Monday, January 05, 2009

To the Man on the Street about the Morse "L" Attack

To Man on the Streets among other frustrated residents:

Most of us don't see much crime in our neighborhoods. We may see someone involved in an arguable drug deal, an open beer bottle, and the perpetual trash. We may see someone flash a gang sign and evoke anger. Perhaps, we experience little else other than never ending dog crap on our grass. We may find that the local apartment building lacks reasonable maintanence or some event happened while we were gone at work. Most of us are non-confrontational. We respect people's space, even if others have yet to learn how to respect our space.

If we approach the belligerent, then we risk misunderstandings. Some are 'hard of hearing' or simply 'want to hardly hear.' Diplomacy is a tender art best left to the experts. Whatever the issue, the Morse Street "L" seems like a textbook example of what not to do at 3:30 a.m. on New Years Eve based upon the blogs! Nevertheless, I sympathesize with the victims. Anyone can become frustrated and vulnerable after work at 3:30 a.m.

Some appear confused about when the crime was committed. A crime must be quickly defined and geographically pinpointed for 911 to get Police to react fast! The Morse "L" event escalated into an aggravated battery; the subjects committed the attack on CTA Property. See 720 ILCS 12-4(b)(9). However, perceived crimes were in progress before the victim ever reached the turnstyle.

It seems, in hindsight, unwise to report the crime until after there was physical confrontation. Perhaps, the victim should have reported the "assault in progress." Unfortunately, a decision was made to confront. The law requires a victim to back away from crimes in progress (assault, mob action, and trespass). Otherwise, a victim can become the offender. Of course, hindsight is always 20/20, but ponder these thoughts.

The victim 'may' have had other options. I am unaware that there was a report of "assault, mob action, and trespass in progress" before the Morse "L" confrontation. A criminal 'assault' is an event that puts the victim in 'reasonable apprehension' of 'receiving a battery. That is, reasonable fear of future bodily harm. Activity of an insulting 'or' provoking nature, such as confinement or restraint is often criminal, as well. See 720 ILCS 5/12-1(a), 5/12-3 and related law. Either crime, among others, are punishable by a maximum of less than one year of imprisonment. 730 ILCS 5/5-8-3.

A call to 911 for 'mob action, assault or battery in progress' should get immediate attention. Why approach the CTA turnstyle, when someone is committing a crime? Just report it! Unfortunately, the victim is made to appear 'unintimidated' in blog reports. The victim's alleged state of mind seems 'unreasonable' to me in hindsight. In approaching, he put himself and others at risk and escalated the incident. He 'might' have been arrested, as well, but the suspects fled, which is an arguable admission of their guilt. See 720 ILCS 5/12-4(a) and 12-4(b)(9). Perhaps, there were grounds to charge the suspects for a hate crime, if caught, but this is unclear from the blog reports.

Of course, if any suspect is ever arrested and arraigned as a defendant, then the judge or jury makes the final ruling. Locals have a right to pack the courtroom, do research, and provide morale. Residents can send advance information to the appropriate Assistant States Attorney ["ASA"], States Attorney Unit, or news agency. This is particularly helpful, when there is evidence of the accused defendants' propensities to repeatedly commit attacks. There is a place to research a defendant's record, if arraigned. Go to the 10th Floor of the Daley Center, if you want to 'mine data,' but beware, an arrest is not a conviction and neither is an indictment. Also, dragnets can happen. Ultimately, the ASA must prove that a defendant is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt and may dismiss a case.

When someone prevents passage through intimidation and looks like they won't let a passenger take the train, then a victim must decide whether it is menacing and thus 'an assault in progress.' Most reasonable people find it innappropriate to physically bar passage to a CTA turnstyle. When faced with an assault, you should report it to 911. An "assault in progress" should evoke immediate action by CPD. The alleged confrontation resulted after there was a 'reasonable apprehension' of receiving physical contact of an insulting or provoking nature with an individual. See Battery 720 ILCS 5/12-3(a)(2).

Of course, an Assistant States Attorney will make the final decision on whether to prosecute, as well. That said, a court can impose or revoke conditional discharge, supervision, or a suspended sentence. See 730 ILCS 5/5-6-3. This may depend upon whether the offender was provoked, etc. These are known as mitigating factors. Some mitigating factors may mean zilch to a Court as a matter of discretion. Also, there can be aggravating factors, such as a possible secondary charge of Mob Action (720 ILCS 5/ , among other grounds for arrest. The law requires a victim to avoid confrontation; otherwise, the victim can be deemed an aggressor and be charged for a battery, as well, as a matter of discretion.

My morals on the alleged Morse "L" incident: Two options: (1) carry a cell phone and call a taxi from Glenwood Tap, or (2) Call 911, repeat (if necessary), and wait for Police to arrive and clear the area. Let Police know where you are. Encourage them to provide safe passage onto the red line. There may be other options "man on the street." If we don't use them, we lose them, among other things.

Disclaimer: the above is general information not meant to be legal advice. Every circumstance requires a reasonable reaction based upon experience. For more information, attend your Beat meetings and seek assistance, when provided, from those who professionally teach others to avoid being a victim. Some crimes take two parties. Other crimes are difficult to punish due to demands placed on law enforcement. Don't turn yourself into a victim.

3 comments:

Man On The Street said...

My morals on the alleged Morse "L" incident: Two options: (1) carry a cell phone and call a taxi from Glenwood Tap, or (2) Call 911, repeat (if necessary), and wait for Police to arrive and clear the area. Let Police know where you are. Encourage them to provide safe passage onto the red line. There may be other options "man on the street." If we don't use them, we lose them, among other things.

Thanks for addressing me and my concerns directly. Pretty cool. But I do have problems with your approach.

As someone mentioned, the option of taking a cap isn't always available to everyone for a number of reasons. First, who could have anticipated such a confrontation at a CTA train station that it warrents automatically calling a cab? I've lived in Chicago all of my life, rode the buses and train since I was seven and rarely if ever heard of such a scenario. My first instinct would NOT be to automatically call a cab if my regular routine is to ride the train home. Also, for many people, riding the CTA is the ONLY option, timewise and financially speaking. To do so you HAVE to walk through the turnstyle. If there are various people blocking it, your only option is to ask them to move (which I'm guessing the victims in this case did). What happened after that is, of course, up to debate (did the victims try to leave and were attacked? did the victims become physical in trying to board the train? did the victims not say anything at all and were attacked for no reason?).

And even if the victims immediately left and called the cops, who's to say the attackers wouldn't have followed them and assaulted them anyway? They obviously had no qualms about hanging out on CTA property and attacking strangers, so following their victims regardless of their desire to avoid confrontation is not out of the question.

Calling 911 is not always a safe options depending on the situation. Should the victims have called 911 when they saw the attackers hanging out in the train station (again, calling 911 for loiterers is probably not high on the police emergency priority list)? Should they have waited until they were denied entry, then stood there and whipped out their cell phones to call 911? (I'm sure the attackers would have left peacefully without incident upon seeing that).

Sure it would have been "safer" to take a cab, if that is an option for you. And yes, calling 911 is adviseable, provided you can leave the situation and get to a safe place to do so. But for whatever reason, these two people chose not to do so or at least felt they didn't have to, which is their right. I'm not a pollyanna who thinks that civic rights trumps common sense all the time. But someone telling me I can't right the fucking train? Perhaps it's the 6-3, 230 pound black guy in me talking, but fuck that. Had I been in that situation, i probably would have told them to move and if it's on, then it's on.

You are corect that if we don't use other options, we may "lose them". But if we opt to take cabs, walk 10 blocks out of our way to avoid "dangerous street corners", give ourselves self-imposed curfews to be off the streets and avoid trouble, if we don't stand up for our rights and let the petty thugs have their way, we lose a lot more.

Sorry for rambling. Too many thoughts on this. But thanks for addressing it.

lafew said...

Sure, there is an arguable claim against CTA 'for posting' a security guard and providing what appeared to be a safe environment for commuters. The negligence is in holding out a security guard, who was unwilling or unable to report the unsafe condition to Police in a timely manner, so that the crowd could be safely dispersed. They have a very limited time to file as in months at most.

www.yourcta.com is the place to find the e-mail addresses for the administration Complain to them! Craig is correct calling the CTA complaint line is a waste of time.
They put you on perpetual hold. I have to wonder whether the contractor, if there is one, suppresses CTA complaints based upon my past efforts.

CTA also has regular meetings. Efforts can be made to bring CTA administrators to RP! People should not stew, they should perpetually beef at the right time and place to those responsible until something is done! You can even provide links to mine and Craig's Blog as reference points for CTA officials.

MOTS, I was born in Chicago about fifty years ago. I played at Potawatomi Park as a toddler in what is left of the sandbox in the early sixties. I spent a year enrolled at a feeder high school to the defunct Cooley High School when CPS closed it. I commuted as a teenager on C&NW, the subway, and the "EL." Although the solicitors occasionally beg, it is no where near what it used to be.

I went to Biddy Mulligans and listened to Yippies recite like beatniks. I remember when street musicians were banned, which was overkill. I have lived in Chicago for twenty-two continuous years, almost half of which were in Rogers Park. I also have generations of ancestors who grew up and lived in RP. This is home for me. That said, this is what I have learned; respect is a two way street. There are ways to handle bad manners.

That said, I still believe that there were other options besides approaching the turnstyle without a CPD escort. We don't have to growl like Grawbowski's every time that some teenager or young adult has issues with his hormones or maturity level.

Again, I admit that I was not there; I accept that premise. Since I have lived in the Chicago area for all but two years, I could have even walked home and burned off the alcohol, if any.

That said, if you see something, say something. I wonder, since hindsight is always 20/20, whether Police would have escorted the victims in question through the turnstyles and waited on the platform, upon request.

No one has to be a hero. There is a place and a time for everything. I think that we should learn from these incidents.

As stated in previous posts on other blogs, the situation on the ground in Rogers Park has improved tremendously in my opinion over the last ten years. Gin bottles have been thrown on neighbors' lawns since the days of prohibition. We can only hope that more take an interest in improving the lives of others, who are unable to figure it out!

Occasional ebbs take place. I hope that the positive trend continues in spite of the pessimism and what can seem at times like pointless political rhetoric. Craig is not a native Chicagoan, but I agree that there is always room for improvement. Neighbors just have to decide that they want it bad enough to do something other than bicker about it.

Man On The Street said...

The negligence is in holding out a security guard, who was unwilling or unable to report the unsafe condition to Police in a timely manner, so that the crowd could be safely dispersed.

Again, I think you're missing a key issue. According to reports there was NO security guard there. Only a CTA agent, who is NOT a person trained in security. Unless there was a security guard there earlier in the evening, there apparently wasn't one there at 3:30 when the incident took place.

That said, I still believe that there were other options besides approaching the turnstyle without a CPD escort. We don't have to growl like Grawbowski's every time that some teenager or young adult has issues with his hormones or maturity level.

Who said anything about "growl like Grabowski's ever time some teenager or young adult has issues with his hormones or maturity level"? I NEVER advised getting tough with them as a general rule. I'm talking about ME. I'm talking about a person who is refusing me entry into a public facilty, a person who has no authority to do so. If I say "excuse me" several times, as I would, and that person refuses to budge, then yes I, personally, would go "Grabowski" on them. I have a middle-to-low tolerance for some unauthorized stranger denying me my right and I don't care if it's a teenager or a fully "mature" adult. Trust me, I know the difference between a situation that is threat to my life and a run-of-the-mill asshole. I've dealt with them in bars, in stores, on the street and, yes, in train stations. I've dealt with them singularly and in groups. I guess "waiting for a CPD escort" depends on the person, the situation, etc. Don't get me wrong, I know when to walk away. If someone truly feels threatened by the situation, by all means, walk away and call the cops. Period.

I could have even walked home...

Well, that might have created a different problem...

Again, I never advised that direct confrontation was the answer to this problem for EVERYONE. If that was the impression I gave, then I'm sorry. That might be MY response at some point, but not for everyone. The point I was trying to make is that taking a cab should not be an automatic response to leaving work at 3:30 a.m. Immediately calling the cops upon seeing a group of teens in a train station should NOT be an automatic response (not to mention being a borderline racist response).

Neighbors just have to decide that they want it bad enough to do something other than bicker about it.

Agreed. We just apparently have different ideas on what "do something" means.


P.S. I went to Biddy Mulligans too and saw WAR and the Ohio Players there. Oh, and I remember the bar around the corner that had turtle races...