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Civic leader to monitor graffiti-related sentencing

Canatta: Residents want tougher penalties


by DANIEL BEEKMAN
Thursday, July 2, 2009 10:24 AM EDT
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Tony Canatta is headed to court. He and other members of the Waterbury LaSalle Community Association want the Bronx judicial bench to know: residents of the east Bronx consider graffiti a serious offense. The WLCA will launch a court watcher initiative soon, Canatta said. It has been a topic of discussion for a year or two. Members will attend graffiti-related cases to combat clemency. Graffiti is not a high priority on E. 161st Street, Canatta said. The vandals who deface E. Tremont and Waterbury LaSalle “get off easy.”

“We need someone from the neighborhood in court to testify,” said Canatta. “We need the judges to know that people care.”

WLCA participants won’t necessarily testify. They’ll sit at the back of the courtroom in printed t-shirts. Senator Jeff Klein has offered to help. The t-shirts will read “NO GRAFFITI” or some related message. WLCA member Mary Jane Musano recently met a prominent Bronx judge, John Collins. When it comes to graffiti, the court rarely adheres to the letter of the law, Collins told Musano. Murder and rape are punished, not graffiti.

Musano is satisfied with the 45th Precinct; the police nab vandal after vandal, she said. If the WLCA court watcher initiative is successful, Musano will recruit other east Bronx civic associations. Years ago, east Bronx leaders mounted a court watcher initiative to protest auto theft. It worked.

“We complain to the police,” Musano said. “We complain to the mayor. People treat graffiti as if it wasn’t a crime. It is.”

Klein has proposed legislation that would require sentenced vandals to perform graffiti removal. In fact, most sentenced vandals do so already, Benjamin Smith of Bronx Community Solutions said. Bronx Community Solutions is a four-year old non-profit project. It attempts to diminish the borough’s reliance on short-term jail sentences for non-violent offenses such as drug possession, prostitution and graffiti. Rather than sentence a graffiti vandal to a month in the slammer, a judge will let Smith put him or her to work. The Bronx Community Solutions Tag Team paints over and washes away graffiti.

Smith is not an advocate of court watcher initiatives; it’s difficult to pinpoint and attend a two-minute graffiti case. He suggested that the WLCA launch a letter campaign. Musano hopes to enlist more than 20 people from the WLCA and other civic associations. Ten-plus participants will attend court together, she said. According to Canatta. Graffiti is on the uptick not only in business, but also residential areas.

“On garages and fences,” he said. “Summer is here. School is out. The vandals are getting bold.”





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The following are comments from the readers. In no way do they represent the view of yournabe.com.

Benjamin wrote on Jul 6, 2009 10:36 AM:

" At Bronx Community Solutions, we know that despite millions of dollars worth of economic development in the Bronx, complaints of graffiti were up significantly in 2008.

In response, Bronx Community Solutions has partnered with the District Attorney and the NYPD to tackle the issue. First, the District Attorney and Bronx Community Solutions work to make sure that graffiti offenders who don’t face long incarcerations are sentenced to community service and assigned to clean-up crews that work specifically to repair the damage of graffiti (you can view an analysis of the sentences graffiti cases receive in the Bronx that we conducted on our website).

Then, Bronx Community Solutions works with NYPD Community Affairs officers in 8 of 12 police precincts across the Bronx to identify sites, work with property owners to obtain permission and conduct clean-ups.

For more information, you can go to www.changingthecourt.blogspot.com "

Aida Portilla wrote on Jul 15, 2009 11:29 AM:

" I have right now this issue; my house was vandalized on July 4, 2009. It totally destroy the paint of the house as I was cleaning...I can't afford it to paint the house and in addition knowing that perhaps in Halloween they'll do it again. I'm a single mother working 2 F/T jobs to pay the mortgage, my 2 oldest children are working F/T and going to college my youngest at HS neither one of us do no wrongdoing to nobody.
What can I do? "

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