INSANITY Jason Rantz: Seattle's downward spiral – may legalize most misdemeanor crimes

Dennis Olson

Chief Curmudgeon
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www.foxnews.com /opinion/jason-rantz-seattles-downward-spiral

Jason Rantz: Seattle's downward spiral – these city actions are driving the decline
Jason Rantz
6-7 minutes

The city of Seattle may legalize most misdemeanor crimes. This isn’t an exaggeration. It’s arguably not even the most radical idea introduced by the Seattle City Council.

Rather, it’s the latest move by politicians growing increasingly dangerous and aloof to concerns in a city spiraling dangerously out of control.

In the final week of October, the Council used the 2021 budget process to forward an updated plan installing heroin injection sites, replace a specialized police unit tackling homelessness, and lay off more Seattle police, which already has record low staffing. Seeing the writing on the wall, some of the city’s best paid residents are fleeing.

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Councilmember Lisa Herbold argues that misdemeanor defendants disproportionately suffer from mental illness, addiction and/or homelessness. Punishing them for crimes, therefore, is unconscionable. Consequently, Herbold introduced legislation rewriting Seattle’s criminal code to offer affirmative defenses for suspects.

Merely arguing that crime was a consequence of your homelessness, addiction or mental illness could warrant a dismissal of charges. Seattle is experiencing an historic surge in homicides – the highest since at least 2008. Should it add more unpunished misdemeanors to the growing list of concerns? Herbold originally tried to sneak the legislation in as a budget item, meaning it would not be subject to the same public scrutiny, but the Council tabled it and plans to review the idea as a standalone item.

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In truth, the shameful reality in Seattle is that misdemeanor crimes are seldom seriously charged and criminals rarely see meaningful jail time. It’s created a dangerous environment highlighted by a report showing 100 prolific offenders responsible for 636 jail bookings in 2019. A year later, the problem hasn’t gone away.

One fed up judge finally rejected yet another plea deal to let a homeless man with over 70 convictions go free. Judge Ed McKenna questioned how releasing him served public safety interests. Aghast that the judge put a homeless man in jail, Seattle City Attorney Pete Holmes partnered with the public defender in an unprecedented media campaign to shame the judge. McKenna felt forced into early retirement.

The Council argues it’s addressing the underlying causes of the crimes when, in truth, it is exacerbating them. The Council cut Seattle’s Navigation Team, a specialized unit of police and outreach workers clearing dangerous encampments while connecting the homeless with shelter.

Seattle is about to hit year 16 of the 10-year plan to end homelessness precisely because of the city’s permissive attitudes on homelessness.

The Council replaced the team with eight civilian outreach workers doing the same work, minus enforcement powers. That means no more sweeps. Good luck finding a park not completely covered with tents. Seattle is about to hit year 16 of the 10-year plan to end homelessness precisely because of the city’s permissive attitudes on homelessness.

A significant problem is the overwhelming number of homeless addicts. City officials believe over 50% of Seattle’s homeless are dealing with addiction. Unfortunately, the Council intends on coddling, rather than treating, them.

Despite pushback from residents, neighboring cities and the U.S. attorney for Western Washington, the Council edged closer to heroin injection sites (dubiously called “safe consumption sites,” though it’s uncontroversial to note it’s never “safe” to shoot up).

Rather than standalone sites, the Council now plans to fund them in pre-existing social service offices where the homeless already visit. The plan has the support of the Council, despite little data to suggest it would be successful. In fact, the data shows the opposite.

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Seattle is inspired by heroin injection sites in nearby Vancouver, B.C. They shouldn’t be. The neighborhood in downtown Vancouver was turned into a dangerous, filthy hellscape. What’s worse, overdose deaths continue to skyrocket. September saw over four overdose deaths a day, double what they saw the year prior.

With addiction comes crime. It’s not just open-air drug dealing, which remains a fixture, but break-ins where addicts steal then sell items to fuel their addiction. As those crimes go unpunished, a Council hellbent on defunding the police has run cops out of the force.

The SPD has the lowest number of deployable staff since 1990, which interim chief Adrian Diaz warns is not enough to keep the city safe. Officers accelerated their historic mass exodus after the Council partially defunded the department to force layoffs. At least 118 officers separated by the end of September. Yet the Council is readying an additional 20% budget cut, which cuts staff by not filling over 90 empty positions and laying off 35.

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Residents are taking notice. South Lake Union and Downtown Seattle, where many of the city’s high paid tech workers live, are ditching their high-priced neighborhoods leaving a 9.5% and 8.5% large-apartment vacancy behind. Why pay high rents for small apartments in a city that’s growing increasingly dangerous, dirty and expensive? Businesses are following suit.

The very addicts on Seattle streets can change when they hit rock bottom. That may be what it takes to get Seattle to change its course: hitting rock bottom. But at that point, what will be left of this once great city? If there’s not quick intervention, we may soon find out.
 

BadMedicine

Would *I* Lie???
well, I for one would be against liberalizing any actual CRIME LAWS... the ones they mentions, homelessness, substance abuse, IMO aren't crimes. we DONT have the money to enforce this garbage... now a NO LOITERING around lawful businesses, trespassing in entry ways, or harassing of paying customers/ lawful citizens.,.. those are REAL crimes that should be dealt with by the state if they don't ant property owners to.... but they aint ready for that convo...

currently they're trying to drive the last business owners out of town so they can create a feral human utopia. Good on 'em. May the last homeless family there eat the last politician.. you know the .gov aint leaving until THE PARTY OVER!
 

hiwall

Has No Life - Lives on TB
People convicted of any and all crimes should receive punishment. Labor is a good punishment for lesser crime.
 

Dobbin

Faithful Steed
Rise of a "might makes right" situation.

A "frontier" situation if you will.

Warlords will rise on a majority platform of force and offering what Government doesn't seem to want to get its intellectual grippers around.

Not every human is motivated by "peace and love." In truth they're probably about equally motivated by hate and war.

They do have to be encouraged to "the higher motivations."

And - for the moment - government in Seattle still has the upper hand in force. That is what gives government license to enforce laws - a monopoly of force sanctioned by the majority of humans. But this being imagines it will not be long before even government bends their knee to some warlord - or some organization. AntiFa seems real close to being top dog currently - if not there already.

It is possible to be "generous to a fault." It would seem the Progs in Seattle are past that point.

Dobbin
 

undead

Veteran Member
Seattle residents can decide to live in a feces-strewn cesspool all they wish, and I hope the more their streets smell of urine and feces the better. But what the socialists REALLY want is for this same thing to be forced down the throats of NORMAL cities and towns by edict of the Federal government, or left-wing Governors.
 

SSTemplar

Veteran Member
I'm good with that. If there is no victim there is no crime. There is a difference between loitering in front of a store and actually denying access or egress or if the loitering is causing customers to by pass your business. Physical or financial assault are real crimes. Other things are fund raising for the city,state,country. Hell half the felonys in this country don't actually harm a person but give you control over people. I suspect that anything outside the 10 commandments is superfluous.
 

Double_A

TB Fanatic
No city may decide, that misdemeanor crimes as defined by the State, are no longer crimes.

Cities may drop or amend their Cities codes, but not state law by themselves
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
The impression I got both visiting my old housemate a year and a half ago and his current e-mails are that a lot of people (he's one of them) don't really experience the "bad side" of Seattle very much; though we were both shocked at what happened with CHAZ (where he rented my uber).

It was very interesting because I not only visited him, but I got together with a face-book pen pal whose family nearly fell into homelessness (when her husband came down with a chronic and terminal illness and needed care) and was only saved when a relative passed away and left her some money.

She bought a tiny house with it in an outlying area and her daughter moved in, but she took us around and showed us the camps and explained how people fall into the tents; she actually had been desperately trying to help a friend who was a single mother prevent this from happening and said: "I'm a medical worker, I knew all sorts of a social worker and agencies and NO ONE would help her and her child, no one."

She said "the pattern" is usually a job loss or illness, followed by income loss, followed by living in a car, then the car gets towed away and if the family is lucky they get a tent.

She said somewhere in the process many people start drinking or using drugs, at which point they then fall into the over-all addicted and pretty hopeless population she showed us living in city parks, parking lots, and other places.

But the point is, they did NOT live anywhere near where my old housemate and his High Tech friends various IT agencies live.

He was used to seeing these people on the bus sometimes, but they didn't really affect his life.

I suspect now that things are so bad that it IS starting to affect people like him and it sounds like they are moving and taking their money with them.

He's hardly worked in his office for months now, he hasn't said anything about moving himself; but there would be no reason for him not to in terms of working, he can do that anywhere.
 

hiwall

Has No Life - Lives on TB
No city may decide, that misdemeanor crimes as defined by the State, are no longer crimes.

Cities may drop or amend their Cities codes, but not state law by themselves
They can refuse to arrest and refuse to prosecute.
 

Firebird

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Politicians depend on tax revenues, why in the world are they hell bent on destroying Seattle?
 
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