Couric & Co.
July 23, 2007 12:43 PM

Battleground: Philadelphia

By
Byron Pitts
Topics
Field Notes
(CBS)
Byron Pitts is National Correspondent for CBS News.
Is it a war?

That's what Philadelphia Police Commissioner Sylvester Johnson calls it. Community activist Mel Wells agrees, there is a war going on in parts of Philadelphia. Both men are lifetime residents of Philadelphia. Both love their city deeply. One has enforced the law for 43 years. The other has broken the law a few times in his youth, but has since turned his life around and leads a community service organization called One Day At A Time.

Honestly, I rolled my eyes a bit when they first compared the killings and violence in Philadelphia (406 murders in 2006, more than 200 so far in 2007) and in other American cities to a "war zone." Too often people have thrown around phrases and words like "war zone" and "battlefield." I've seen war up close and there is no mistaking what's going on in places like Afghanistan and Iraq. War zones have a certain look. A certain feel. There's even a smell to it.

After spending several days in Philadelphia, I must admit there are striking similarities.

Just like in Baghdad, there are law-abiding citizens who are afraid to go outside at night or even venture too far away from their front door in the daytime. Just like Baghdad, there are law-abiding citizens whom we met that keep a gun close by when they take their children to school, go to the grocery store and when they close their eyes at night in their own bed. In Philadelphia they're not called "insurgents"; they're drug dealers and thugs. Oddly enough the Police Commissioner says "Philadelphia does not have a gang problem."

On the 2200 block of Percy Street in North Philadelphia, I met two mothers who've had a child murdered in some sort of drive-by shooting. In my 25 years as a journalist, I've never met two mothers on the same street who've had a child murdered. Eighteen-year-old Taheera Jones was preparing for her freshman year at Temple University. She worked for a local attorney over the summer to make money for school. She was the oldest child and the first in the family to go to college. She was walking home from work, a few steps from her door, when a shootout started up the street. As she fumbled for her door key, she was shot in the head. Dead. I asked her mother -- who still lives in the same house -- what she says to her younger children, "How do you keep them motivated? How do you keep them hopeful when their sister did everything right, but she was killed?"

"The first thing I teach them is how to be safe."

What? Be safe? What's that's say about society when a mother's primary lesson to her children is how to avoid being shot? How does a child dream in an environment like that?

On that same block, we found at least 10 houses that were abandoned and boarded up. You ever live on a street with condemned and boarded up houses?

Also in that neighborhood there are only three adult men of working age on a block with at least 40 families. Three men! Most homes are run by elderly grandparents or women. One of the men approached me: thick build, strong hands (like a brick mason). "We're the only men here," he told me. "Just the three of us," he said. "We look after the women and children as best we can." He said it with both a sense of pride and sadness.

Since 2001, there have been more than 10,000 gunshot victims in Philadelphia. Imagine that, 10,000 people? The Boston Garden can hold just over 19,000.

Many of the people we spoke with blamed the surge in shootings and death on illegal handguns. Commissioner Johnson made this observation: "Illegal guns are a big problem in Philadelphia and across the country. But guns are only a symptom of a deeper sickness."

By all accounts, Commissioner Johnson is a "cop's cop." He started his career as a beat cop and worked his way up the ranks to commissioner. He's familiar with every kind of crime imaginable. He says the real danger in Philadelphia is the rising unemployment and school drop-out rates, the collapse of families and the growing divide between the haves and the have-nots. "When people are frustrated they get angry, and anger leads to violence. Add in a gun and you a recipe for disaster."

Commissioner Johnson isn't alone in that view. We also spent time with Miami Police Chief John Timoney. Timoney's the former Philadelphia police commissioner and he started his career in New York. Like a number of police chief's across the country, Timoney is a harsh critic of the National Rifle Association and the NRA's influence over the gun lobby in Congress. He points out the recent rise in the murder rate of police officers across the country. Not only are there more guns on the streets of America; there are more powerful guns. "I faced when I was a young cop somebody with a Saturday night special, probably held together by tape," he told us. "Now we have these young kids going around with AK-47's with 30-round clips. They're spraying a (street) corner."

But Chief Timoney agrees with Commissioner Johnson the problem goes way beyond guns.

Mel Wells used to carry a gun. But the murder of a friend who died in his arms and time in jail changed his life. "God told me that could have been me, dead of a gunshot wound," Wells said. So he went to work for his father, Rev. Mel Wells, founder of "One Day at a Time." It's a social service agency in Philadelphia that helps former convicts, drug addicts and others get their lives back on track. Today the younger Wells is president of ODAT. The agency helps more than 55,000 people every year.

Wells agrees illegal guns are a major problem, but when I asked him if he could rule the world for a day, what's the first thing he'd do to end the gun violence in Philadelphia?

"I'd love the sinner," he said. "I'm here because someone loved me."

According to Wikipedia, "War is a prolonged state of violent, large scale conflict involving two or more groups."

The killings and gun play in American cities seems to meet at least part of that definition of war. We spent time with some of the young people engaged in that conflict in North Philadelphia. There were a few who seemed hard and cold and distant. Everyone I talked with agreed SOME of these kids should be in jail. I asked a 16-year-old boy who proudly displayed a tattoo of an AK-47 on his forearm and boasted of the knife wound that marked his other arm, what the future held for him. At first he seemed confused by the question. Then after some delay he said "just staying alive." But the vast majority of the young men I spoke with seemed more scared than tough - more hopeless than hard. Once we got past the bravado, these young men talked about lost dreams, absent parents, limited education and few prospects for the future. We met one 19-year-old who'd been in jail for shooting another teenager four times. He was released from jail because the kid he shot refused to testify against him or "snitch." The expectation was they'd settle it on the street someday. This kid had a teardrop tattoo under his right eye. A blank tear symbolizes a friend or relative had been murdered. A colored-in tear drop, the tattoo worn by someone who'd actually committed murder.

When asked about his future, this teenager said "dead or in jail."

Is it a war? To many of those involved, it sure feels that way.






Add a Comment See all 46 Comments
by adhowardmba July 26, 2007 3:29 PM EDT
To ncc1701pm

The knowledge that you claim to have, is it firsthand knowledge? Did you grow up in an urban area? I did, and I can tell you, the vast majority of things that occur in the ghetto are not positive, but some things are. I was born and raised in a very violent neighborhood. But I left and pursued an education. I don't have a criminal history, which should not be anything to brag about, but if you live in certain neighborhoods,it is.
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by adhowardmba July 26, 2007 3:18 PM EDT
I'm thoroughly surprised; and confused. You? Black? Actually though, your tone does remind me of Bill Cosby. But to some extent, it seems that you have hatred for your own race. If we could speak in a frank manner, did you grow up in a mostly white neighborhood? Do you have black friends? What is your profession? To answer your question, you're right in the sense that if there is a large black population in an urban area, there is a high level of violent crime.
Reply to this comment
by ncc1701pm July 26, 2007 1:58 PM EDT
To: adhowardmba

Don't you have any comments on the major Cities with low black populations and their low violent crime rate ? Do a little research on your own. Don't just talk the same trash as your ignorant friends. Take your head out of the sand and you'll find the truth. I want to see these problems solved and if it means making some people uncomfortable with themselves, them so be it.

I should tell you now that I am a successful black man living a middle class life in the greater New Orleans area and I certainly know what I am talking about.
Reply to this comment
by adhowardmba July 25, 2007 4:42 PM EDT
ncc1701pm so are you biased against people who are considered to be lower class, whites included?
Reply to this comment
by adhowardmba July 25, 2007 4:38 PM EDT
ncc1701pm I can even agree with you on some respects. But it seems that if it is left to you, you would put a fence around the ghetto and let them all starve. The brush that you are painting with is too broad. Whites come from broken families, and single parent homes also. Do you consider them to be families?
Reply to this comment
by ncc1701pm July 25, 2007 12:07 PM EDT
To: adhowardmba

There are several major U.S. cities with very small black populations; Salt Lake City, UT is one of them. Salt Lake City has one of the lowest violent crime rates in the country. There are many other cities like Salt Lake City. Just look to the west.

Middle class blacks and whites are similar in many respects. In my city we live together without any problems. Middle class black family size is very close when compared to middle class white families. It's the lower class blacks that have large families, if you can call them families.
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by ncc1701pm July 25, 2007 11:56 AM EDT
Come on people, don't drop the ball, give me the name of a major U.S. city with a large black population that does not have a high violent crime rate. Can't do it, can you ? I didn't think so.

Come on, let's ID the ones that make us afraid to walk the streets at night. Lets ID the people that are destroying our cities. Let's ID the perpetrators. Lets drag it into the light of day. Lets hang it out there for the world to see.

We know who they are and they know that we know, so, don't be afraid to say it. No more excuses. Fix your broken families, fix the cities you've destroyed. Take control of your culture and be proud of who you are. You are better than crack cocaine. You are better than the gang bangers you allow to control your neighborhoods. You are better than the Hip Hop culture you embrace.

No one other than you can fix this mess you've made. So, get on with it, the rest of us can't wait forever.
Reply to this comment
by adhowardmba July 25, 2007 11:50 AM EDT
ncc1701pm I'm surprised. you don't seem like a racist at all. but looks may be deceiving. to answer your question. there is no big city without big city problems. do blacks commit a disproportionately large percentage of violent crimes? i don't know. but blacks are disproportionately convicted of violent crimes. since you represent the book of knowledge for african americans, tell me this, if blacks and whites both earn middle class incomes, how do they behave relative to each other? Who has the fewest children? if you are wondering, this is a question regarding sociology.
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by usastrong1 July 25, 2007 4:43 AM EDT
Just to follow up with what jsb1974 says; for what it's worth, I agree about the families having a lot to do with it. I believe a key element of strong family values is a two parent household. In the absence of abuse or other things, a two parent household is more stable than a single parent household. While two-parent households are not immune to having kids who commit crime, I believe their kids do so at a lower rate. Politicians must embrace this but probably will not do so, or at a lower level, because single parents are a strong voting bloc and if you slight them, you won't get their vote. This also ties into religion, which makes it all the more complicated, given the justified separation of church and state. It's a delicate act to be sure.

Even with divorce being commonplace and relatively easy to obtain, it is still easier for people who live together to separate than if they were married. It will be interesting to see if there is an effect on crime from all the people who are living together and raising families but have not married.
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by jsb1974 July 25, 2007 1:07 AM EDT
Where are the parents? Why aren't they keeping their kids out of gangs? We want to blame everyone else - the police, the schools, the teachers, the NRA, our state government - why are we not blaming the parents of these kids who are joining these gangs? Isn't it the responsibility of the parent to keep their kids out of trouble and to teach them to live respectful lives, to get an education, to not be a victim? Why do we always blame everyone else? Ask yourself, what would I do if I knew my child was involved with gang activity. Then ask yourself what are the parents of these kids doing. Maybe we should start there before we point fingers at everyone except those on the front lines of responsibility.
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