Winfield |
Paul Bass of the New Haven Independent is keeping a body count.
And the year’s total
body count for the city that has given us Yale, two nationwide recognized pizza
houses, the inimitable Roger Sherman, and William Celentano, a funeral director
and the first Italian-American mayor of New Haven -- indeed, the last
Republican mayor elected in New Haven 68 years ago – is 21.
“There have been 21
homicides in New Haven this year,” NBC
Connecticut reports. “Twenty
murders were reported citywide in 2020, according to statistics from the New
Haven Police Department” – and we have about 3 months left to close out the
year.”
It promises to be a record
year, not only for new Haven but for all major cities in Connecticut.
The New Haven
Independent, whose reporting on murders in New Haven has been more granular
than some might wish, tells us the latest shooting victim is Trequon Lawrence, 27
years old, employed by Yale New Haven Hospital, and a new home owner.
“I purchased my
first multi-family dwelling,” Lawrence wrote on Facebook. “Truly blessed and
highly favored. Yet this is a bitter sweet time in my life. As some of you may
know I lost my baby girl a few weeks back. And in all honesty she was my
motivation for buying the house. When she left a piece of me left with her.
Nonetheless I still had to make this move toward putting my family in a better
position. In life we will experience many highs and many lows. But without the
lows we can’t truly appreciate the highs. I am GRATEFUL overall and will
continue to strive for greatness in light of my daughter.”
Lawrence was shot
eight times. The shooting occurred, the publication noted, “down the street
from the home of State Sen. Gary Winfield,” who “observed afterwards that the
police department has not been giving the public much information about what’s
behind this year’s flood of shootings.”
Contacted for
comment by the publication, Winfield said, “My experience over a couple of
decades is that you don’t get the intimate details of the shooting itself. But
you get, ‘This is what we’re seeing. We’re seeing these are isolated
incidents.’ Or: ‘They’re related to gangs or cliques’ … You get some kind of
trending information to give some sense of what is actually happening,’
Winfield said.”
Sure, sure. The
causes of shootings in New Haven this year are not materially different than
the previous year, and the year before that, and the two decades before that.
Even so, the accumulative
data apparently is not sufficient to allow the General Assembly to remediate city
shootings through legislation.
“While the police
need to keep certain details about individual shootings confidential while they
investigate,” the publication noted, “in the past they have communicated more
about what’s behind outbreaks of violence, Winfield said. He argued that
officials and the community can’t craft an effective response without more
information.”
The notice posted on
Dante’s Gates of Hell was, “Abandon hope, all ye who enter here.” Things are
not quite that bad in New Haven. The state delegation, Winfield said, has
“reached out to the mayor to have a conversation about what has been going on.
In order to tackle the problem we need to know what is actually happening. People
in the city have fear. Some of that is born from what is going on. Some of that
is born from a lack of information.”
New Haven has had a surfeit
of insouciant Democrat politicians over the last 60 years, but Winfield’s
indifference to a murder in his city that occurred “down the street from
his home” is a high bar to surmount.
Whatever can
Winfield mean when he says he lacks the proper data from New Haven police to
fashion an answering piece of legislation – other than that legislation for
which Winfield is best known: a bill that withdraws from all police officers in
the state a partial immunity from suits that would allow plaintiffs
to seize the personal assets of police officers in Connecticut? The removal of protective immunity in Winfield's signature bill, some have argued, likely contributed to a drop-off in urban police recruitment, and a flight from urban areas to the suburbs by city police officers, this at a time when New Haven’s murder rate is growing by
leaps and bounds.
Following an
affirmative vote on the Winfield bill, police chiefs warned, “There is not and cannot be an
alternative to this for any police officer or agency. We strongly believe that
the loss of qualified immunity will destroy our ability to recruit, hire, and retain
qualified police officers both now and in the foreseeable future. We are also
very concerned about losing our current personnel at a higher rate than we
normally can replace. Any impact on our ability to recruit qualified personnel
in general will also impact our minority recruitment efforts, which is a goal
in this bill that we strongly support.”
Any of the survivors of the relatives of victims listed by the New Haven Independent in its granular coverage of New Haven murders doubtless would appreciate a clear answer to the above question?
Surely it is the
greater part of Winfield’s obligation as a State Senator to fix his attention
on murders that occur right under his nose and to propose legislative fixes
that really do fix the problem.
Comments
But how can that be? People don't kill people, guns kill people. We are constantly told how inherently dangerous they are. They escape the gun safe, load themselves, and discharge willy-nilly killing innocent people.
Recently, the CT Citizens Defense League sued big cities like New Haven for dragging out the statutorily defined 60 day pistol permit process to 7 or 8 months if at all. In a news conference, poor New Haven Mayor Justin Elicker was upset about having to use valuable city resources to fight the suit. In that same news conference, he tried to defend the illegal permit processes by equating good folks trying to play by the rules and get their permit as a contributing factor to violent crime rate in the city. The uninformed and hoplophobe alike will nod their collective bobble heads in agreement I am sure.