Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had the same thought- she doesn’t seem to have any experience leading an actual urban police force. But I’ll withhold judgment for now.
The vast majority of the park police are in major cities - DC, Philly, Boston. The "law enforcement rangers" in big wilderness parks are not park police.
Oh, well, as long as she was stopping teenagers from fornicating in a park that was in a major city….
You do know that big city cops do this all Friday and Saturday night?
Anonymous wrote:DC now has about the same number of homicides this year as Baltimore. Do you think Baltimore would put a park ranger in charge of its police force?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had the same thought- she doesn’t seem to have any experience leading an actual urban police force. But I’ll withhold judgment for now.
The vast majority of the park police are in major cities - DC, Philly, Boston. The "law enforcement rangers" in big wilderness parks are not park police.
Oh, well, as long as she was stopping teenagers from fornicating in a park that was in a major city….
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At least in Washington DC, the US Park Police and the uniformed Secret Service have no problem with hot pursuit of violent crime suspects, including for crimes that do not occur on federal land. Thanks to the "Latte Liberal" caucus on the DC Council, MPD is not permitted to do the same and has to rely on the assistance of the Park Police and USSS. Hopefully the new chief will bring not just her working relationships but also some moxie to the job.
Correct. I don't want MPD flying down DC streets at 100 mph and putting pedestrian and cyclist lives at risk when they can go get these clowns later without dangerous street chases.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Park Police does a great job shooing people indoors when lightning is within a certain radius. I’m sure those skills carry over to policing a crime-ridden city.
If the city is that crime ridden, you could just move on. The rest of us actually understand city living & crime go together due to broken window policies and the actions due to white forefathers which have a trickle down effect.
Love how if one white guy from ward 3 gets hurt riding his bike on Connecticut avenue, we have to turn out transportation policy upside down because our goal is supposed to be no one ever gets hurt.
But 30,000 mostly black crime victims every year? Oh well, what can you do? That’s city living for ya
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wasn’t there a whole season of The Wire about how park police were the baddest cops around?
It's been more than 20 years since that show debuted. Perhaps time to Let It Go.
Do not EVER ask me to give up Idris Elba.
Truth.
Also? Baltimore hasn’t changed one iota since The Wire premiered The corruption, the crime, the abysmal schools, the abandoned row houses. The occasional federal bust when the local pols just get too corrupty
That show is still very much on point, because Baltimore is still a dystopian hellscape with squeegee boys
And there was one figure who struck fear in the hearts of Stringer, Avon and everyone else: the park police
Anonymous wrote:
Ah yes, another in a continuing series of posts entitled "Everything Is Actually About Bike Lanes."
Anonymous wrote:
The glimmer of hope I have for the new chief is I have to believe that Bowser recognizes how bad things will get for her of crime and public safety don’t improve.
Anonymous wrote:At least in Washington DC, the US Park Police and the uniformed Secret Service have no problem with hot pursuit of violent crime suspects, including for crimes that do not occur on federal land. Thanks to the "Latte Liberal" caucus on the DC Council, MPD is not permitted to do the same and has to rely on the assistance of the Park Police and USSS. Hopefully the new chief will bring not just her working relationships but also some moxie to the job.