Police OT Credited in Crime Dip
Weekend Blitz Ordered by D.C. Chief Ends With Twice as Many Arrests
Relatively few of the weekend's arrests were related to homicides and other violent crime, said D.C. Police Chief Cathy L. Lanier. The effort cost about $1.3 million in overtime. A police union official said it was a drain on resources to have officers work a pair of 12-hour shifts.
(Photos By Katherine Frey -- The Washington Post)
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Tuesday, June 12, 2007; Page B01
D.C. Police Chief Cathy L. Lanier said yesterday that crime across the District dipped 10 percent last weekend as a result of her "all hands on deck" initiative, in which 3,300 members of the force worked a pair of overtime shifts.
The department made 650 arrests -- double the number for an average weekend, Lanier said. Relatively few were for homicides and other violent crimes. The largest share -- 153 -- was for prostitution and related crimes, followed by 118 arrests for reckless driving and other serious traffic offenses.
The police activity drew praise from some neighborhood activists and kept judges at D.C. Superior Court working into the night, as many of those jailed over the weekend made their first appearances yesterday. But the impact could be short-lived: Lanier said she is not planning to repeat the weekend blitz this summer.
Lanier, who took office in December, said her strategy was to set the tone for summer. She said that the number of crimes was 10 percent below the average number reported the previous five weekends. Still, some officers grumbled yesterday that the approach was show, not substance.
"Officers know a P.R. stunt when they see it," said Kristopher Baumann, chairman of the Fraternal Order of Police Labor Committee, adding that it was a drain on resources to have officers work a pair of 12-hour shifts. "They are saying, 'Here we go again.' "
The department's own research shows that the weekends aren't even the busiest time in some high-crime areas, Baumann said. For example, in the 7th District, the southernmost area east of the Anacostia River, crime is highest on Tuesdays and Thursdays.
Baumann said the tactics were not much different from the approach taken by Lanier's predecessor, Charles H. Ramsey, who declared "crime emergencies" in three of the past four summers -- a move that gave him more flexibility in changing officers' schedules and ordering them to work overtime. But officers resented it, and they were upset when Ramsey forced them to cancel some vacations.
Lanier said she believes that the expanded police presence, which cost about $1.3 million in overtime, sent neighborhood residents the message that the department is responsive to community concerns. The number of arrests -- between 6 a.m. Friday and 6 a.m. Sunday -- turned out to be higher than police initially reported; on Sunday, police said an earlier tally counted 492 arrests.
The rest of Lanier's summer crime-fighting plan relies on proactive patrols and other tactics developed after analyzing trends during the past five years.
Baumann said officers are looking forward to carrying out those efforts and appreciate that they were developed by each of the seven district commanders.
D.C. residents said they noticed more police last weekend.
Sandra Seegars, a community activist in Ward 8, said she saw about 50 police cadets in brown uniforms knocking on doors and talking to people in her Congress Heights neighborhood. There was little violence over the weekend, she said. "It was quiet day and night."

