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politics and politicians Title: ‘The Wire’ Creator Demolishes Baltimore Crime Myths Pushed by Martin O’Malley Just as Martin O’Malley, Baltimore’s Democrat ex-mayor, prepares to announce a run for the White house, he faces devastating and detailed criticism for his role in creating the mess in Baltimore from a noted expert on the city: David Simon, reporter, author, and creator of the seminal HBO crime drama The Wire.Former Baltimore Mayor and Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley isn’t a household name, but it appears he’s about to take on Hillary Clinton for the Democrat nomination. The New York Times just announced O’Malley’s hiring of a political director who previously worked with Barack Obama and called O’Malley’s presidential announcement “almost certain.” O’Malley recently told NBC’s Meet The Press that he “won’t think of announcing” his presidential bid anywhere other than Baltimore. It’s not a great time to be a former mayor of Baltimore, however. Rioting, looting, and unrest in the city became front page headlines for a week, as the result of tension between Baltimore’s black community and the police. The affable Irish Catholic Democrat Martin O’Malley has a response already prepped: he’s the guy whose no-nonsense policing actually lowered crime rates enormously when he ran Baltimore. A recent interview with The Wire scribe David Simon on The Marshall Project’s website, conducted in the wake of the Baltimore riots, punctured O’Malley’s narrative. Simon — a Democrat who says he would vote for O’Malley if he becomes the Democrat nominee — has no ideological ax to grind. He also said that, despite clashing with O’Malley over production of The Wire, he has no personal animus against the would-be presidential candidate. The picture of Baltimore under Mayor Martin O’Malley painted by Simon was as gripping as any script he has ever written. The story Simon told has nothing to do with some conservative ideal of tough policing. It’s not about “broken window” policing policies, as a Bloomberg article on O’Malley recently described his crime strategy, in a drive-by smear of law-and-order conservatism. No, the Baltimore scenario Simon laid out in gripping detail is about how ambitious Democrat mayor Martin O’Malley created and encouraged an environment of lawlessness by the police. It’s about how O’Malley cynically manipulated crime statistics in order to pad his resume for his future political career, a strategy he continues to employ as he prepares his presidential run. The plan seems to be working so far. A recent Washington Post story looked into Martin O’Malley’s claims about reducing crime:
Ultimately, WaPo judged O’Malley’s claim “mostly true,” but that was before the David Simon interview revealed that O’Malley’s claims cannot be checked by simply looking at the numbers. David Simon’s Detailed AccusationsIn the Marshall Project interview, David Simon comes across as a straight shooter who has a lot to get off his chest. The burning of Baltimore seems to have hit him on a gut level, and he wants to confess the behind-the-scenes facts he’s known for years. Simon’s stories in the interview have the ring of truth because they are so densely packed with details Simon picked up in the years he worked on The Wire, talking with insiders over a couple of drinks late into the evening. Given the obsession with race shared by the Obama Administration and mainstream media, it’s notable that David Simon downplays the racial aspect of what went wrong in Baltimore. As he says he learned working on the book Homicide: Life on the Streets:
Simon’s essential thesis is that in order to bring down crime stats to pump up his future political ambitions, Democrat Martin O’Malley took actions that destroyed the quality of policing in Baltimore. As an example, look at Simon’s assertion that under Mayor O’Malley, the police began to do massive sweeps for no other reason than to gin up arrest numbers.
Simon points out how one of the unintended consequences was to further drive a wedge between the black community and police, a situation that Simon believes came to a head in the Freddie Grey riots. It’s the sort of thing that won’t show up just from looking at crime statistics. Simon offers an indictment of how O’Malley’s lawless law enforcement impacted the black citizens of Baltimore:
Simon also describes how O’Malley’s emphasis on making arrests to pump up numbers twisted the normal incentives for good police work. Both the incomes and career advancement of police officers became tied not to fighting real crime, but to conducting activities that would give O’Malley the stats he could brag about. Simon explains how police officers making legitimate collars spent longer on cases, which meant they racked up less overtime, so:
Some of the most jaw-dropping admissions in Simon’s interview relate to he what describes as one the big secrets behind O’Malley’s dramatic drop in crime: “cooking the books” by simply ignoring, or re-categorizing, crimes out of existence. Simon claims that crime victims were sometimes intimidated out of reporting offenses:
To push down the numbers for certain types of crime, Simon says the Baltimore police under Mayor O’Malley simply erased inconvenient facts:
It won’t shock anyone who followed The Wire that its creator ultimately pins the problem on the drug war, but Simon isn’t concerned with the potential benefits of legalizing drugs, so much as he is with the negative impact that the war on drugs had on policing. Simon’s advice:
Martin O’Malley’s ResponseAfter Simon’s interview came out, it earned cursory glances from a few mainstream media outlets but nowhere near the attention it should have been given, as it linked an upcoming presidential candidate with parts of Baltimore reduced to a smoking ruin. For example, the Huffington Post gave the accusations against Martin O’Malley a scant 549 words, which included a response from O’Malley’s press flack:
The Huffington Post doesn’t seem to have followed up on that story, however. The 2006 WaPo article does not exonerate Martin O’Malley. Instead, it confirms that a review produced evidence supporting exactly the sort of accusations Simon made in his interview:
Team O’Malley goes on in the article to smear whistleblower Clark, apparently hoping no one would actually read the article they touted to defend their candidate. Any journalist thinking of covering Martin O’Malley’s upcoming run for the White House needs to read the Simon interview and then start asking O’Malley some tough questions, with followups. If O’Malley were a Republican, it’s certain that they media would go over every inch of his record with a fine-tooth comb. But Martin O’Malley is Democrat. That means it’s up to citizen journalists and dedicated voters to do the research themselves. There’s no better place to start then with David Simon’s account of the damage O’Malley’s ambition did to the city of Baltimore. (1 image) Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top • Page Up • Full Thread • Page Down • Bottom/Latest BTW,anybody who hasn't seen "The Wire" needs to watch it. Really good program. Why is democracy held in such high esteem when it’s the enemy of the minority and makes all rights relative to the dictates of the majority? (Ron Paul,2012) Top • Page Up • Full Thread • Page Down • Bottom/Latest |
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