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Lee Cataluna: HPD's Shameful Crime-Solving Record Shouldn't Be Tolerated - Honolulu Civil Beat

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About a year ago, I was sitting in a meeting in downtown Honolulu when, all of a sudden, there were strange sounds coming from the ceiling. Something had gotten in through the roof and was crawling around the duct system.

A colleague looked up and saw a face peering down from an air vent. Someone had climbed up a fire ladder outside the building, had found a way inside the narrow ventilation system, and was crawling around inside the building. Eventually, the climber made it out to the steep-pitched roof, wedged herself precariously in a corner, and proceeded to break off roof tiles and throw the pieces to the ground.

Police were called. The fire department showed up with a truck and lift to get the person off the roof. Maybe a dozen or more first responders spent two hours trying to safely get her down.

The saddest part of the story was this: The cops knew this person by name and had pulled her off high places before. She was homeless. She was a climber. She was often in dangerous situations that required the assistance of so many first responders.

Honolulu police have a dismal record when it comes to closing cases, especially property crimes.

Anthony Quintano/Civil Beat

Just about everybody on Oahu has a story like this, about seeing teams of police officers, as well as fire fighters and ambulance crews, responding to a single homeless person who is gravely disabled, dangerous or in danger, acting out and refusing help. HPD is very visible in the community. We know they’re busy doing stuff that nobody else wants to do and stuff that is, frankly, a stretch as far as their job description.

Likewise, many Oahu residents have first-person accounts of home break-ins or car break-ins and how they knew, even as they picked up the phone to report the crime, that it was a fruitless endeavor, a formality simply to document the loss for insurance purposes or to add to the neighborhood statistics.

HPD may be very visible in the community, but they are mostly reactive, clearing up whatever mess there is in the moment and then moving on to the next. Oahu residents have tacitly given up on crime-solving, case-breaking, or even investigatory follow-up.

It may not be surprising to those who live here that the Honolulu Police Department has one of the worst crime-clearing rates in the country, but it should be infuriating. It should be untenable. Christina Jedra’s analysis of FBI data describing what we have understood anecdotally for too long should ignite a call for action and a commitment to change.

Don’t Take It Anymore

In 2018, Honolulu Police Chief Susan Ballard warned the Honolulu City Council that with nearly 250 unfilled positions in the department, victims of non-violent crimes would get a letter telling them that their report was noted but no action would be taken.

“The property crimes, you know, we’re still going to do some of the investigations if we have the leads,” Ballard said at the time. “But if we don’t have the leads, and we don’t have the staffing to chase after the leads, then we just don’t have the personnel.”

However, these numbers from the FBI show the magnitude of the problem. Even violent crimes aren’t being cleared at a rate comparable to other police departments or even to HPD in years past.

No wonder so many crime victims take to social media and the Stolen Stuff Hawaii Facebook group, become their own investigators and crowd-source enforcement of laws.

The thing is, though, even in the de facto role of social service front-line workers, the efforts of the Honolulu Police Department haven’t yielded much positive change. They’re rescuing the same folks over and over, telling the same people to move along, routinely clearing the same homeless encampments.

No wonder so many crime victims take to social media and the Stolen Stuff Hawaii Facebook group, become their own investigators and crowd-source enforcement of laws.

In the last six months, police were assigned yet another new duty: to enforce quarantine and Mayor Kirk Caldwell’s various public health fiats, issuing mountains of citations to people sitting on the beach or walking in a park when Caldwell decided that, somehow, this was the key to combating COVID-19.

(Actually, the solo-only beach-and-trail user rule was supposed to make for easier enforcement, so even COVID rules require special accommodations for Honolulu’s underperforming police force.)

For all its big city problems, Honolulu retains many of its small-town sensibilities. As most people can tell a story of a crime that happened to them or someone they know that received no follow-up from police, most can also tell a story about a cop who is awesome or describe a time a police officer truly helped.

I bring this up to make the point that the potential for efficacy is there. So much of it comes down to management of resources and political will.

There is a mayor’s race happening. Don’t buy into the dodge by Caldwell and his predecessors who shrug and say if you have complaints about HPD take them up with the police commission.

There should be a collective declaration that we’re just not going to live like this anymore, not in Hawaii, not in a place where we talk about a laid-back lifestyle but lock doors and windows and set the alarm even if we’re just doing errands that will take us away from home for 45 minutes on a Saturday morning.

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Lee Cataluna: HPD's Shameful Crime-Solving Record Shouldn't Be Tolerated - Honolulu Civil Beat
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