Portland restores gun violence unit as city's defund the police failure results in soaring crime



Facing a continued scourge of violence since cutting its police budget by $15 million last summer, Portland, Oregon, has decided to reintroduce a gun violence task force within the city's police department.

What are the details?

The new team, called the Enhanced Community Safety Team, was introduced last month in response to skyrocketing violence in the city, KATU-TV reported, and comes only months since the city disbanded the Gun Violence Reduction Team as a part of police budget cuts.

Following the dissolution of the previous gun violence team, shootings in the city skyrocketed.

According to the Associated Press, "More people died of gunfire last year in Portland — 40 — than the entire tally of homicides the previous year. The number of shootings — 900 — was nearly 2 1/2 times higher than the year before."

"The spike has continued this year, with more than 150 shootings, including 45 people wounded and 12 killed so far," the AP added.

Many members of the community have squarely blamed the budget cuts, and specifically the dissolution of the GVRT, for the violence. Among them is Elmer Yarborough, a crisis response volunteer for Portland police who lost his nephew last year to gun violence only a month after the unit was disbanded.

"Without a doubt, I think it is a possibility that my nephew could still be alive if the GVRT was not dissolved," Yarborough told the AP. "I cannot say for sure if he would, but what I will tell you is had it not been my nephew that was saved, it probably could have saved the life of someone else."

What else?

Amazingly, the new unit was requested by Democratic Mayor Ted Wheeler, who also serves as the city's police commissioner. Wheeler had been outspoken in support of defunding the police as Black Lives Matter protests rocked the city for much of the last year.

Yet despite now acknowledging in practice that the city's defund the police movement was ultimately an abject failure, in January, Wheeler refused to admit as much.

"I believe if the GVRT were [around] today, we would still see a substantial, if not identical increase, in shootings in Portland," he reportedly argued. "This is clearly part of a larger national trend."

Others strongly disagreed with the mayor, including many within the police department who warned that cutting the police budget would only lead to more crime.

"I'd say they're more emboldened, maybe, to be out with guns," Portland Police Chief Chuck Lovell said last August. "They know there's not someone watching. There's no real deterrent there. And I think that's part of the issue that's causing us to see the spike we have in July."

Then in a statement to the AP, Portland police quoted former Salinas, California, Police Chief Kelly McMillin, saying, "Not to be overly dramatic, but if you lose the unit which focuses on removing firearms from the hand of violent offenders, people will die. It's really just that simple."

Nathan Howard/Getty Images

Portland police forced to beg for community's help in curbing out-of-control violence



The Portland Police Bureau is asking for the community's help in ending a spike in violence across the city.

What's a brief history here?

According to Fox News, at least 850 shootings have been reported in Portland as of Dec. 24. The outlet noted that there were at least 59 reported shootings in December alone.

"As of Christmas Eve, this year's shootings had surpassed last year's by more than 116%, with 393 shootings reported in all of 2019, statistics show," Fox pointed out. "At least 53 murders have been reported in Portland as of Dec. 24 — the highest yearly total the city has seen in nearly 30 years."

What's happening now?

Portland Police Bureau Chief Chuck Lovell in a Dec. 16 video appealed to the public and insisted that the public needed to lock arms and "do everything we can together to break the cycle of violence."

"Gun violence has plagued our city at twice the rate of last year," he said. "On average, someone is shot in Portland roughly every two days."

"We've come together to mask up, to stay home to keep others safe. We have come together to do our best to stop the spread of a deadly disease," he continued. "Violence is also a disease that kills and our community is suffering the consequences."

"We cannot lose sight of the fact these are human beings who have died," Lovell added.

According to a report from KGW-TV, Portland Police Bureau Lieutenant Greg Pashley reported that there were at least 225 victims of gun violence in Portland in 2020 alone.

"The number of bullets that must have been flying around our neighborhoods, city streets, sidewalks — it's awful," Pashley said.

The bureau is now asking for a a community-wide effort and action to help put a stop to gun violence across the city after its gun violence reduction team was disbanded over the summer.

The team was dismantled after activists and gun control activists said that the bureau was guilty of racism in "stopping people of color disproportionately to others," the station reported.

Pashley later said that "[s]ocial services, government organizations, non-government organizations, church based [organizations]" are of utmost importance "so that people feel as if they have support and options other than to act out violently."

What else?

Sgt. Kenneth Duilio — who worked on the now-disbanded gun violence reduction task force for approximately 19 years — said that many of the killings are gang-related.

"Theyr'e all connected," he said. "And some of these connections don't just go back, like, for a few weeks or a few months. They go back years and years."

Chief Lovell talks about increased gun violence. https://t.co/EQSCSd0IGp
— Chief Chuck Lovell (@Chief Chuck Lovell)1608159846.0