Return to Virginia Business - March 2003

Can a strong new police chief stem Richmond’s crime problem?
Despite perceptions, most violence is not downtown

by Robert L. Burke
Virginia Business
March 2003

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It’s a cold Saturday night in a Richmond east side neighborhood and Vance Purnell is killing time in the parking lot of the 88 Cleaners & Coin Laundry on Government Road. He leans into the passenger window of a small pickup truck to talk to a young woman and an older man, when there is a sudden roar of engines and headlights. Two cars zoom up. Four cops jump out. Purnell, 37, steps back with a blank look. “Take your hands out of your pockets,” yells one officer. He obeys. A small plastic bag falls to the ground.

About an hour later one of the officers tells a city magistrate that he believes the bag holds crack cocaine. But for now an angry Purnell is standing handcuffed in dirty blue coveralls and muddy work boots. His words are slurred; he admits to drinking a couple of beers. Onlookers watch, both curious and entertained. A woman with three children walks through the parking lot. She won’t look but the kids do, their eyes locked on Purnell and the police.

What raised suspicion was seeing Purnell with his hands inside the truck — something officer Richard Lloyd Jr. and his partner Robert Sprinkle spotted through the dark from their cruiser about 40 yard away. Drug deals are often done that way. Lloyd stands with Purnell while other officers talk to the truck occupants, who are later released.“You take drugs?” Lloyd asks Purnell. “Hell no, man,” he says. “I drink.”

Purnell goes to jail, charged with distributing narcotics. And for a few more hours the officers cruise crime-ridden neighborhoods on the city’s east side, past rows of ramshackle or abandoned houses, dirty street corners and the bleak brick buildings of housing projects. They’re on the frontline of the city’s effort to stem a chronic crime problem, which is threatening both its social fabric and economic health. They pass scores of young black men dressed in oversized coats and baggy jeans, knit caps pulled low. The youths studiously pretend not to see them, but Lloyd always shouts a greeting or shines a spotlight. Some they recognize as ones they’ve arrested before. Sprinkle calls them “frequent flyers.”

Before their shift ends they make another arrest, this time two teenage boys found sitting in a stolen blue Buick. One had been picked up just days before on a carjacking charge. Sprinkle, a six-year veteran who patrols some of the city’s worst neighborhoods, can’t fathom how things got so bad. “You wonder why people are out at three o’clock in the morning drinking beer, with a six-month-old baby on their lap,” he says. “Before I took this job, I didn’t even know this place existed.”

The city’s long-running war on crime is at best a standoff. Richmond remains Virginia’s most violent city. Despite gains made in recent years it is still the state’s murder capital, a black eye it earned nationwide in the mid-1990s when homicides soared to 160 in 1994, later dropping under aggressive police tactics and prosecutions. But now killings in the city are up again — rising 20 percent in 2002 to 84, followed by 13 more killings in the first five weeks of this year.

A few miles away from the city’s worst areas, the violence is threatening to take a different toll. Richmond is entering a key phase in the overhaul of its moribund downtown business district. Boarded-up stores on Broad Street will be torn down, replaced by a performing arts complex and a new 216-room hotel. A relic from a failed 1980s project, the Sixth Street Marketplace, will be turned into a street again, lined with new shops and restaurants. A few blocks east a new federal courthouse is planned. The new $160 million Greater Richmond Convention Center on Broad Street is open, and city leaders hope it will spawn new clubs and restaurants in the historic Jackson Ward neighborhood nearby.

None of this will work, though, if people are afraid to come downtown. Business leaders shudder at the thought of Richmond reclaiming its bad reputation. “It does have an impact on our economy because people have the perception that the city is not safe,” says Lynda Sharp Anderson, president and CEO of the city’s Metropolitan Business League. Beverley “Booty” Armstrong, a part-owner of the upscale Jefferson Hotel, calls crime “a huge factor” in the city’s plans. “If the city doesn’t solve that problem or the perception of the problem as the case may be, then the economic growth of the inner city is going to be impossible.”

But exactly how much of the crime fears are perception or reality? Citywide, crime rose 3 percent from 2001 to 2002 with the biggest hikes, about 20 percent, occurring in the number of homicides and rapes. The sad fact is, the areas hardest hit by crime are not the trendy Fan District near Virginia Commonwealth University or Shockoe Bottom or even the boarded-up blocks at Sixth and Broad just a few blocks from the state capitol. It is the low-income neighborhoods south of the James River and east of Interstate 95 that suffer most. Most of the city’s homicides aren’t random killings. Police say in most instances the killer and victim know each other and illegal drugs are involved. Indeed, of the 84 homicides last year not one was downtown.

Richmond’s experience might reflect a larger shift in crime for which experts haven’t agreed on a cause. Washington, D.C., for example, saw a 12 percent hike in homicides last year. Nationwide, the overall crime rose slightly in 2001 after dropping the previous 10 years, according to the most recent data from the U.S. Department of Justice. The homicide rate for older teens and young adults nationwide also rose slightly in 2001.

Into this fight comes police Chief André Parker, a 24-year law enforcement veteran who arrived in Richmond last August from his job as assistant deputy director for the Illinois State Police. Parker follows well-regarded Jerry Oliver, who left after a seven-year tenure to head Detroit’s police department. Parker has vowed to “take back the streets.” In October he announced what he called the “Blue Wave” — an initiative to target open-air drug markets. In late January Parker hosted a public meeting to launch a Community Crime Control Plan to develop a citywide anti-crime strategy. About 400 people attended. Parker also wants to hire another 58 police officers. Police can’t solve chronic problems in Richmond with poverty, illiteracy and the easy access to illegal guns. “The drug problem is not going to be solved by me locking people up,” he says.

Despite its crime problems, Richmond has launched several major projects and attracted commercial investment as well. City Manager Calvin Jamison cites the new convention center and the coming Broad Street improvements, along with a $49 million renovation of the city’s train station. Also taking off is the revitalization of the city’s riverfront. Several developers are planning multi-million projects that will bring shops, restaurants, apartments and new office buildings to areas such as Brown’s Island and along the newly refurbished Canal Walk. “If that doesn’t sound like a city that’s booming with prosperity, I don’t know what is,” Jamison says.

The city may have an edge in its plans to repopulate downtown. Richard Florida, a professor at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh and author of “The Rise of the Creative Class” says urban places like Richmond attract creative people, such as artists and musicians, who in turn develop an urban community that attracts highly sought-after workers in a variety of fields. Once the workers are in place the companies will follow, Florida says. “These old districts provide authenticity” that this creative class covets, Florida told a recent gathering of the Greater Richmond Chamber of Commerce. “You guys have that in spades.”

That’s why places like the Fan District and Shockoe Bottom can attract people despite the city’s disturbing crime rate. “One of the ways cities have dealt with crime issues is by encouraging people who aren’t as fearful of crime,” Florida says. “The gay population, younger artists, the cultural people. ... I think a lot of cities think they’re going to get the suburban family as the first mover into downtown, and that’s just not going to happen.”

Simply increasing the number of people downtown will breed a sense of security, says John F. Berry, executive director of Richmond Renaissance, the organization overseeing many of the downtown projects. “That is going to give people in this region a lot more confidence about downtown.”

There’s another confidence gap, this one political. A dozen area businesses have put $60,000 toward a campaign to yank power away from the current City Council. “There doesn’t seem to be a whole lot of faith” in the city leadership among business people, says Armstrong, a principal in CCA Industries, one of the donor companies. “The perception is you don’t feel the sense of urgency coming out of City Hall. ... They’re all focused on their own little districts.”
The businesses are backing a proposal by the City Charter Commission, formed by former Gov. L. Douglas Wilder and former U.S. Rep. Thomas J. Bliley Jr., to let voters choose the mayor instead of leaving it to the nine-member council. The city’s nine-ward system was set up in the 1970s to guarantee black representation by creating black-majority wards.

What has evolved, critics say, is a leaderless council whose members frequently embarrass the city with over-the-top combativeness or clownish antics. Former mayor Leonidas B. Young, for example, who held office between 1994 and 1996, spent nearly two years in jail for mail fraud, filing a false tax return and obstruction of justice. Council woman Reva Trammell, who represented the 8th District for four years until her defeat last November, was known for her public tirades and occasional scrapes with the law, including an allegation that a city police officer had slapped her. Current 6th District Councilman Sa’ad El-Amin last year surrendered his law license in Virginia rather than face 47 misconduct charges before the Virginia State Bar. On February 21, a federal grand jury indicted El-Amin and his wife, Beverly D. Crawford, on 16 counts of tax evasion and other charges.

Richmond Mayor Rudolph C. McCollum Jr. dismisses the proposal as a power grab. He called the charter commission “a certain group of people that recognize you can harness a lot of folks through money.” What the city needs instead is support from its neighboring counties, he says. Urban cities traditionally have higher levels of social ills such as crime, poverty and illiteracy. Virginia’s independent city system, though, makes cities pay the bill themselves. And the current moratorium on annexations prevents cities from expanding their tax base by taking in more land.

Richmond’s neighboring counties would all benefit from a vibrant urban core, he says, and they ought to help make it happen. Chesterfield County, for example, is considering building a new coliseum to compete against the aging Richmond Coliseum. “Does it make sense ... when 10 miles away you’ve got the facility here? Why not help share in that?” McCollum says. “Those are the kinds of things we need to be thinking about.”

There are plenty of questions about the city’s future. One answer will come this year when demolition crews start taking down empty buildings on Broad Street and erase at least some of its deteriorated landscape. Which way the fight against crime goes is still wide open, as Parker looks for new officers amid an alarming rise in homicides that carried over to early 2003. Richmond’s leaders are looking to 2007 and Jamestown’s 400th anniversary as a kind of coming-out for the city. Jamison calls it “Virginia’s Olympics.” It won’t help if Richmond presents itself to the world wrapped in police tape.

Return to Virginia Business - March 2003