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Curbs Urged on Nighttime Use of ATMs

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SPECIAL TO THE TIMES

Amid widespread unease about violence after dark at automated teller machines, three Los Angeles officials called Thursday for a citywide shutdown of outdoor ATMs after dark.

Los Angeles City Atty. James Hahn and Councilman Nate Holden stood with Councilman Mark Ridley-Thomas to announce their support for a proposal made by Ridley-Thomas in the wake of an attack Sunday. Symbolically, they gathered outside a Crenshaw district bank where a man was shot while making a 3 a.m. withdrawal.

For the record:

12:00 a.m. Oct. 5, 1996 For the Record
Los Angeles Times Saturday October 5, 1996 Home Edition Metro Part B Page 3 Metro Desk 2 inches; 37 words Type of Material: Correction
ATM robberies--A story on automatic teller machine crime in Friday’s editions incorrectly reported that there were 45 ATM robberies in the city of Los Angeles last year. In fact there were 74 robberies and attempted robberies, and 45 during the first half of 1996.

The proposed restriction would not apply to the burgeoning number of bank machines that are in supermarkets, malls and other businesses, as well as in 13 Los Angeles Police Department substations and five other LAPD facilities. But it would curtail operations at hundreds of other ATMs outside branch banks.

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There was mixed reaction from consumers and dismay from the banking industry, which denounced the measure as a Draconian response to a rare, albeit lethal, risk. New police statistics show there were 45 ATM robberies in the entire city of Los Angeles last year, compared with about 300,000 serious crimes reported annually to the LAPD.

Meanwhile, at City Hall, chances of passing what would be the nation’s most stringent ATM safety law seemed low. At least four members of the 15-member council said the measure went too far, and none of the others were willing to embrace it fully.

But the proposal appeared certain to set off another round of public dialogue about how much freedom society should surrender to protect itself.

“In the hours of darkness, people are more vulnerable. It’s time to say enough is enough,” Hahn said. “It is going to be an inconvenience for the public . . . but I think it’s a small price to pay.”

He compared the restrictions to laws requiring motorists to buckle up before they hit the road. “Seat belts save lives and they used to be optional,” Hahn said.

Meanwhile, bankers warned that such a shutdown would force millions of consumers to do without a service that they have taken for granted for more than 15 years. Moreover, several said, the measure would all but eliminate after-hours banking in areas such as South-Central and East Los Angeles that have historically complained about a shortage of financial institutions. These areas also lack an abundance of markets with cash machines.

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“We may be pushing a solution to one policy problem while exacerbating another,” said Ian Campbell, a spokesman for Great Western Bank, at whose branch this week’s slaying occurred. Great Western this week placed the ATM at Crenshaw Boulevard and Vernon Avenue on daylight-only hours in deference to Sunday’s death, but Campbell and other bankers said enactment of such restrictions should be left up to banks, based on case-by-case review.

The initiative underscores the ongoing tug of war between the conveniences of technology and their accompanying risks. In Los Angeles County, three people in as many months have been killed while making ATM withdrawals after dark.

Two of those slayings have occurred within Los Angeles city limits. (The other L.A. incident was at a Home Savings of America branch in South-Central on Vermont Avenue in July.) The incidents have been deeply disturbing to many bank customers, even though bank and police statistics have shown ATM crime to be extremely rare.

Indeed, even as bank machine use has soared, robberies and attempted robberies at ATMs in the city of Los Angeles have plummeted during the last few years, from about 20 a month in 1992 to about 7 a month this year, LAPD statistics show.

But at a Sherman Oaks bank, where a pregnant woman was stabbed to death during a March 1993 carjacking, one busy shopper who had just retrieved cash from an outside ATM applauded the City Council’s consideration of shorter hours.

“You close them down at night, you just may save a life,” hairdresser Julene Sinatra said. “And for those people who complain about the inconvenience, I say ‘Get a life!’ It wasn’t that long ago we didn’t even have these things.”

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Times staff writers John Glionna, Jodi Wilgoren, Henry Chu, Sandy Banks and Matea Gold contributed to this story.

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