER Alert being broadcast, then there is sufficient information and evidence to believe the child is in real danger, and the person who is suspected of abducting the child is a signifcant threat to child's life.

 It can be difficult to tell a parent who's child is missing that no AMBER Alert can be broadcast for them, but the AMBER Alert system is effective because it is not over-used, or abused.

In 2011,  the NC Center for Missing Persons issued 12 AMBER Alerts.  In each case, the child was recovered safely.