Several Adventure residents requested a meeting last Wednesday with the Chief to discuss specifics about the robbery. The meeting was held but the Chief was not there, delegating the meeting to subordinates. Among other outcomes, the Chief promised to circulate a flier to the Treasure Island houses warning about the break in and soliciting information. The Chief reiterated that promise to me in person last Thursday. And then didn't do it. Instead, three cop cars parked on North Treasure Drive and Hispanola for about an hour and handed out fliers randomly to passing motorists.
The materials last night consisted of a cribbed Power Point from Neighborhood Watch Miami. The chief had obviously not even read it. (News flash: Neighborhood Watch has been around 40 years, not 30. source: the materials handed out.) and spent most of the time riffing. There was no organized presentation, no clear steps to the process, just some general advice about locks. And for those of you thinking about following the Chief's advice to get a double cylinder lock, they do help reduce break-ins but make sure there's never a fire in your house because, you know, looking for the key in smoke and flames is hard. That's why double cylinder locks are against code in many states. But I'm sure you'll be fine.
The Chief also explained that vehicle burglaries are because people don't lock their cars. Seriously? People leave their cars unlocked? Must be because the chief said in 99.9% of vehicle thefts, that was the case. I guess the .01% was the car stolen on Adventure last Monday where the house was invaded and the keys taken. Remember?
Know what else the chief is committed to? The PAL, which he suspended without notice two years ago and has yet to reinstate, in spite of it being funded and there being community support for the program. Daniels has said many times that he is committed to the PAL but has never acted on it. So what does "committed" mean?
Here's the something the Law Enforcement Trust Fund laid out for. Last year, the Chief took $5,000 from it to attend something called the "Seven Isles Police Chief's Dinner" which was sponsored by the police chief in Bal Harbour. A nice dinner I'd imagine. You may have followed how that use of the LETF money in Bal Harbour has gone.
Let's get back to the money spent on investigating our own police officers. The only outcome of what is sure to exceed $500,000 has been to establish that the arbitrator doesn't trust our officers testimony. We had to lay off two good cops to pay for this arbitration. Yet the legal bills are mounting up for the second case, also bound to lose, while the cops we've known for years are kept away from the community.
There is no PAL, our emergency community communications, no outreach to elderly and disabled, and no Neighborhood Watch programs. Instead, the money is spent irresponsibly for routine management issues elevated to court battles. The police didn't even distribute a simple flier while our police station is hidden from view and our police cars are kept in a derelict lot in full public view..
North Bay Village has seen rocky times but through it all, the one thing we could count on were cops who engaged with the community. That's no longer true.
Maybe Daniels will be forced to create a Neighborhood Watch. Maybe he'll stop the politicking and start the managing. Maybe he'll put the police back in the community. But I'm not betting on it.
Kevin Vericker
December 28, 2012