Richard Hartog / Los Angeles Times
Senior lead officer Jack Richter checks in on a homeless man at the corner of San Julian St. and 6th Street during a look at Skid Row in downtown Los Angeles, Wednesday, April 09, 2008. Crime has risen in the neighborhood.
Skid row effort hits a wall

Richard Hartog / Los Angeles Times
Senior lead officer Jack Richter checks in on a homeless man at the corner of San Julian St. and 6th Street during a look at Skid Row in downtown Los Angeles, Wednesday, April 09, 2008. Crime has risen in the neighborhood.
Is the well-publicized cleanup campaign slowing? The area is still safer than two years ago, but many wonder where things are headed.
The LAPD's campaign against drug dealing on skid row arrived this month at the apartment of an alleged street-corner dealer. Police found $135,035 -- including about $6,000 in quarters, nickels and dimes.
The arrest was immediately felt on the street, "because people couldn't find their drugs," said LAPD Capt. Jodi Wakefield.
The arrest underscores skid row's reputation as L.A.'s bazaar for street drugs. But despite the find, the police department's 18-month effort to clean up the streets of downtown has reached a crossroads.
After more than a year of rising arrests and declining crime, skid row and surrounding areas have seen both level off since the beginning of 2008. Although violent crime has remained flat, property crime is up nearly 60% over last year.
Downtown officials and residents are quick to note that the uptick needs to be taken in context. The streets of skid row are still far safer now than they were two years ago.
But there is some concern about the much-publicized cleanup campaign slowing down -- and what comes next.
"We see it with our own eyes," Estela Lopez, head of the Central City East Assn., said of the new numbers. "This is a good time to sit down and say, 'Where are we going from here?' "
The police crackdown had coincided with increased gentrification on the edges of skid row, with residents moving into upscale lofts, and a variety of trendy bars, eateries and galleries opening up.
LAPD officials see a connection, saying the jump in property crimes is a result mostly of new shoppers, club-goers and others coming into the area.
LAPD Lt. Paul Vernon said many of the thefts from cars were a result of people leaving expensive electronics in plain sight in their vehicles.
"They are an attractive nuisance in an area where people are desperate for narcotics and will steal anything they can sell for a few bucks," Vernon said.
Often those whose cars are broken into have chosen to park on the street outside parking lots at night, he said.
Eighteen months ago, the city of Los Angeles brought a long-promised strike force to skid row, with the pledge of creating a safer city in the process. Fifty additional police officers, on bike and foot, fanned out across the area, where drug dealers, prostitutes and thieves often operated openly on the streets.
Prosecutors, parole officers and trash crews were also part of the effort, known as the Safer City Initiative.
Similar endeavors had already had some success in lowering crime rates in MacArthur Park and the north Valley, and Los Angeles Police Chief William J. Bratton promised that the skid row initiative would target "the criminal element, which preys upon the homeless and mentally ill."
While some skid row activists decried what they called overly aggressive tactics used by police, others in the area praised the efforts as nothing short of transformational.
The initiative had an almost immediate effect on crime, and the area saw a dramatic decrease in the number of homeless encampments.
But so far this year, arrests are down 12% in downtown. Fewer and fewer people have been attending the monthly "triage" meetings for the public and private groups supporting the Safer City effort.
And while the number of homeless people and encampments seems to be holding steady after the initial drop, according to statistics from the LAPD, some business owners are complaining that they are a seeing a dramatic rise in encampments and trash in the area.
George Kelling, author of the "broken windows" theory that Safer City is based on, said he expected arrests to drop as behavior on the streets changes.
The arrest was immediately felt on the street, "because people couldn't find their drugs," said LAPD Capt. Jodi Wakefield.
After more than a year of rising arrests and declining crime, skid row and surrounding areas have seen both level off since the beginning of 2008. Although violent crime has remained flat, property crime is up nearly 60% over last year.
Downtown officials and residents are quick to note that the uptick needs to be taken in context. The streets of skid row are still far safer now than they were two years ago.
But there is some concern about the much-publicized cleanup campaign slowing down -- and what comes next.
"We see it with our own eyes," Estela Lopez, head of the Central City East Assn., said of the new numbers. "This is a good time to sit down and say, 'Where are we going from here?' "
The police crackdown had coincided with increased gentrification on the edges of skid row, with residents moving into upscale lofts, and a variety of trendy bars, eateries and galleries opening up.
LAPD officials see a connection, saying the jump in property crimes is a result mostly of new shoppers, club-goers and others coming into the area.
LAPD Lt. Paul Vernon said many of the thefts from cars were a result of people leaving expensive electronics in plain sight in their vehicles.
"They are an attractive nuisance in an area where people are desperate for narcotics and will steal anything they can sell for a few bucks," Vernon said.
Often those whose cars are broken into have chosen to park on the street outside parking lots at night, he said.
Eighteen months ago, the city of Los Angeles brought a long-promised strike force to skid row, with the pledge of creating a safer city in the process. Fifty additional police officers, on bike and foot, fanned out across the area, where drug dealers, prostitutes and thieves often operated openly on the streets.
Prosecutors, parole officers and trash crews were also part of the effort, known as the Safer City Initiative.
Similar endeavors had already had some success in lowering crime rates in MacArthur Park and the north Valley, and Los Angeles Police Chief William J. Bratton promised that the skid row initiative would target "the criminal element, which preys upon the homeless and mentally ill."
While some skid row activists decried what they called overly aggressive tactics used by police, others in the area praised the efforts as nothing short of transformational.
The initiative had an almost immediate effect on crime, and the area saw a dramatic decrease in the number of homeless encampments.
But so far this year, arrests are down 12% in downtown. Fewer and fewer people have been attending the monthly "triage" meetings for the public and private groups supporting the Safer City effort.
And while the number of homeless people and encampments seems to be holding steady after the initial drop, according to statistics from the LAPD, some business owners are complaining that they are a seeing a dramatic rise in encampments and trash in the area.
George Kelling, author of the "broken windows" theory that Safer City is based on, said he expected arrests to drop as behavior on the streets changes.
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