Email received from Tim Smith

March 20, 2008

The following email was received from Tim Smith, Wards Corner resident:

I would like to share with all of you the following event that just happen in our area that you will not hear about in the news or from the city.

On the evening of March 17, 2008, around 8:00 pm in the 200 block of Oxford Street, my neighbor was out for a walk. A dark SUV with tinted windows drove past him and turned into a driveway at the end of the block. This SUV then came back down the street past my neighbor and pulled into a driveway a few houses behind him. My neighbor heard the doors close on the SUV and then heard someone tell him to “Give it up”. When my neighbor turned around he saw two men with “hoodies” pulled up over their heads and two guns pointing at him.

That evening my neighbor had done something he has never felt he needed to do in all his years walking in Talbot Park, carry his concealed weapon. My neighbor has a permit and is trained in the use of his weapon and for some reason he had a strong feeling to carry that night. That feeling probably saved his life this week.

As my neighbor reached for his weapon one of the men fired a shot. Everyone ran in opposite directions. My neighbor was not hit but a stray bullet from the ‘would-be-thieves’ was free to do as it pleased. Naturally these two men will not be found as happens in most of these situations.

The suspicion here is that this was part of a gang initiation, to rob someone at gun point. The fact that one of the men was willing to pull the trigger tells me he was ready and willing to kill someone if need be.

This is the kind of story that goes on just about every night in just about every area of Norfolk that does not make it into the paper or on the TV news. Nobody got killed and in this case nobody got robbed so it is not news.

What is news, in the paper and on TV, are the car break-ins in downtown and how something needs to be done about it. Being these break-ins are happening downtown and the fact that we have a “reactive” form of government instead of a “proactive” form of government, I am sure there will be immediate action taken to catch these thieves who are causing havoc in downtown. All the while the tax payers in the suburbs are being terrorized by gangs.

If we are not willing to join together and take back our streets, but choose to ask our police to do that for us, than we need to insure our police force in Norfolk are second to none in Hampton Roads. Our police need to be the top paid with the best benefits and the latest equipment to fight crime.

We need to stop giving tax breaks to developers that create large dirt piles for us to look at each day or empty condos that do not pay taxes. Before we reduce our tax base our police need to be fully funded and the BEST. We need a government that is “proactive” in its approach to crime (I was at the meeting in Wards Corner years ago were the city chose to ignore the evidence of gang activity we presented to them).

The criminals have the upper hand; they have the will, focus and the stamina to do what it takes, no matter how long, to reach their goals.

The question I pose to you is “Do you have a stronger will, better focus and a superior stamina to do what it takes to keep the criminals from reaching their goal?”

If you do not, then you will be hearing more stories like the one my neighbor told me last night. Only the outcomes may be deadlier and harder to live with. The criminals win and we continue paying for our loss, maybe with our lives.


Norfolk Police need help finding Anthony M. Scott

February 11, 2008

Norfolk Police need help finding Anthony M. Scott, who has been charged with malicious wounding and using a gun during a felony.   He is wanted in connection with a Feb. 2nd shooting in the 300 block of San Antonio Blvd.

Scott, 32, also uses the nickname “Ant.”

He is described as black, 5 feet, 7 inches tall, the release says. He weights [sic] 200 pounds and wears his hair in corn rows. He could be driving a gold or silver Mazda MPV.

He is known to visit the San Antonio Boulevard area, the release says.

Virginian-Pilot article here.


Denby Park residents call “10 On Your Side”

February 8, 2008

Denby Park residents are fed up with City Council’s, to date, impotent response to cleaning up crime in their neighborhood. Finally, at a breaking point, the residents have called WAVY TV’s “10 On Your Side” for help. View the clip “High crime area has area residents concerned“.


Wards Corner criminal activity Tuesday night

January 31, 2008

I received the following email from Lieutenant Hungerford, Norfolk Police Department, as a response to an inquiry from Laura Thom, Jim English and myself on the criminal activity and police presence in the Greater Wards Corner area on Tuesday night , January 29th, 2008. As always, we in the Greater Wards Corner Partnership appreciate the great service of the men and women in our Police Department.

 Louis/Jim/Laura –

Yes there was a robbery at the Shell on the evening of the 29th. A lone B/M suspect went into the station, displayed a gun and took money fomr the cash register. We had several units right in the area, but the guy disappeared into the woodwork. He ran over behind RC’s so he probably lives in one of those apartments.
Also, with regard to the event that also occurred on the 29th at about the same time over by Norfolk Collegiate – An officer, over off of Lafayette Blvd., attemtped to stop a car for a traffic violation, and he fled. Our guys backed off, but put it out on radio. Another unit saw the vehicle on Granby and by the time he turned around the bad guys stopped the car and ran off, with the exception of the woman and a child. She was being detained (which she was being vocal about). Drugs were found in the car. K-9 was attempting to get a track. The area was cordoned off at the time due to the tracking effort. Sorry for the inconvenience,but we were working to make the arrest. Unfortunately we did not get the guys, but V& N (Vice and Narcotics) is following up since the car was not stolen, and the woman can ID the suspects. The car was impounded.
V/R
Rog

Councilwoman Whibley suggests skateboard park for Wards Corner area

January 9, 2008

Yesterday, as Norfolk City Council rejected the idea for a skateboard park in downtown near Harbor Park, Councilwoman Whibley recommended the park for a troubled area of Wards Corner. The Pilot Online quotes Theresa Whibley as saying,

“Why not build one at Wards Corner?

“We’re looking for a way to clear some of that area out. It’s a great central location,” she said. “They’re looking for a rec center out there, and we don’t have the money for one. So we could start with this.”

I don’t ever remember the Wards Corner Partnership asking for a rec center in Denby Park, but a skate park could be a wonderful addition to the Comprehensive plan that is already on the table. The Wards Corner Partnership still demands that the Texas Streets be redeveloped as planned for in the Comprehensive Plan. A reminder of what the Plan calls for:

[The housing units in the Texas Streets] have been built too close together, without appropriate provision of open space, and without amenities. The maze-like character of the resulting development, its proximity to highly-traveled Little Creek Road and to Interstate – 64 make it unfortunately suitable for drug dealing and for serving as a base for other criminal activity. The Norfolk police report that the situation in these buildings is getting worse. They recommend major change: the acquisition and demolition of these buildings, before the situation has even more adverse impacts on the surrounding neighborhoods.

… we suggest a mixed use development, making use of the Uptown Norfolk concept, as described in the retail market analysis.This development would consist of a 200 room hotel and associated function rooms, restaurant and parking deck, at the most prominent location: the corner of Little Creek Road and Fort Worth Avenue. The room tower of the hotel would be visible from the Interstate, and would serve both the Uptown District and the Naval Base, which is only a short distance to the west on Little Creek Road. Norfolk’s Economic Development Department reports substantial developer interest in identifying a hotel site in the general Uptown area.

We show Fort Worth Avenue being widened to 100 feet, so that it can serve as the main street for local traffic within the new development. Little Creek Road provides access, but cars make turns into individual businesses from Fort Worth.

… we show 125,000 square feet of medium-box retail, as recommended by the economic analysis, plus 25,000 square feet of other stores, including a destination restaurant at the most prominent entrance location. Our finding is that this amount of potential retail development is feasible for the Uptown District now, even before the construction of the Wal-Mart.

The combination of the hotel, which provides a focus of activity at night, and the active retail and restaurant uses, should prevent this area from ever again becoming a focus of unlawful activity, and its excellent retail location will be put to a better use than drug dealing.

If at all possible, we recommend that the City work with the current owners of these properties to create a development corporation that will represent these owners in proportion to their land holdings. This proposal offers these owners a way out of an increasingly untenable situation.

In a second phase of development, the at-grade parking lots are replaced by 200 market-rate apartments, additional retail and some 40 town houses, making it a true mixed-use, 24-hour community. The apartments are 5-story elevator buildings, organized around a private courtyard, with their own secured garage, swimming pool and other amenities. They have restaurants and other retail on the portion of their ground floor facing Fort Worth Avenue. Buildings like this have worked well in other uptown districts, including Uptown Dallas. The parking lot to the south is replaced with individual town houses, with alley access to their own
garages. Houses and apartments something like this can be found in Norfolk’s West Freemason Street district downtown. While there is no waterfront nearby, this location has excellent access to the entire region, and could be a desirable residential address if a new environment is created as shown.

The Plan calls for the total redevelopment of the Texas Streets to a desirable living location that would include a large hotel, restaurants, and apartments in a mixed use setting. If Councilwoman Whibley would like to add a skate park or park to the plan, that is welcomed. But there is no reason not to move forward with purchasing land and redeveloping the Texas Streets.


Police identify man shot at Southern Shopping Center

January 3, 2008

The police have identified the man murdered on Monday in front of the Game Stop video game store as Jamal Matthews 21 year of age. The question begs would the politicians running our city government remain so silent if this cold blooded murder had taken place in their sacred downtown?

Pilot Online reports that the Police have charged a youth with the cold blooded murder:

The youth who was charged is 17, according to police. He was charged with murder and using a gun while committing a felony.

Investigators don’t know whether Matthews knew the person who shot him.

The youth was arraigned this morning in Juvenile and Domestic Relations Court.

Amanda Howie, a spokeswoman for the Commonwealth’s Attorney’s Office, said prosecutors intend to prosecute the youth as an adult. He was ordered held in the city detention center pending a bond hearing on Jan. 9, she said.

According to an unconfirmed Police report, the youth was captured in Denby Park. Project Focus needs to focus on tearing this rat’s nest of crime to the ground.


Man held up at ATM at Navy Federal on Hampton Boulevard

January 1, 2008

WAVY TV News  is reporting, a man was held up yesterday at gunpoint at the Navy Federal Credit Union ATM at 7979 Hampton Boulevard near the Lochaven and Glenwood Park neighborhoods.


Man dies after being shot in front of video game store in Southern Shopping Center

December 31, 2007

Pilot Online reports that a man was shot in front of the Game Stop store in Southern Shopping Center. In an unconfirmed police report, a suspect was apprehended in Denby Park this afternoon.


Norfolk police say man shot in the 300 Block of East Little Creek Road.

November 22, 2007

Here we go again folks. The Pilot Online reports:

NORFOLK

A man was shot about 9:30 p.m. in the 300 block of East Little Creek Rd., police said.

The victim talked with officers when they arrived and was taken to Sentara Norfolk General Hospital, said Officer Chris Amos, a police spokesman. Amos said he did not know how serious the wound was.

The Greater Wards Corner Partnership knows the solution to this problem. It is clearly taken care of in the Greater Wards Corner Comprehensive Plan. “Mr. Mayor tear this block down.”


Suspect in attempted abduction surrenders

October 22, 2007

A man sought by police on charges that he tried to take a young girl from Granby High School turned himself in at the Police Operations Center at 3661 Virginia Beach Blvd. this afternoon, police said.

In a statement given to The Virginian-Pilot, Andrew D. Truelove, 22, said he was not attempting to harm or abduct the girl, but rather went to Granby

“to seek out school bullies” and “threaten them.”


Suspect in the attempted abduction at Granby High School to turn himself in

October 22, 2007

andrew-truelove.jpgAccording  to the Virginian-Pilot, Andrew Truelove, the suspect in the attempted abduction of an eight year old girl at Granby High School on Thursday afternoon, will turn himself in to the Police at 8:00 PM this evening.


Police identify suspect in attempted Granby High abduction case

October 20, 2007

andrew-truelove.jpg Norfolk Police have identified the suspect in the attempted abduction of an eight year old girl at Granby High School Thursday afternoon. Warrants have been secured for Andrew Truelove.

According to Wavy TV News

Police say Truelove may be with his father, Alan. They may be in a gray 1991 Toyota four door with Virginia license plates JJE-5741

Anyone with any information should call Norfolk Crime Line at 1-800-LOCK-U-UP.