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Key Pen’s ‘low’ crime rates:
Statistics don’t tell the whole story
By Irene Torres
KP News
Crime
statistics for the Key Peninsula on file with the Pierce
County Sheriff’s department are low compared to the rest
of the county. One factor that seems to keep the
statistics low is the work of neighborhoods
collaborating with agencies like Safe Streets,
Neighborhood Watch, the Sheriff’s, and Citizens Against
Crime (CAC).
To help
neighborhoods take the necessary steps to protect their
properties, the Pierce County Sheriff’s office has
established a program called Neighborhood Action Teams
(NAT). No less than 11 KP teams have been formed,
including Key Peninsula, Bond Beach, Crescent Beach,
Horseshoe Lake, Key Peninsula Lutheran Church, Lake
Holiday, Palmer Lake, Lake of the Woods, Morningside,
Sunshine Beach, and Taylor Bay.
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For more information about forming a
Neighborhood Action Team, or to view crime
statistics for your neighborhood, visit
www.piercecountycrimedata.org. |
At the
Palmer Lake community, crime deterrent efforts are
paying off, according to local residents. Barbara Waller
told the KP News, “We work with various groups. We have
no formal crime watch but combine the best of all
forums, and it seems to work for us. Rick Lingle of
Palmer Lake is the new CAC president and is also a
member of the Key Pen Crime Task Force. He is a member
of the Palmer Lake Improvement Club and passes all
information to this group. Rich Holden and Emily Watson,
Community Service Officer with the Pierce County
Sheriff’s Department, are active in our community.”
Watson
said, “The NAT is about getting to know your neighbors
and interacting with the residents of the neighborhood,
causing suspicious people and activities to stand out.
The residents are then able to report the suspicious
activities and people to law enforcement and ultimately
reduce crime. This program allows neighborhoods to
report their physical boundaries to the Sheriff’s
Department, generating monthly reports showing only
crimes within the neighborhood instead of the half-mile
radius from an address within the neighborhood. The NAT
is qualified to purchase signs for posting, alerting the
public of their organized group.”
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Any emergency calls should be directed to
911.
For a non-emergency, to report a crime that
has
already occurred, or to speak with an
on-duty
deputy, call (253) 798-4721 and choose
option 1 when the the recording begins.
To report illegal drug activity in your
neighborhood,
you can telephone the hotline at
(253)798-7537,
or call Crime Stoppers at (253)591-5959. Or
make an online report
here.
To see a summary of Key Peninsula Crime
Statistics
from 2005 and 2006, click
here. |
Waller
said they pass information on all activities ranging
from speeders’ license plate numbers, to houses that
have a lot of traffic. “We also provide periodic lists
of suspect houses to our community liaisons with the
Sheriff’s Department (Bryan Ward and Dave Plummer), who
patrol at the expense of the Palmer Lake Beach Club on
their off hours,” she said. “As a result of this we have
closed one major meth house and removed at least two
drug house inhabitants from our area. We have also
installed security lights in areas where there seems to
be the most activity. We did this as a result of input
from the community liaisons.”
Patricia
Latshaw, president of the CAC/Citizens’ Patrol said CAC
members are the “eyes and ears” for the sheriff’s
department. “If we hear or know of a problem area, we
alert the (Peninsula) detachment. This summer there was
a lot of construction site burglary and those
contractors either took all their equipment home each
night or had someone stay on site to watch,” she said.
“A lot of theft on the Key is related to meth use.
However, this is decreasing as new construction comes in
and more people are made aware of what to watch for.”
Another
factor in the apparent low crime rate on the KP seems to
be underreporting. For years, the response by the
sheriff’s department to the Key Pen was slow and
officer-coverage was sparse. Now, with 24-hour coverage,
county records show response times have improved.
Lt. Larry
Bauer, the head of the Peninsula Detachment, wrote in a
message posted on the detachment’s Website, “Keep in
mind that there is a difference between (the statistics
reported) and the actual numbers of crimes that occur in
our communities. Not all crimes get reported to law
enforcement. There are a lot of reasons for this, but
the one I hear most often is, ‘I don’t call 911 because
your officers never respond.’ As you might expect, this
is the last thing that I want to hear. If crime is not
reported, it makes it look like crime levels are lower
than they actually are. My deputy staffing levels are
partially dependent upon the number of crimes reported
in our detachment each year. Each time a citizen decides
to not call to report a crime, it hurts the entire
community. So please report crimes when they occur.”
Last
summer, incidents of car prowls occurred in several
neighborhoods, as car stereo systems were targeted.
Watson said that during the period of June 1 to Aug. 31,
the detachment received 2,269 calls for service, 13 of
which were for vehicle prowls.
“The
detachment received 78 calls for service for vehicle
prowls for the unincorporated areas of Pierce County
west of the Narrows Bridge,” she said. Of those, 33
reports were taken to document the crime. Areas affected
by multiple incidents include the State Route 16/State
Route 302 interchange area and SR-16 near the west side
of the Narrows Bridge area. The 78 recorded incidents
only include those reported … by the victim. If the
victim failed to call the sheriff, it is not recorded as
a crime. The victim may think the value was
insignificant, (or that) there is no chance of catching
the perpetrator or (that) law enforcement doesn’t care.
We cannot factor unreported crimes into our trend watch
and cannot account for how unreported crimes affect a
trend we are monitoring.”
Long
driveways, dark roads, and heavily forested areas make
it difficult to keep a vigilant watch for criminal
activities. Stories have been circulating about Vaughn
homes with their front doors kicked in, with nothing
apparently missing. In November, a rash of vandalism was
reported to the KP News by resident Troy Erwin. At least
30 mailboxes were destroyed near Carney Lake, off
Wright-Bliss Road, on three different streets, according
to Erwin.
“From the
look of the damage, it appears they used a 2-inch metal
pipe,” to damage and knock the boxes off their posts, he
said. “My mailbox was completely destroyed, but five
mailboxes in the same vicinity were not damaged, which
might give an indication (the vandals) know someone in
the neighborhood.”
A couple
living across the street, “who don’t miss a thing,”
according to Erwin, “didn’t see them and they didn’t
hear their dogs bark.” He added, “We learned a long time
ago, if we want to get our important mail, we need a
post office box.” Erwin is offering $100 toward a reward
for information leading to the arrest and conviction of
those responsible, and he said he hopes that reward fund
can grow through other contributions.
In other
incidents, batches of stolen mail found roadside, under
brush in a ditch, were returned to the Vaughn Post
Office for investigation and delayed delivery. Mail
theft is a felony under Federal Title 18 Section 1708,
punishable by fines and/or not more than five years
imprisonment.
Watson
noted, “The detachment reviews all calls for service on
a daily basis and receives monthly reports from the
Pierce County Sheriff’s Department’s Crime Analysis
Unit. We are constantly monitoring to determine any
trends we can curtail.”
If the
detachment notices a trend, the active community groups
and neighborhoods in the vicinity are contacted and
informed about the trend, so they can spread the alert.
The detachment also offers an electronic peninsula-wide
alert system for notification of incidents occurring
within its jurisdiction that may affect many residents
living in this area. Residents can sign up for that
email notification by clicking on the “My Account” link
at www.co.pierce.wa.us. The Peninsula Detachment
Website, www.co.pierce.wa.us/pc/Abtus/ourorg/sheriff/peninsula.htm
has complete instructions.
©Copyright 2005-2008, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
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