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Mayor: Tent raid was not my plan
Critics have assailed St. Petersburg for last week's slashings at homeless camps .
By ABHI RAGHUNATHAN
Published January 22, 2007
Watch the St. Petersburg Police raid a tent encampment, slicing up and carting away the tents belonging to the homeless.
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ST. PETERSBURG - Mayor Rick Baker says he had no idea that top city officials, including the police chief and one of his deputy mayors, planned a raid on homeless camps Friday in which police slashed tents being used for shelter. "I did not know that the operation had occurred until it occurred," Baker said Monday. "I was aware that the fire marshal had identified a very grave concern. I did not know the specifics to the solution." In some cases, police officers tore apart the tents while homeless people were still inside, cutting the fabric with scissors, knives and box cutters. The raid on the "tent city" at 15th Street and Fifth Avenue N came just days after two homeless men were slain, and jolted a community still frightened because the killers are still at large. Videos of officers cutting apart tents have received hundreds of views on YouTube and other Web sites. Baker spoke just hours after elected officials, including members of the Pinellas County Coalition for the Homeless, blasted the city's raids. "What we saw on Friday night was an embarrassment for this city," St. Petersburg City Council member Jamie Bennett said at a news conference. Baker neither condemned nor praised the actions of police and fire officials. "I'm not going to talk about that," Baker said, adding he was concerned about potential legal threats made by homeless advocates. After the raid, homeless advocates donated more tents, and the encampment re-emerged over the weekend. By Monday it contained more than two dozen tents. Baker said he did not anticipate another raid because he was satisfied that safety concerns - like a lack of fire extinguishers - had been addressed. He said attention now focused on the city's homeless had created an "opportunity" to search for solutions, even though the images of the raids had led to "some negatives." The raid Friday was the city's latest attempt to deal with tent camps that have sprung up in recent weeks. Two weeks ago, the city shut down a tent city on Fourth Avenue N after it said it helped about 100 of its residents get social services such as rent vouchers. Those who refused services or did not receive them soon set up their tents at Fifth Avenue N at 15th Street and Fifth Avenue N at Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Street. By Monday, the King Street location was empty. But the other site was bigger than ever; about two dozen tents stretched for nearly a block along 15th Street. Several homeless people at the site said Monday that they are still shaken by the raid and could no longer trust the city. The Rev. Bruce Wright of Refuge Ministries called it "a shame." "I was devastated," said Raymond Young, 66, who keeps the remnants of his old, cut-apart tent in a garbage bag. "I didn't know how they could do something like this." The decision to raid the camps and cut tents was made during a meeting Friday of top city officials. Police Chief Chuck Harmon, Deputy Mayor David Metz, Maj. Melanie Bevan of the Police Department, Lt. Rick Feinberg of the Fire Department and several others gathered to discuss how to deal with the fire hazards they had seen at the homeless camps. Police and fire officials had gone to the camps Thursday night and warned people to take their tents down, but the tents had gone back up by Friday morning. They talked about the lack of fire extinguishers, people smoking and cooking in tents and the risk of a fire spreading quickly through the camps, Harmon said Monday. The group quickly agreed to take the tents down, and seize them as evidence, Harmon said. Harmon said the officials didn't want to arrest anyone or create a major confrontation. Then Bevan suggested just cutting the tents if someone protested by refusing to leave, and others agreed, Harmon said. But Harmon said no one in the group talked about the fact that they were seizing or destroying private property. "In hindsight we didn't discuss the actual property issue, and we probably should have taken that into consideration," Harmon said. Harmon said people no longer smoke or cook in their tents. They also have fire extinguishers, Harmon said. "I think the perception was not good of how and what we did," Harmon said. "I hope there's no need to ever do that again." Times reporter Alisa Ulferts contributed to this report. Abhi Raghunathan can be reached at araghunathan@sptimes.com or 727 893-8472.
[Last modified January 22, 2007, 21:58:40]
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Comments on this article
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by jennifer
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01/23/07 10:21 PM
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i am embarased to think that we as americans can treat another human being the way our city officials just did.if they were animals they would have been cleaned fed and placed in a safe environment.where is the justice.my children would know better.
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by Chris
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01/23/07 07:27 PM
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Quit bieng lazy. Get jobs. Get homes. All of society faces the same issues and the gov. makes special considerations fo the others. You all complain, but what if they were camping in your yard? It's called loitering and it's illegal.
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by Maret
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01/23/07 11:46 AM
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Yeah, is this a good, compassionate community? The tax-paid police who don't have to earn real wages have no idea of the economic realities. And is it safer to sleep with shelter than a tent? What happened to the U.S.?
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by Paul
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01/23/07 06:28 AM
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Through all the horror seen on this video you can clearly see able bodied people just sitting around when they could be working. Smoking cigarettes at 3 bucks a pack, and recording video on cell phones. Homeless by choice, or necessity?
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by Katrina
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01/23/07 06:14 AM
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It absolutely amazes me how top city officials make decisions to do things without fully thinking through the consequences. Shame, shame, shame on the city for what you did to the homeless. You clearly violated their property rights.
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by Clyde
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01/23/07 02:28 AM
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A PC was fired for the orangatan comment, I see little dif. Fire them all n maybe they will be able to experience the thrill of homelessness If u didn't know then what will u do? How can top officials NOT think, let us see the minutes of the meeting
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by Samm
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01/23/07 01:50 AM
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The mayor didn't know. The police didn't think about property destruction. The mayor is worried about legal action, but not finding a vacant building to refurbish for this growing epidemic.
What's wrong with this picture?
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by Burns
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01/23/07 01:17 AM
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At least nobody was hurt! ...Excellent Smithers...
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by Kathy
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01/23/07 12:52 AM
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That raid had plenty of support from the locals. It's the people who don't live in the area who are complaining. If you want to support the homeless, house one.
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by pat
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01/23/07 12:22 AM
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mr. mayor, it states the tent slashings etc. werent your plan!! however i havent noticed the firings of those who acted without your command!!please explain
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by matt
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01/23/07 12:17 AM
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Destroying someone's property & home is just the cruelest thing I've seen in years. Why can't the city provide small, modular sleeping spaces in an industrial area for these people? Better than this kind of public humiliation.
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by scott
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01/23/07 12:10 AM
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Welcome to the South..where the teachings of Jesus Christ are foremost in our rhetoric, and absent from our actions. Are you proud of your work Chief Harmon? Make sure the stormtroopers get the cameras next time.
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by tim
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01/23/07 12:09 AM
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poverty,hunger,and disease...its a war we better start fighting right here in our own back yard! this was the bright idea of our elected officials,brilliant!
who/what will they attack next? drug dealers? wow...and im not even running for office!
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by Ernest
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01/23/07 12:08 AM
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Dont the St. Pete Police have more important things to do than harrass homeless people? I was a St. Pete resident from 1963-1987 and know that they are the poorest excuse for a law enforcement agency in this country!
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