Each year, US News and World Report lists the 25 most dangerous cities in the United States.
President Trump made news this week when he announced that he was federalizing the Metro DC police department. Judge Jeanine made news saying that she was not interested in "root causes", that her while job was prosecuting criminals and making victims whole. Evidently, roving gangs of unsupervised youth have become a problem, committing crimes that the "juvenile Justice" system is either unable or unwilling to prosecute.
The issue for juvenile crime is not what the system treats. The issue is parenting. Parenting is hard. I know that I did crazy stuff when I was a kid, and I know that my kids did crazy stuff when they were kids. Yet, I had good parents and my kids had good parents. My parents were responsible for me, and I was responsible for my kids. It works out well like that.
Changing gears to make a metaphor, if I had a vicious dog and let him roam freely, than I have no doubt that when that dog hurt someone, the police would soon be at my door to hold me accountable. Likewise, parents should be held accountable for the actions of the child.
Imagine my surprise when I read the US News list of dangerous cities, and I found my hometown, Alexandria, LA, listed in #6. A small metro in central Louisiana of about 45,000 folks. Wow. Who is responsible for a city making the list? That is easy.
The Mayor. The mayor is the chief executive, responsible for everything that happens or fails to happen. The mayor sets the tone for the local police department.
The Sheriff. The sheriff is the elected law enforcement officer in the parish. While the mayor controls the local police, the sheriff is still the elected cop running the parish. He can augment or take over the law enforcement in the whole parish.
The District Attorney. The District Attorney is the prosecutor. That is his sole job.
Crime is a problem. The reason I don't live in Alexandria any more is because crime got too bad 20 years ago. The lected leaders let too many people get away with too much. It's time to crack down hard and make Rapides Parsh a safe place to live and work.