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  • It is painfully clear that almost no one read the article. What did Mao say about investigating matters before speaking on them?

    If the idea of more police cameras makes you queasy, I understand: I spent the first decade of my career as a criminal defense and civil rights lawyer and during that time, I would have treated a plan for more police-controlled cameras with suspicion and skepticism. But acting as the policy director for progressive prosecutor and Philadelphia DA Larry Krasner for six years changed my perspective.

    The author is no leftist, but she worked in opposition to the police first, then went to a DA's office where the guy at the top is at minimum doing actual harm reduction (e.g., a significant reduction in sentences and requests for pretrial incarceration, prosecuting cops, exonerating and freeing people who were railroaded by prior DAs). This is someone whose ideas have been informed by practice and we're dunking without even reading it.

    What finally broke the [nonfatal shooting] case open was the discovery of surveillance footage from a private camera outside the Get It Mini Market... Before the discovery of the Mini Market footage, the shooting on Marston Street seemed destined to contribute to one of the grimmest statistics in the American criminal justice system: less than 20 percent of nonfatal shootings in most large American cities are ever solved. The clearance rates have been as low as 11 percent in Chicago, 10 percent in Durham, 15 percent in San Francisco, and 18 percent in Philadelphia.

    Shootings are the type of crime that is still prosecuted in an AES state. 80-90% of nonfatal shootings resulting in no case is a real problem. It's one thing to say "I've investigated the issue and this is not a worthwhile tradeoff," but you'd have to actually investigate, and you'd have to acknowledge that there's a real issue (gun violence) you're choosing to pull back on.

    Opposing ideas without investigating and ignoring real-world problems that get in the way of sweeping solutions are hallmarks of ultraleftism.

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