Page 2 of 2   <      

Bad Neighborhood

(By Bill O'leary -- The Washington Post)
Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.

Congressional crimes aren't always committed under the congressional dome, but perhaps community policing strategies could still work on the Hill. FEC staffers and FBI agents could walk the halls of the Capitol and pay surprise visits to K Street offices and Beltway fundraisers, getting to know the model citizens and the perps, trolling for tips about which senator is living beyond his means and which lobbyist has set up a bogus think tank, checking out disclosure forms for red flags. They could focus on "hot spots"--defense appropriations, if Cunningham's case is any guide, or congressional earmarks in general, or leadership PACs. They could hang around the 2 a.m. sessions where leaders bring up thousand-page bills that no one else has read.

But in urban America, law enforcement has recognized that it doesn't have to accept the status quo, that out-of-the-box thinking can tilt the playing field against criminals. Members of Congress have no better reason to be passing bills in the dead of night than members of gangs have to be hanging out on street corners in the dead of night. Cities such as Los Angeles and New Orleans have enacted curfews to keep juveniles out of trouble. Maybe Congress needs a curfew, too.

Some commentators -- mostly liberals -- have proposed another out-of-the-box solution to congressional crime: raise congressional salaries, so that members won't be tempted by bribes. These commentators sound a lot like the criminologists -- mostly liberals -- who used to argue that the best way to fight crime was to fight poverty. That view has faded in recent years, just as the view that poverty caused terrorism was widely discredited by the middle-class backgrounds of the Sept. 11, 2001, hijackers.

But a massive summer jobs program for teenagers has helped reduce crime in Boston, while an intense crackdown on truancy has contributed to New York's success. And some law enforcers who scoffed at after-school programs and midnight basketball now believe they're useful crime-fighting tools -- not so much because they can help teens become model citizens, but because they keep teens busy at times when they might otherwise be committing crimes.

So how can we keep members of Congress busy? Perhaps there should be sanctions for members who miss hearings or votes without valid excuses, the congressional equivalent of a truancy crackdown. Or members could be required to spend a fixed amount of time with constituents. (This would also force them to face their victims and acknowledge their humanity, a common tactic against recidivism.) Presumably, the less time congressmen have to meet privately with lobbyists and other special interests, the less time they have to subvert the public interest. In fact, some reformers -- again, mostly liberals -- believe that public campaign financing is the only way to overhaul a system that forces politicians to spend most of their time begging special interests for cash. The urban analogy would be the decriminalization of drugs, which proponents believe would eliminate the profit motive that fuels so much gang violence.

They may be right. But the last decade suggests it's possible to make real progress without such radical measures. And many criminologists now believe the most powerful deterrent to crime is not lowering potential payoffs or providing alternative activities, but making potential offenders worry about consequences. For example, prosecutors in Boston made gang culture much less attractive when they started slapping draconian prison sentences on known troublemakers, like the 15-year stint one gangster received for possessing a single bullet. Maybe Duke Cunningham needs to go away for life, as a warning to his peers.

Or maybe his peers should go with him. "In some neighborhoods, the scoundrels are just replaced by new scoundrels," Kelling said. "But getting the worst offenders off the streets makes a difference." In Pittsburgh and Atlanta, for example, prosecutors used the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act to take down entire street gangs. There's a partisan case to be made that the GOP leadership in Congress -- which took power in 1995 by pledging to slash government and end Democratic corruption, but has expanded government while rewarding its K Street benefactors -- now qualifies as a corrupt organization.

Then again, modern research suggests that severe punishment isn't as important as swift and sure punishment. "It's like housebreaking a puppy: If you don't discipline him the second he does something wrong, it doesn't work," said Jean O'Neil, research director for the National Crime Prevention Council. "You have to drive home the connection between crime and punishment."

In any case, potential offenders won't worry about getting punished if they don't worry about getting caught, which requires them to worry about getting seen. Cities such as Baltimore and Chicago -- not to mention casinos, hotels and convenience stores -- have sent that message successfully by installing surveillance cameras in high-risk areas. C-SPAN doesn't air the behind-the-scenes huddles where laws are crafted, but maybe there should be cameras in members' offices and the Capital Grille.

Good lighting also discourages crime. And the congressional equivalent is strict disclosure: Crooked politicians hate "sunlight" as much as muggers. But other design strategies that have helped create the effect of surveillance in urban areas -- the author Jane Jacobs called it "eyes on the street" -- could have more literal applications in Congress. Maybe congressional offices should have more windows, so anyone can see what's going on inside. Maybe members should switch desks with their receptionists. "They're called back rooms because nobody can see what's going on in the back," said Art Hushen, a Tampa police officer who specializes in design issues. "People act differently when they think they're being observed."

Criminologist Timothy D. Crowe, the author of "Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design," suggests that congressional offices should have open layouts, avoiding the indoor equivalent of dead-end alleys. Good design can also allow gatekeepers to control access to potential crime spots, or at least find out who's there for what purpose.

Of course, Congress is supposed to be the people's house; everyone's allowed to be there for any reason. But that's where the urban analogy breaks down a bit: Most victims of congressional crimes -- the American taxpayers -- live nowhere near Congress. That makes it a lot harder to set up a neighborhood watch group. And many criminologists agree that it's hard to revitalize bad areas unless potential victims are empowered and mobilized to reclaim their communities. O'Neil said that citizens must feel victimized before they act, and she's not sure Americans realize they were victimized by Cunningham and Abramoff. "If I have to explain for 20 minutes why this is hurting you," O'Neil said, "that's a tougher problem." Blumstein noted that local groups often take tough stances against streetwalkers, who they see every night, but not against call girls, who commit similar offenses behind closed doors. "Congress is like the call girls," Blumstein said. "People don't feel the impact directly." And what can they do about it, except call their congressman?

If ordinary voters seem powerless to dismantle Washington's culture of corruption, rank-and-file members of Congress are not. Criminologists find that even in the worst neighborhoods, most residents are law-abiding citizens who want to help police; they're just afraid of the thugs who run the show. Levin pointed out that high schools have persuaded students to break their culture of silence since Columbine, and school shootings have dropped significantly. "Snitching used to be seen as some kind of Nazi activity, but now it's acceptable to inform on a student who threatens to blow up the school," he said.

Maybe someday, it will be acceptable to file an ethics complaint. But for now, reform is in the hands of prosecutors and voters. And it's worth recalling that crime rates skyrocketed for years before urban America reached the enough-is-enough stage.

"These things take a while to sink in before people decide they're not going to take it anymore," Levin said. "I don't think we're there yet."

Author's e-mail: grunwaldm@washpost.com

Michael Grunwald is a staff writer on The Post's National desk.


<       2


© 2006 The Washington Post Company