Surf City still safe?
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Jose Paul Corona
The same city that boasted no murders in the past two years has
now seen three fatal shootings and one near-fatal shooting in the
same neighborhood in the past six months. All three brutal deaths are
believed to be gang related, police said.
While this 300% jump in the murder rate may be alarming to
Huntington Beach residents, police say it does not indicate a rise in
crime in Surf City.
“It’s an anomaly, it really is,” said Huntington Beach Police
Department Lt. JB Hume, who is charge of the gang unit that patrols
the Oakview neighborhood where all four young men were shot.
Murders rock a city
Shock enveloped the city when Oscar Gaytan, 18 and Heriberto Tapia
Vasquez, 16, were murdered in the early morning hours of May 11 in
the Oakview neighborhood.
The killings broke the city’s nearly three-year streak without a
homicide. They were the first since the murder of Bridgette Ballas, a
29-year-old Calvin Klein account executive, who was found raped and
bludgeoned to death on Nov. 27, 1999. Police arrested 23-year-old
Victor Miranda-Guerrero for that crime.
Although the person responsible for the brutal slayings of Gaytan
and Vasquez has yet to be caught, police have identified a suspect
and issued a no bail arrest warrant for Juan Jose Meza on June 26.
Police feel that it is only a matter of time before he is caught.
On May 28 another young boy, this time a minor, was critically
wounded when he was shot in the chest in an intersection of that same
neighborhood. Witnesses reported seeing a maroon Cadillac driving
westbound on Warner Avenue after the shooting, police said.
Then, on July 29, 19-year-old Ernest Duarte was found shot to
death in an alley in the Oakview neighborhood. Police thought, this
too, was gang related and said they believed that Duarte was in a
gang.
While the investigation into his death is still ongoing police are
no longer sure that it was gang related, Hume said.
“It may not be gang related, we have not been able to prove that
it’s gang related,” Hume said. “If it was gang related it would be
obvious.”
Crime on the decline
Despite these horrific shootings, police contend that gang
activity and crime are not on the rise. In fact, Hume says, crime
rates have dropped.
“Overall, crime, with the exception of the murders, has gone down
steadily for the past three years,” he said. “Across the board,
either [crime] is the same or it’s down.”
Police are not the only ones who seem unconcerned about the rising
murder rate.
“I would tend to agree with [police],” Councilwoman Shirley
Dettloff said. “I think that they were isolated incidents.”
Experts in gang activity at UC Irvine also agree with police.
Cheryl Maxson, a professor of criminology, law and society at UCI
said that a rise in murders is not indicative of a pattern.
“Four is a very small number,” she said. “Typically I caution
people not to make a trend out of it.”
Gang homicide studies conducted in larger cities with a bigger
gang presence indicate that gang murders are not particularly planned
and they generally don’t have anything to do with gang issues, Maxson
said. Ronald Huff, a professor of Criminology, Law and Society and
dean of UC Irvine’s School of Social Ecology agreed with Maxson’s
assessment.
“Just because gang members are involved, doesn’t mean it’s gang
motivated,” he said. “[And] just because we have unfortunate tragic
incidents doesn’t mean that there’s a trend.”
People only need to look at the stock market to see that there can
be significant kinds of swings in patterns. This is particularly true
in Huntington Beach since the city doesn’t have a large gang
population or problem, he added.
Dettloff, who is also a member of the Oakview Task Force, believes
it is important to continue to reach out to members of the Oakview
area so that these types of crimes don’t occur again.
And gang prevention programs are key to the area, she said.
Bill Flower, superintendent of recreation and human services for
the city, oversees the Oakview Community Center. He said that while
these types of crimes have an impact on the neighborhood, he hasn’t
gotten any calls from residents regarding the murders.
A strong presence
Hume attributes the decline in crime he cited, in part, to the
Neighborhood Enhancement Team, which is made up of six officers whose
primary job is to patrol areas that have received city and federal
funds, such as the Oakview neighborhood.
The team handles about 90% of the calls related to the Oakview
area, said team Officer Art Preece.
They are on constant patrol of the area and are there to make
their presence felt, Hume said.
The officers said their daily presence in the area has made
residents feel more at ease speaking with them.
“That relationship I have with them is very valuable,” Preece
said.
That was evident on a recent patrol of the neighborhood when area
residents waved at him as he drove by and others called out his name
when they saw him.
Not only do Oakview area residents recognize Preece, but he
recognizes them. As he patrols the neighborhood he points to
different people and gives a little bit of background on them.
He knows if they are gang members and what gangs they belong to.
He can name siblings and parents and knows who’s in jail and who just
got out.
He also knows who he can go to for help if he needs it. It’s
obvious that he likes his job.
“I try to deal with [gang members] as civilly as possible,” he
said.
He deals with them on an ongoing basis and that’s the best way to
approach the relationship. They know he has a job to do and even
though they may not like it sometimes, they seem to respect him.
The majority of those living in Oakview are hard working people
just trying to get by, he said, and most of the kids aren’t bad.
“There are some good hearted kids and then some that aren’t good
hearted kids, that’s the best way to put it,” he said.
* JOSE PAUL CORONA covers City Hall and education. He can be
reached at (714) 965-7173 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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