Sunday, August 19, 2012

Gun Violence: Queens Leaders Call For Increased Patrols To Curb Surging Problem in Southeast Queens.

Amid a surge in shootings and murder this year, Queens leaders Friday called for more cops to bring peace to the borough's troubled Southeast.

"Right now the police department is down by about 7,000 police officers," state Assemblywoman Barbara Clark (D) said at a press conference Friday. "The precincts we have are understaffed and we need more police presence in our communities."

Queens District Attorney Richard Brown endorsed the call for more police to patrol Sutheast Queens -- an area where shootings have increased 22 percent in the last year, three times the rise seen by the city as a whole. Murders have also risen here, increasing 28 percent even as they fell almost 18 percent citywide.

Last week, a police officer was shot twice in the leg during a pursuit in Southeast Queens. Three men were killed by an AK-47 in Springfield Gardens a month earlier when someone fired more than 60 rounds in their Jeep.

According to Clark and other officials, increasing police presence in these areas could decrease the number of guns on the street and the inevitable shootings that follow. An additional precinct in the area could help too, Clark said.

"The 105th precinct is huge," she said. That precinct stretches roughly nine miles from the Glen Oaks section of Queens in the North to the edge of JFK airport. If there's an emergency at the Five Towns shopping center in the South, Clark said, police have to travel from the precinct in Queens Village -- almost a 20 minute car ride.

"The distance by itself is too much," she said.

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