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A
We
know
that
what's
happening
right
now
is
much
more
than
a
police
issue
or
a
crime
issue.
This
is
a
community
issue
and
there's
trauma
in
our
communities
and
we
need
to
heal
it.
The
police
officers
also
know
this
and
they
feel
it
too.
The
deaths
of
young
people
are
causing
pain
throughout
this
community
and
it
goes
throughout
the
ranks.
This
trauma
extends
past
the
victims
and
their
families.
It's
for
felt
throughout
all
of
our
communities.
No
matter
what
neighborhood
you
live
in,
no
matter
what
high
school
you
go
to
or
which
church
you
attend.
A
A
Earlier
this
summer,
had
the
opportunity
to
attend
one
of
our
summer
earn
and
learns
in
beltzhoover
in
a
fifteen-year-old
girl
said
something
to
me.
That
is
beyond
wisdom.
It's
it's!
It's
something!
That's
going
to
stick
with
me
for
the
rest
of
my
life.
She
said
you
can't
make
choices
for
me.
I'll
make
my
own
choices
in
life,
but
you
can
provide
me
opportunities.
We've
been
working
to
do
that
through
my
brother's
keeper.
We've
been
working
with
those
that
are
the
most
risk
young
african-american
males
to
provide
opportunity.
A
A
B
Thank
you
taking
this
rare
bonuses.
Thank
you
all
for
coming
this
afternoon
this
afternoon,
I
just
want
to
follow
up
a
little
bit
on
the
mayor's
words
about
the
the
corresponding
the
correlation,
if
you
will,
between
services
and
opportunities
and
violence,
because
because
there
really
is
a
is
a
nexus,
and
it's
going
to
that
point
of
connection
that
we're
going
to
be
working
on
as
we
start
moving
forward,
implementing
our
model
of
focus
deterrence
or
what,
if
we
describe
for
you
in
August.
B
Fourth,
we
had
a
press
conference
is
our
model
of
group
violence
intervention
a
lot
of
that's
going
to
involve
getting
together
with
the
moral
voice
of
the
community,
those
people
in
the
lives
of
the
young
people
who
are
engaged
in
this
pattern,
violence
and
helping
them
to
make
better
choices.
You
know
communicating
to
the
loved
ones
of
these
individuals.
You
know
we
love
you,
we
care
about
you,
but
the
violence
needs
to
stop
and
having
that
unified
message.
Come
from
both
police
service
providers,
members
of
their
community,
that
they
care
about.
B
So,
looking
for
a
uniform
moral
voice
for
the
community
and
then
focused
enforcement
for
those
who
make
bad
choices,
okay,
the
person
god
the
purpose
for
this
particular
press
conference-
is
to
simply
provide
a
little
context
and
perspective
to
what
we've
been
what
we've
been
seeing.
The
violets
we've
been
experiencing
again
on
August.
Fourth,
we
did
a
very
detailed
press
conference
where
we
unveiled
our
web
based
violence
report
you'll
find
it
it's.
You
will
still
find
there
a
five-year
analysis
of
violent
crime
in
the
city
of
Pittsburgh
in
great
detail.
B
I
urge
you
to
go
back
to
back
to
look
at
that.
You'll
also
find
an
analysis
of
the
year-to-date
from
from
that
day,
that
website
is
going
to
be
updated
every
month,
as
the
new
data
becomes
available.
I
just
looked
a
little
while
ago,
and
my
staff
is
in
the
process
of
uploading
the
July
data.
So
if
you
go
there,
you'll
see
the
data
has
been
updated
from
the
from
the
last,
but
in
the
meantime,
what
we
want
to
do
here
today.
B
This
is
just
set
the
context
and
help
allay
some
fears
and
maybe
break
up
some
urban
legends
that
may
be
developing
here
in
short
and
I'm
gonna
bring
up
commander.
Larry's
corrado
in
a
few
moments
is
going
to
talk
more
about
the
specifics
of
the
trends
and
the
investigations,
but
in
terms
of
the
broader
perspective,
please
understand
it
from
the
statistical
standpoint,
the
number
of
homicides
and
shoot
in
shootings
and
violent
crime.
B
We
are
on
a
general
par
with
our
five
year
average,
that
being
on
a
general
part,
puts
us
down
somewhat
from
last
year's
averages.
If
you
compare,
we
in
the
city
of
Pittsburgh
to
other
cities,
our
size
and
larger
you'll
see
that
we
are
not
experiencing
the
significant
growth
and
violent
crime.
That's
occurring
in
these
other
cities.
Okay,
now
this
is
not
intended
to
minimize
the
seriousness
of
the
problem.
We
face.
It's
still
a
problem:
okay,
it's
still
an
all-hands-on-deck
emergency.
B
When
we
have
this
many
young
people
dying,
but
the
reality
is,
it
is
not
an
epidemic
of
violence
that
is
outside
of
the
norm
of
this
city.
Okay,
we're
going
to
be
talking
to
you
today
about
some
of
the
methodologies
we
are
putting
in
place
to
improve
our
capacity
to
reduce
violence,
so
the
data
we
unfolded
on
the
August
fourth
website
is
one
effort
toward
that,
using
data
to
measure
and
more
precisely
define
the
areas
in
the
individuals
driving
the
violence.
B
Commanders
I'm,
sorry
assistant
chief
Schubert,
talked
to
you
last
time
and
we'll
talk
more
this
time
about
some
of
our
focus
deterrence
efforts
in
the
communities
where
the
shootings
are
occurred
and
share
with
us
anecdotal
success
story
or
two.
So
we
have
a
lot
of
things
going
on
in
place
in
terms
of
improving
our
game,
leveraging
the
best
practices
of
our
profession.
Next
week,
myself
and
30
of
my
closest
friends
here
from
Pittsburgh
to
include
police
officers,
members
of
the
criminal
justice
system,
elected
official
city
city
residents,
will
be
traveling
to
john
jay
college.
B
To
learn
from
the
best
more
details
about
how
this
focus
deterrence
model
has
worked
in
other
cities
and
learned
from
other
communities
that
have
implemented
this.
This
strategies
will
learn
from
those
who
for
whom
it
worked
well
and
for
those
with
whom
it
didn't
work
as
well,
we'll
find
out
what
they
would
do
differently
the
next
time,
and
when
we
come
back,
we
will
continue
to
move
forward
in
earnest.
My
goal
would
be
that
we
will
fully
implement
this
strategy
at
honor
about
the
first
of
the
year.
It
was
a
little
luck.
B
It
may
be
quicker
than
that
gave
it
in
the
meantime
that
hasn't
stopped
us
from
improving
every
single
thing
that
we
know
we
can
identify
here
to
hone
our
game.
So
with
that
event,
turn
over
to
Commander,
Larry's,
grotto
or
major
crimes,
commander
will
talk
to
you
about
the
investigations
and
some
of
the
more
details
of
the
trend.
C
Good
evening
or
good
afternoon,
chica
clay
asked
me
to
speak
relative
to
context
and
and
what
we're
seeing
in
investigations
are
violent
crimes
and
the
reality
of
it
is
I
feel
very
confident
saying
our
communities
are
very
safe.
Our
communities
are
very
safe
in
the
manner
of
part
1
crimes
relative
to
robbery
relative
to
rape,
burglary.
Our
communities
are
very
at
risk
in
those
communities
of
color,
where
we
have
high
instances
of
gun
violence
and
to
provide
context.
C
I
think
you
have
to
look
at
victimology
and
when
we
talk
about
victimology
that
we
have
seventy
two
percent
of
our
murder
victims.
Seventy-Two
percent
of
our
murder
victims
are
the
motive,
is
either
attributed
to
retaliation,
drugs,
and/or
robbery,
and
that
is
a
significant
number
there's
a
significant
number
because
of
the
association
that
our
victims
keep
now
for
know
and
I
said
this
the
last
time.
This
is
not
a
blame
game.
Loss
of
life
is
tragic.
Loss
of
life
matters,
regardless
of
the
victims,
participation
in
crime,
and
that
will
always
remain
clear.
C
However,
we
understand
that
our
victims
behaviors
for
the
association's
that
they
keep
put
them
at
extreme
risk
and
with
that
extreme
or
with
that
activity,
increases
their
risk
to
be
victim
about
front.
So
we
looked
at
it
just
crossed
the
board.
You
know
we
know
we
have
an
eighteen
percent
decrease
in
homicides
from
2015
to
2014.
C
However,
that's
not
good
enough
because
we
see
an
increase
in
non-fatal
shootings
across
the
city,
so
homicide
isn't
our
only
a
matter
of
violence.
It's
immeasurable.
However,
we
still
have
work
to
do
to
ensure
that
that
non-fatal
shooting
those
gunshots
that
you're
hearing
in
your
neighborhoods
at
night.
Those
are
diminished
as
well,
but
relative
to
that,
that's
what
my
position
was,
and
that
was
what
I
was
asked
to
provide.
You
know
we
talked
about
gun
violence
versus
gun
safety.
I
know,
question
came
up
relative
to
the
age
of
our
victims.
C
We'd
have
not
seen
an
increase
in
younger
victims;
it
remains
the
same.
There
were
nine
victims.
Last
year
under
the
age
of
20,
there
were
nine
victims
to
this
point
this
year
under
the
age
of
20.
It
gets
our
attention
when
you
hear
a
child.
A
young
teen
become
victim
of
murder.
However,
all
of
our
murders
get
to
do
attention
that
they
deserve
regardless
of
age,
and
then
that
is
important
for
you
to
understand,
as
we
move
forward
how
we're
going
to
investigate
these
cases.
Okay,
thank
you.
D
D
When
something
happens
it
happens
to
all
of
us
and
as
commander
Saradha
was
saying,
doesn't
matter
who
gets
killed,
it's
one
too
many.
It
does
affect
our
officers
a
lot
more
when
it
is
a
younger
person
or
a
child.
It's
something
that's
difficult
to
deal
with,
as
it
is
difficult
to
deal
with
for
the
members
of
the
community
where
it
happens.
D
We
recognize
that
the
first
48
hours
in
his
own
on
our
side,
takeout
investigation
or
GV
I,
it's
critical
time
for
us
and
when
I
say
that
not
just
for
trying
to
help
solve
the
case,
which
is
something
we
we
desperately
try
to
assist.
But
it's
working
with
the
community
is
that
community
engagement
it's
getting
out
there,
knocking
on
the
doors
where
this
is
occurring,
letting
them
know
that
we
care
here's
what
we
got.
We
need
your
help,
everything
we
need
to
do
to
help
calm.
D
Can't
say
enough
about
the
information
sharing
and
internally
and
with
it
with
the
community
I
mean
that's
paramount,
getting
that
information
out
to
them
and
getting
information
that
they
may
have
back
to
the
people
who
need
it,
but,
more
importantly,
talking
to
them
and
letting
them
know.
What's
going
on
in
your
community,
so
they're
not
just
hearing.
D
What's
on
the
news,
they're,
not
just
hearing,
what's
on
the
street,
they
hear
from
us
and
that's
that's
important
calming
the
affairs
of
the
community
through
the
visibility
through
that
door
knocking
through
showing
that
we
support
them
and
providing
a
sense
of
security
in
the
communities
for
people
that
are
affected
by
this
violence.
You
don't
know
where
it's
going
to
happen.
We
don't
know
where
it's
going
to
happen.
D
I
think
that's
probably
one
of
the
biggest
fears
of
people
in
the
community
is
whether
it's
retaliatory
or
not,
that
it
happens
and
there
could
be
innocent
people
who
are
close
by
that's
something
we
take
very
seriously
within
the
park
department,
but
I
can
speak
of
in
each
zone.
We
take
that
very
seriously
that
we
can
help
mitigate
that,
prevent
it,
and
so
that's
that's
something.
That's
close
to
us
using
as
I
said
intelligence-driven
data
to
focus
our
efforts
better.
So
we
can,
we
can
police
better.
We
can
police
smarter
out
in
the
field.
D
D
One
there's
been
a
number
of
homicides,
a
number
of
shootings
number
of
shots
fired
calls
in
the
Marshall
shadeland
in
mexican
war
streets
and
in,
I
think,
is
probably
mid
july,
commander
Bickerstaff
and
her
staff
working
with
intelligence
working
with
narcotics
and
vice
working
with
commander.
Sir
otto
and
investigations
put
together
a
plan
and
they
didn't
just
look
at
it
and
say:
hey
we're
going
to
go
out
and
saturate
the
area
and
hopefully
will
disrupt
what's
occurring.
D
One
of
the
incidents-
I
think
it
was
in
earliest
early
august,
where
some
of
the
officers
who
were
doing
surveillance
up
in
shadeland
marshall
and
we're
sitting
in
a
car
watching
and
they
see
a
who
is
from
the
mexican
war
streets
up
in
that
area
out
of
place
so
they're
watching
them
and
I'll
pops.
Somebody
from
Marshall
shadeland
involved
in
illegal
activity
up
there
pulls
out
a
firearm
and
attempts
to
shoot
the
other
person.
There's
a
misfire.
The
officers
end
up
chasing
both
getting
them
and
recovering
three
weapons.
D
This
is
they
weren't
just
there
in
you
know
a
random
place.
They
looked
at
the
information
they
had
and
they
were
there
when
it
occurred
in
a
maybe
arrest.
They
took
guns
off
the
street.
You
know,
they're
of
the
people
that
they
identified
is
the
most
violent
offender.
Since
they
started
this,
they
arrested.
Nine
put
them
in
jail,
recovered
a
number
of
weapons,
drugs
cash,
but
they
won
another
step.
They
went
up
there
and
people
who
are
on
the
list
were
happening,
be
in
jail.
D
Talking
to
the
probation
parole,
looking
into
other
cases,
to
try
to
keep
them
in
jail,
I
mean
it's
things
like
that
that
help
improve
the
communities
to
make
people
feel
safer.
You
know
when
there's
a
court
case
coming
up
or
they're
an
arrest
and
they
get
it
rained
going
down
to
the
magistrate
who's
doing
the
interim
intoning
them
truly
know
the
background
of
this
person.
So
hopefully
we
can
get
a
higher
bond,
keep
them
in
there
and
keep
them
off
the
streets
from
causing
more
violence.
D
They've
been
very
successful
in
the
Mexican
War
Street,
where
they
had
a
number
of
shots,
fired,
call
in
July
and
August.
There
have
been
none
in
September,
so
we
look
at
that
as
a
positive
thing
and
will
continue
on
it
and
will
continue
on
the
marshal
shadeland
and
do
everything
we
can
to
keep
making
it
smaller
and
smaller
and
smaller.
This
wouldn't
be
possible,
though,
without
the
engagement
from
the
community,
the
information
we
get,
people
call
911
me
into
Hazelwood.
D
D
D
We're
going
to
do
everything
to
mitigate
what's
going
on
into
communities,
so
they
trust
us
enough
to
call
911
and
that's
something:
we're
finding
throughout
the
zones,
this
zone,
4
and
zone
1
or
perfect
examples
of
people
coming
forward
and
calling
and
getting
the
information
out
to
us.
So
that's
where
we're
at
we're
going
to
continue
to
do
it
and
I
can't
talk
more
about
the
teamwork,
any
information
sharing
that's
going
on
within
the
Pittsburgh
Police
with
the
communities
and
other
other
agencies
that
are
helping
us.
So
that's
where,
at
on
the
operation
side.
B
No
I
just
have
to
thank
chief
Hubert
and
echo
the
outstanding
police
work
that's
being
done
day
in
and
day
out
here
in
the
Pittsburgh
Bureau
police,
extremely
responsive,
very,
very
capable
investigative
work,
adding
new
tools
to
the
skill
set
and
starting
to
make
a
dent.
It's
that
time
for
celebration.
B
It
just
gives
us
a
hint
that
the
methodology
we're
looking
at
has
us
on
the
right
course
and
we're
going
to
continue
to
try
to
improve
our
capacity
and
earn
the
respect
of
those
in
the
committee's
to
come
to
trust
us
enough
to
have
those
cod
calls
come
more
frequently
for
people
to
have
enough
confidence
in
us
that
they
trust
us
enough
to
be
willing
to
come
forward
to
help
us
with
these
cases.
So
I'm
we're
doing
a
lot
of
it.
A
lot
of
interesting
things
were
embracing
every
best
practice.
B
We
can
identify
that
we
think
will
help
with
this
particular
problem.
But
I've
said
it
before
I'll
say
it
again.
We
could
do
everything
by
the
book.
We
could
do
everything
perfectly
and
still
not
do
this
alone.
Okay,
we
can
only
successfully
do
this
if
we,
as
members
of
a
Pittsburgh
community,
come
together
and
recognize
our
interdependence
in
addressing
the
many
issues
that
fuel
the
violence.
I
don't
want
to
give
give
my
hat's
off
and
thanks
to
our
partners
with
be
pep.
B
B
I've
got
a
lot
of
work
yet
to
do,
but
we're
deeply
in
past
I
committed
to
that
work,
because
the
reality
is
any
loss
of
human
life
is
unacceptable.
It
takes
a
toll
on
the
victims
and
the
victims,
families,
of
course,
but
it
takes
it's
a
tragedy
with
respect
to
the
actors
and
the
actors,
families
as
well.
Nobody
wins
in
this
game.
It's
cheap
schubert
and
the
mayor
mentioned
it
is
taking
a
human
toll
in
my
officers
as
well,
so
that
we
can't
be
successful.