'The rats are eating our marijuana; they're all high': Infested New Orleans police evidence room becoming rodent cafeteria



New Orleans Police Superintendent Anne Kirkpatrick put the infestation problem plaguing the department in stark terms — particularly in regard to the evidence room that she said has become a kind of smorgasbord for rodents.

"The rats are eating our marijuana," Kirkpatrick said Monday at a City Council Criminal Justice Committee meeting, NOLA.com reported. "They're all high."

Besides consuming narcotics in the department's evidence room, she also said rodents have been scattering feces across desks, the outlet noted. Cockroaches also are making the rounds, NOLA said.

"It is not just at police headquarters. It is all the districts. The uncleanliness is off the charts," Kirkpatrick also said, according to the outlet. "The janitorial cleaning [team] deserves an award trying to clean what is uncleanable."

Other problems at the aging criminal justice complex near Orleans Avenue and North Broad Street include heavy mold as well as deteriorating HVAC units, elevators, and plumbing systems, NOLA added.

More from the outlet:

Kirkpatrick's assessment came as she lobbied to relocate department headquarters to a downtown high rise. The council is considering a 10-year lease on two upper floors of 1615 Poydras Tower, a temporary move while the department maps out future long-term housing, she said.

Kirkpatrick also said the department's overall condition likely is a "turn-off" to potential out-of-state transfers — not to mention for present employees, NOLA noted: "It's not OK, and it's not OK for people to be treated that way and be called valued."

A motion to authorize the pending lease agreement cleared the committee and goes next to a full council vote, the outlet said.

"I foresee most of the criminal justice agencies will have to be temporarily housed as we address these old decrepit buildings," Chief Administrative Officer Gilbert Montaño said, according to NOLA. "The Herculean lift of being able to move police headquarters was a challenge. There's a contemplation for the overall finalization of the campus, but right now we are addressing police headquarters because it is in dire straits."

The outlet reported that the city would pay total base rent of $7.6 million from its general fund over 10 years under the terms of the lease agreement.

"It's a good deal for the city to move here," Montaño also said, according to NOLA, given that repairing the present headquarters would cost three times as much.

'They're all high' | Rats eating marijuana, broken AC, roaches, plague NOPD headquarters youtu.be

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Video Shows Activist Throwing Palestine-Colored Rats Into McDonald’s

Video shows the red, white and green rodents being released inside the restaurant

Chicago takes top spot ahead of 9 other Democrat-run cities on list of America's most rat-infested cities



America's top-50 rattiest cities were announced Monday by the pest-control company Orkin. For the ninth year in a row, Chicago clinched the top spot, beating out nine other Democrat-run cities. Los Angeles jumped to the #2 spot, while New York City fell to #3.

"Rattiest" cities ranked 4-10 are as follows: Washington, D.C.; San Francisco; Philadelphia; Baltimore; Denver; Detroit; and Cleveland, Ohio.

The list is based on new extermination services rendered between Sept. 1, 2022, and Aug. 31.

Gold-medal rat hole

A Block Club Chicago and Illinois Answers Project investigation found that Chicago has chronically failed to keep up with rat complaints. It received over 50,000 complaints in 2022 and has already seen 38,742 complaints in 2023, as of Oct. 13.

Streets and Sanitation indicated the problem worsened during the pandemic, reported WFLD-TV.

Even when the city gets around to intervening, its efficacy leaves much to be desired. For instance, it has issued 117,000 rat-related tickets amounting to $153 million in penalties since 2019, but still has $126 million in ticket debt outstanding.

Facing a worsening trend, the city's inspector general's office indicated it would audit the Bureau of Rodent Control and investigate "multiple complaints about the efficiency and effectiveness of the City's rat abatement program."

Leftist Mayor Brandon Johnson'srecommended budget would allocate $14.85 million to the Bureau of Rodent Control for the 2024 fiscal year. The budget documents also noted that the bureau's full-time staff will increase slightly from 114 to 118.

The proposed 118 rodent bureaucrats will be tasked with addressing the spread of the Norway rat, Chicago's only species. The Norway rat females reportedly can spawn 50 offspring per year. Their female offspring can, in turn, reproduce just months after birth. Block Club Chicago cited zoologists who suggested two rats could turn out several thousand more inside a year.

Tommy Lawler, a Chicago resident in Clearing's Chrysler Village, told Block Club Chicago he encountered 10 rats just cutting his friend's front lawn.

"They looked like they were in a fricking resort," said Lawler. "One of them was in a puddle like he was doing the doggy paddle or something. They were afraid of nothing! They didn’t care."

A McKinley Park resident complained to the city in April 2020 that rats had been eating her 76-year-old mother alive.

Not only do rats carry diseases, but they chew through car wires, power lines, and various structures.

Despite multitudes of rats chewing up Chicago, Rodent Control Deputy Commissioner Josie Cruz told WBEZ in April that Chicago's response to rats was "on the right track."

"I just feel like we're moving forward," said the rat czar of America's rattiest city. "As long as we're continuing with our preventatives and continue doing our education and contacting people."

Silver-medal rat hole

Prior to the pandemic, Los Angeles was already facing a rat problem.

A year after a rat-linked typhus outbreak, former San Diego mayor and prospective gubernatorial candidate Carl DeMaio sounded the alarm in 2019, saying, "California is being overrun by rodents – and without immediate emergency action by state and local government, we face significant economic costs and risk a public health crisis."

DeMaio cited a report by his group, Reform California, which claimed the problem was "directly related to the elimination of effective rodent control methods and a spike in the homeless population."

The city, which has lost recourse to another effective rat poison on account of Gov. Gavin Newsom's latest ban, has only seen its vermin problem worsen since.

Packs of rats have been filmed parading around in broad daylight. They have invaded schools, closing at least one. Earlier this month, merchants along Olvera Street indicated their livelihoods were at risk on account of infestations.

"Part of the problem here is there is such a bureaucracy the way the city operates," Edward Flores, owner of Juanita's Cafe, told KTLA-TV. "There doesn’t seem to be any staffers here that are tasked with gathering them up."

According to Flores, the homeless encampments littered throughout the city are full of human waste and food, feeding the problem.

KNBC-TV reported that this year, 75,518 homeless people were counted in Los Angeles County.

Bronze-medal rat hole

New York City, which dropped one spot, has claimed some recent success in addressing its rat problem, citing a sizeable drop in 311 calls about rat activity in July across the city. The drop appears to have been a relatively easy feat, given that the city set a record for rodent sightings in 2022.

"New Yorkers may not know this about me — but I hate rats," said Mayor Eric Adams. "It's still early, but these numbers show what we're doing is working and that we are moving in the right direction. Every food scrap that we keep out of the trash and every black bag that we keep off the street is a meal that we’re taking out of a hungry rodent's stomach. It takes all of us to win the war on rats, so I encourage New Yorkers to keep composting, keep putting your trash in containers, and I hope to see you out there at one of our 'Anti-Rat Community Days of Action.'"

The city has taken various steps to crush the rodent uprising. For instance, in June, Adams announced a new rule requiring restaurants and other food-related businesses to use trash cans with lids, hoping to cut down on the mountains of exposed garbage that had long been feeding armies of rats.

Adams' call to action comes in the wake of the pandemic, during which rodent sightings skyrocketed.

The problem persisted well into this year, such that so-called rat tourism has taken off.

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NYC's first 'Rat Czar' will earn $155k; mayor says she was 'made for the job'

NYC's first 'Rat Czar' will earn $155k; mayor says she was 'made for the job'



There's a new "Rat Czar" in charge in New York City, and she is dead set on laying waste to one of the Big Apple's most notorious infestations.

"The rats are going to hate Kathy, but we're excited to have her leading this important effort," New York City's Mayor Eric Adams said in an announcement at St. Nicholas Park Wednesday.

"Rat mitigation is more than a quality-of-life issue for New Yorkers. Rats are a symptom of systemic issues, including sanitation, health, housing, and economic justice," said the new "Rat Czar," Kathleen Corradi.

"I'm honored to lead this work, grateful to Mayor Adams for this opportunity, and look forward to sending the rats packing."

The actual title of the "Rat Czar" position is "Citywide Director of Rodent Mitigation." As "Rat Czar," Kathleen Corradi will be the first dedicated member of the mayor's office working solely on reducing the city's rat population.

"Kathleen Corradi was made for the job of Rat Czar," the New York City Mayor's Office wrote in an Instagram post.

"Today marks a new era in our battle against the scourge of rats in New York City," said Department of Education Chancellor David C. Banks.

Mayor Adams said Corradi will lead a multi-agency effort to test new mitigation techniques, expand outreach, and increase remediation work to help rid the city of "public enemy number one."
The "Rat Czar's" role will involve coordinating across the city's governmental agencies, community organizations, and private sector.
Corradi, a former elementary school teacher in Central Brooklyn, will earn $155,000 yearly in salary in her new position.
She earned her rodent management bona fides while leading the Department of Education's Zero Waste Schools program. In that role, she put pest mitigation strategies in place across 120 public schools that "led to 70% compliance on the Neighborhood Rodent Reduction Task Force."

During the coronation of the "Rat Czar," Mayor Adams also made other rodent-related announcements. Those announcements included a new Harlem Rat Mitigation Zone and a $3.5 million investment in fiscal year 2023 to "expand and accelerate rat reduction work across Harlem."

The Harlem Rat Mitigation Zone investment will include 19 full-time staff, 14 seasonal staff, new equipment, and eight new "rat slabs" meant to prevent rats from burrowing by hardening earthen floors.

Watch Mayor Adams' and Rat Czar Corradi's announcement in full below.



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University Of Pittsburgh Uses Taxpayer-Funded Aborted Babies For Medical Research

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