Friday, April 17, 2009
Benicia PD Nabs Taggers - Great Job!!
Benicia needs a ZERO TOLERANCE policy against graffiti.
My congratulations and thanks to Lt. Daley and his team.
..Ross Sagun
>>> Lt. Mike Daley 4/15/2009 10:49 AM >>>
Following a variety of leads, Benicia Police detectives have identified and interviewed a graffiti "tagger" who has been active in Benicia for over a year. The suspect is a 19 year old Benicia youth. In addition, a 15 year old Benicia youth and another 14 year old Benicia youth have been issued misdemeanor citations for vandalism for separate incidents.
"We have seen graffiti around the city over the past year," Lt. Mike Daley said. "Hopefully this investigation and the arrests we anticipate making will significantly decrease this problem."
Tagging is when an individual marks a particular name or symbol on property. Graffiti is when the suspect draws or paints a design on property.
School Resource Officer Sergio Cruz, who oversees graffiti investigations for the department, developed a lead on the 19 year old suspect and Benicia resident in early March. Based on SRO Cruz's investigation and interviews, it was determined that the this subject had at least two "tags" seen around town - PEWK and GURP along with a "Hard Times", or HT, graffiti marking. It is suspected that this subject has been tagging certain areas of Benicia since the beginning of 2008. "We will be pursuing felony vandalism charges from the District Attorney's Office due to the amount of damage caused by this one person," Lt. Daley said.
"Taggers target certain areas of our town like parks, a tunnel that runs under highway 780, and some of our shopping centers, " Lt. Daley added. "In addition, taggers will mark roadway signs, utility boxes, or anything else they can put their tag or sign on. We think these latest investigations will put a stop to some of the tagging and markings taking place."
The City of Benicia has a pro-active stance in the immediate removal of graffiti. The City has one full time civilian Community Preservation Officer, Roger Core, who works for the Fire Department. However, this officer has worked directly with the police department in documenting graffiti incidents and gaining the cooperation of businesses in its immediate removal. "Roger has done an excellent job in assisting our department with these graffiti investigations," Daley said. "His work with Detective Cruz should lead to the arrest of others committing these crimes."
According to Daley, there are a couple of groups of taggers they would like to obtain information on relative to graffiti crimes. "We are in the process of trying to identity additional groups and taggers around town. We encourage anyone with information on graffiti crimes to contact us and help curtail this problem."
For information on this press release, contact Lt. Mike Daley at (707)590-4259. Anyone with information on graffiti vandals or taggers are asked to contact School Resource Officer Sergio Cruz at (707)746-4253 or Crime Stoppers at (707)644-STOP (7867)
Tuesday, March 24, 2009
Is there any money to fight graffiti and vandalism, or just bus shelters?
Now, I'm not suggesting that the the idea of funding bus shelters should be thrown out. What I am saying is this: Is it just lip service when the City keeps telling us that there is no money for graffiti cameras? I hope not.
I've done just a little research on this and have found camera solutions costing as little as $300. That's right... $300!! How much is a bus shelter? And besides, I will take bets that the proposed bus shelters will be victimized by vandalism and graffiti, costing much more than $300.
Where is the Benicia City Council's priorities? It will soon be "show time". Time tells all...time to put their money where their collective mouths are.
..Ross Sagun
from the Times-Herald:
So far, the city has applied for:
* $400,000 to resurface East Second Street from Lake Herman Road to west of Park Road;
* $4 million to develop a water reuse project for the Valero refinery;
* $2 million to install an ionic exchange system to cleanse the city's drinking water;
* $130,000 to create a Sky Valley rainwater management plan to help keep pollution out of Benicia's water supply.
Other projects the city hopes to identify or secure funds for include a new police station, more police officers, fire station renovations, a hiking trail, a bus shelter and a library expansion project, among other things.
Contact staff writer Tony Burchyns at tburchyns@thnewsnet.com or call 553-6831.
Times Herald
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
One City Council Rises to the Occasion
Posted: March 17, 2009 10:47 AM
|
Monday, March 16, 2009
Reported by: Emily Kiefer
Leaders in Grover Beach are working to keep the city cleaner.
Monday night, the city council unanimously approved a proposal for an updated graffiti ordinance. It's designed to replace the ordinance already in place.
Among some of the changes:
- The new measure will call for graffiti to be removed within 72 hours instead of 15 days.
- A clearer plan for graffiti prevention, including education in the community and schools.
- And a reward system for reporting offenders.
A second reading of the ordinance is scheduled for April 6. It will then go into effect 30 days later.
Saturday, March 14, 2009
Cameras help catch graffiti vandals
Arrest in case of Staten Island graffiti vandal caught on camera
STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- A 15-year-old alleged graffiti vandal was arrested yesterday, less than 24 hours after a video of him defacing a Concord deli was posted on silive.com, the Advance's home on the Web.
Police said those images, captured by high-tech security cameras at My Deli & Grocery on Rhine Avenue, along with other information, helped them track down the suspect.
The video first appeared on silive.com around 2:45 p.m. Thursday and still photos ran in yesterday's Advance.Authorities did not release the suspect's name, or neighborhood, due to his age. He was charged with single counts of criminal mischief and making graffiti, said Detective Joseph Cavitolo, an NYPD spokesman.
The arrest came on the same day a graffiti scourge from Midland Beach was sentenced to 30 days in jail and ordered to pay $5,000 restitution. Joseph Battaglia, 19, was accused of plastering his tag, "Rank," or an abbreviated version, "Ra," in 75 different incidents since January 2007. Battaglia pleaded guilty in January to two misdemeanor counts.
"This shows how working together helps make our neighborhoods a better place to live," Hamim (Shah) Syed, who owns My Deli & Grocery, said yesterday. "We appreciate all the work the police and the Staten Island Advance did and we are glad they apprehended the young man who was responsible for the graffiti. While we feel sorry for his parents, we hope he learns a lesson from this experience and chooses a more positive path in the future."
Two weeks ago, Syed installed four video cameras as part of $9,000 spent on renovations, which included repainting the building.
The security cameras allegedly caught the youth in the act of spray-painting an indecipherable tag on the side of the building early Wednesday morning.
The video shows a hooded male with a backpack skulking around the store exterior about 12:45 a.m. After a few cars have passed, he pulls out a can of spray paint and defaces a wall behind an ice box. Then he walks away.
According to Syed, the vandal also sprayed graffiti on the side of the building facing a neighboring business, All Tire Repair Shop, but that crime was committed off-camera.
Friday, February 20, 2009
Meeting scheduled with Benicia Police Department
..Ross Sagun
2/20/09
Dear Officer Cruz:
- who is doing the graffiti
- who has been arrested
- who in city government is charged with overseeing the problem/strategy/budget of this problem
- what is the rate of occurrence of graffiti crimes (how many have occurred in 2008 vs 2007)
- what is the criteria for classifying incidents (incident number? How do Roger Core's reports get integrated into the stats?)
- what is the cost of graffiti abatement and enforcement
- what is the budget for graffiti abatement and enforcement
- what is the status of the New Year's Day arrest at BHS
- what happened at the X-Park and what is being done about it
- what is the city's strategy to attack the problem
- where are the graffiti hotspots in Benicia
- when will the xpark be remediated and reopened
- when are graffiti offenses being committed? (e.g. mostly at night?)
- how does the BPD investigate and catalog graffiti offenses
- how does the BPD process graffiti-based evidence (e.g. paint cans located at scenes, graffiti indicating specific names in its content)
- the use of cameras to catch suspects, as other cities have successfully done
- reward system
- tip hotline
- graffiti page on the website
- school information program
Tuesday, January 20, 2009
They are back! Graffiti vandals strike again.
The graffiti vandals are at it again. This is about the 5th time my brick wall has been hit. Last week it was the tunnel, again.
When is the City of Benicia going to get serious about stopping this activity? How many more times is the City going to have to repaint the tunnel? How many more police reports are going to have to be taken? There were no less than 50 new graffiti tags that popped up over the holiday, according to the City.
When is the City of Benicia, specifically the Benicia City Council, going to finally do the right thing...that is, put up a camera? I say the time is NOW. The cost is minimal - potentially less than $300. I will volunteer the use of my property. The City has $20,000 to spend on Harleys. How about a couple of hundred to stop this vandalism?
Come on folks...step up to the plate and do the right thing for us. Let's face it...its not going to go away unless we take action.