From:
MPD-3d@yahoogroups.com
Sent:
Tuesday, January 8, 2019 2:49 PMTo: MPD-3d@yahoogroups.com
Subject: RE: [MPD-3d] Shooting investigation
Good
afternoon Mr. Smith, and thank you for your post. While we saw a few weeks of calm in the area,
the homicide on Sunday night is very alarming to us as well. Our detectives are reviewing cameras from the
area, and interviewing witnesses to the shooting. I am hopeful that we will be able to get
enough evidence to identify the suspect or suspects responsible for this
senseless act, and bring them to justice.
Since
these incidents began, we increased our deployment of officers to the area with
marked and unmarked units, along with plain clothes officers from other
divisions within the MPD. We have
deployed our light tower to the area almost nightly, and have conducted patrols
with DCHA PD. We have also enlisted the
help of our partner agencies, to include the ONSE (Officer of Neighborhood
Safety and Engagement https://onse.dc.gov/).
However,
the abundance of illegal guns on our streets is still the primary issue, which
we have made our priority. Each of the
most recent events all share the same thing:
The shooter(s) displayed a reckless disregard for human life by firing
weapons on the street. There are far too
many illegal guns on our streets. What
we need to do collectively as a community is change the narrative that
recklessly shooting a gun in public or carrying one is ok. What we need is:
• For individuals to be held in jail
when we make arrests for gun offenses.
• For our court system to take gun
offenses seriously. • We need to know when the community sees guns on the street.
• We need for family members to turn in the guns that they find in their houses.
• We need to get these guns off the streets and have the system hold individuals responsible.
• We need mediation in the community to squash these petty disputes between individuals before they escalate to gunfire.
• We need government services and resources for individuals with mental health, substance abuse and employment challenges to work with these individuals so that they don’t feel the need to carry a gun or resort to criminal activity.
My
officers and I share the outrage and concern with the community. Nobody should have to live in fear in any
neighborhood. We are continuing our
efforts in the area and continue to encourage the community to call 911 when
they see criminal/suspicious activity afoot.
Thank
you again and be safe.
Stuart
Emerman
Commander,
Third DistrictPatrol Services North
Metropolitan Police Department
1620 V Street NW
Washington, DC 20009
202-673-6820 (Office)
202-486-0995 (Cell)
Stuart.Emerman@dc.gov
www.mpdc.dc.gov
Twitter @DCPoliceDept
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