Can Larry Krasner Fix Philly's Crime Problem?
Philadelphia's progressive district attorney tried to enact criminal justice reform—and got impeached for his trouble.

Larry Krasner wants to fix America's criminal justice system, which imprisons more people per capita than any other country on the planet. Since 2018, he's served as the district attorney (D.A.) of Philadelphia—one of America's most highly incarcerated and crime-ridden cities.
Krasner spent three decades as a criminal and civil rights defense attorney before deciding to run for office. "Our movement did the uncomfortable thing: We took back power," he wrote in a memoir about his successful run for Philadelphia's district attorney. "We outsiders went inside and took over the institution we had fought against all our lives."
In his first week as D.A., Krasner fired 31 staffers and replaced them with a new team that he described as "ideologically attached to the mission."
"It's a pretty basic mission for people who are in favor of freedom," Krasner says. "One of those missions is to be less incarcerated than Vladimir Putin's Russia….Another aspect is not to have what I would call the ultimate form of big government, which is to be the most incarcerated country in the world without a perceptible increase in safety."
Krasner easily won reelection in 2021, but shortly after this interview was conducted he was impeached by the Republican-led state legislature, which blames him for the fact that Philly posted a record 562 murders in 2021 and is on pace for a similar outcome when 2022 statstics are finalized.
In October, Reason's Zach Weissmueller sat down with Krasner for a video interview to talk about his reforms, his city's spike in violent crime, the heat that progressive prosecutors have been feeling, and what it all means for the future of American criminal justice reform.
Reason: Straight out of law school, you went to work at a public defender's office here in Philly. You spent decades as a civil rights defense attorney, and now you are the city's top prosecutor. What made you decide to pursue that in 2017?
Krasner: When I came out of law school, I was a little bit naive. I actually started out as a state public defender in that "under-resourced rodeo" that Justice [Sonia] Sotomayor talks so much about. I believed that if you were on either side, you could do really good work, and that the system wasn't broken. But what I found out over 30 years is that in many ways it really is. Those were the same 30 years when much of the rise in mass incarceration occurred.
So I got to the point when I was 56 years old, where I felt like in order to have a much more sweeping impact on a system that I thought was profoundly broken, I had to do something else. And that's when I decided to run to be a chief prosecutor in Philly.
You have surrounded yourself with people who are aligned with the goal of reforming the criminal justice system. How would you define your mission?
There are other places where they have achieved one-ninth the level of incarceration, and they have one-ninth the level of homicides compared to the United States. We're allowed to look at how they have incorporated human dignity and freedom and shrinking that part of their government while simultaneously making their country a much safer and better place to be. That's where we need to go.
What about criminal justice in Philadelphia in particular? How is your city different?
The crazy irony of Philly is that this is a tourist destination for freedom. The Liberty Bell, the place where they wrote the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, all of that is here. And yet when we came into office, it was the most incarcerated of the big cities. It was the poorest of the big cities. It had the highest level of supervision on probation and parole, 25 times higher than New York City. Yet it is a majority-minority city, and it's also a city that's about 85 percent Democrat. And arguably, the poorest and most violent of the 10 big cities.
How the hell do you end up with this witch's brew? How is everything so bad all at the same time? That's when we came in. Part of the mission was trying to figure out how you unravel that unique combination of economic failure that seems connected to criminal justice policies that don't make you safer and that tear the city down.
You have declined to prosecute some "victimless" crimes. What were you hoping to achieve with that policy, and has it been successful thus far?
One of the things we really wanted to do was to increase the focus on the most serious crimes that tear apart society, situations where I believe that we do need to have jails and we need to have incarceration and we need to have consequences. But part of doing that is to stop taking offenses that are either victimless, nonviolent, or not serious and try to deal with them through public health approaches.
For example, sex work, or, as they call it in the Pennsylvania code, prostitution. You have a situation in which you are dealing with women or men, because it can be both, and sometimes nonbinary people, who are victims in various different ways. They're struggling with trauma. They're struggling with mental health issues. They're struggling with addiction in many circumstances. And what you're doing is locking them up, putting them in custody, and making it so they can't go to police to protect themselves against people who want to harm them. By giving them convictions it's making it harder for them to reintegrate themselves into society when they're able to address these issues. You're not providing them with support for these issues. The reality is you're not getting good drug treatment or mental health treatment or trauma treatment when you're in jail. When you're coming out and you try to become a cashier and they see three prostitution convictions, it isn't going to work.
So, no, we're not going to do that. We're not going to make it worse for people who we view fundamentally as victims. We need the rest of government, the rest of society to work with us, to provide them with some resources. Freedom works better than incarceration in that situation.
Similar feelings, of course, about possession of all drugs while simultaneously wanting to be a catalyst for support. We have seen tremendous success in other countries—Portugal is one—very drastically decreasing addiction. In Lisbon, there is an 80 percent reduction in the on-street persistent use of opioids over 20-plus years by getting away from cops and judges and courthouses.
You said you wouldn't seek bail except in cases where a particularly violent crime had occurred. The rationale behind this move was that jails were filling up with people who haven't been convicted of a crime. Police claim that this creates a "revolving door" because they keep arresting people over and over again. Is that true?
I don't set bail. Bail is set by judges after they hear from the defense and they hear from the prosecution, which is being skipped. When people start saying that we are somehow creating a revolving door, we're absolutely not. In fact, we are very dissatisfied in serious cases involving violent crime that the bails being imposed are way too low.
The first thing we did, 45 days into 2018: We said, for nonviolent, low-level misdemeanor offenses, where people don't present a danger, we're not going to ask for money. When you ask for money and judges put little bits of bail on people, the homeless ones, the broke ones, sit in jail. But the ones who have a job get out. Jail is not for poverty. If you present a true danger to the public, then in my view you should be in jail pending trial, because you present a true danger to the public no matter how rich you are. Money should have nothing to do with it.
But on the other hand, I don't want to be holding people in jail for $135 a night because they can't pay $100, when the person who got arrested for the same damn thing, but has a job, can get out the same day. That doesn't make any sense.
What we found after a year of taking 25 different nonviolent, nonserious offenses and not seeking money bail for those offenses was success. We found there was no increase in crime related to it. There was no increase in people failing to come to court, which is what bail is for. Freedom really was free. We are going to divorce this process from money. So if you present a real danger to the public, you can sit in jail until your trial. And if you don't, you should get out. And this should not be about money.
We have a lower number of these low bails that hold in poor people, but let out middle-class or rich people. We have a lower number, so that's progress. But we also have a higher number of high bails for people who, for example, are charged with shooting a 16-year-old at a recreation center while people are playing basketball. We have a higher number of those high bails. But are we happy? No.
We are frequently seeing a lot of bail commissioners who are used to an old system. It's a system that benefits bail bondspeople and it benefits counties. It becomes a money trough for the government. They're much more comfortable with these bails that are in the middle, and that's a problem that we're still working on.
How do you respond to critics who say this ultimately resulted in some people who didn't commit a very serious crime having this insane bail over their heads?
I respect their opinion, but I disagree. The reality is what we are trying to emulate here, in a state that's all about the cash bail, is what they've been doing in D.C. for over 30 years. Either we're going to hold you and it's not about money, or we will let you out. But D.C. also has the advantage of providing services.
Both gun homicides and armed robberies have gone way up in Philadelphia. How much blame do you deserve for the spike in violent crime in the city over the past few years?
We actually charge gun possession cases at a higher rate than those who came before us. Our conviction rate for homicides, for shootings, for homicides with guns, for rapes, for carjackings, for robberies with guns is extremely high. All of those conviction rates at the trial level are in the 80 and 90 percent levels. What you're referring to is a political narrative that serves certain people, but it is not accurate.
Gun arrests have gone up, but the success with prosecutions has not gone up. It has gone down in certain instances. What's going on is a combination of factors. One of them is that there are a lot of illegal searches that are done in these cases. I don't say that to blame anybody, but the reality is there are a lot of illegal searches. A lot of those searches are thrown out by judges because they violate the Fourth Amendment. And we cannot convict people when all the evidence is thrown out. A lot of those are cases where you have a civilian witness who absolutely will not show up no matter what we do.
We have real difficulties in solving cases. So the rate at which they're actually solving shootings means 83 out of 100 shooters get away with it. But among the 17 percent we actually get, we're getting convictions on almost nine out of 10 at the trial level.
Have you decided not to prosecute certain gun possession cases where it doesn't involve an actual violent crime?
No, that's not correct. We actually prosecute every single kind of gun possession case. You may be referring to a small number of cases, a few percent, where we have law-abiding people who are having, for example, a first offense with a lawfully purchased firearm, but are in violation of not having a piece of paper that says you can carry on the street. In those situations, we hold them accountable with consequences including community service, long-term supervision, fines and costs, and things of that sort. But we give them a pathway to avoid a conviction. We do that because we believe society will be safer if you take law-abiding people who made a mistake and did something wrong and don't make them unemployable.
There needs to be a velvet glove and a hammer. If you're dealing with people who are driving gun violence, who are out to shoot people, there needs to be a hammer. When you're dealing with people who are afraid of the other group, you don't want to turn them toward crime by making them unemployable, you want to give them that opportunity. So we hold them accountable. It's just not in this sort of simplistic old-school way where the only kind of accountability is to break your employability, your ability to get an apartment, your ability to be a provider, your capacity to earn and pay taxes and to form a family.
What do you think needs to change to decrease the Philadelphia murder rate?
I think there's a lot of things that have to change in Philly. First of all, you're dealing with the poorest of the 10 largest cities. There's no question that there is a heavy correlation between poverty and economic failure, particularly on a neighborhood by neighborhood basis, and chronic violence. Philadelphia has been a chronically violent city for decades. What has been done through traditional lock-them-up-and-hang-them-high approaches has never worked to reduce violence in Philadelphia.
So what works? Two things work. One is modern enforcement, and that includes things like some pretty amazing forensics that are now available but have not been funded. But it's never been "good politics" to put the $50 million that Philadelphia needs into a forensics lab that would allow them to go from the statistics they had a few years ago, solving 17 percent of shootings to solving 30 percent or 40 percent. That would make a huge difference in deterrence. So that is part of modern enforcement.
But the other side of it is serious investment in prevention. And that takes many, many different forms. If you view the most sacred obligation of a prosecutor's office or law enforcement as trying to prevent the next victimization, that is really a much better goal than to give somebody a life sentence after that person has taken a life. But that prevention money has to come from somewhere.
When you look and you see the decline of mental health services available in our society during the period of mass incarceration, we gutted 85 percent of mental health services. We put that money into prisons. We put it into jails. The decline of money available for education for poor people, especially public education, coincides very neatly with the growth of everything that was about locking you up and throwing away the key. We have to get these resources from somewhere.
You reduced retail theft and a few other things you consider to be lower-level crimes to be "summary offenses" that typically result in a small fine as opposed to jail. In places like San Francisco, many people complain about quality-of-life effects because the shoplifting went way up, some say because of decreased penalties for shoplifting. In Philly, property crime went up by 30 percent, commercial burglaries by 50 percent. Do you think that your policies have made quality of life worse here in Philadelphia?
No. The reality here is a lot more interesting and a lot more complex. We are seeing a big increase in property crimes right now, but if you look at the last two years, there was a big decrease in property crimes. You lock people up in their homes [during the pandemic]. You shut down businesses, and you have them sitting near their car all day.
When society came back online, people started going back to work. We saw these spikes going back up. This is also, of course, happening in a time of tremendous economic displacement.
We have a voracious, arguably out-of-control situation going with opioids that feeds much of this. It's not even true that we're punishing people less for retail theft—with the summary, you can go to jail for 90 days. What it does is it takes people out of this ridiculous process of tying up police, handcuffing people, taking them to a police station, keeping them in jail until they pay bail, which a lot of times they cannot.
Then they go to court. Then the witnesses don't show up anyway, in very high levels, because their employers don't want [their] security guards to be in court. They want security guards to be at the store. That's what it is.
Police say that there's no incentive to arrest people if it is just "a slap on the wrist." Why is that?
Let me explain how summaries work. Police charge summaries, they show up, they say, "Aha, we got you stealing this package of batteries that's worth $14." They write the charge on a piece of paper and give them a court date right then and there. They don't have to ask me to charge them. They charge them.
A lot of what's happening in Philadelphia now is staffing shortages throughout the government, but we have a very significant staffing shortage with police as well. And they are dealing with what really tears apart society, which is gun violence. I'll give you an example. We used to have a rate of 2 to 4 percent of police out injured on duty. That rate is now about 13 percent, and is 13 percent in a system where the police union picked all the doctors. I'll repeat that. It became a 13 percent stay-home-and-get-paid system, during a pandemic, in a gun violence crisis, when the Fraternal Order of Police picked all the doctors that said whether you had to come to work or not. The notion that people who have all the power in the world to charge those offenses but won't charge them, want to blame somebody else, should make you question what they're saying.
Why do you view the impending impeachment proceeding against you as illegitimate?
You impeach people for committing crimes. You impeach them for deep, deep corruption. This is a legislature that has almost never done it. It has never happened in the history of the commonwealth. They have said we're going to impeach somebody, not because that person committed any crime, but because we disagree with their ideas. Understand where this impeachment is coming from.
I was elected the first time handily, the second time with an overwhelming landslide. We got 72 percent of the vote in Philly. We got more than two-thirds of every Democrat in the primary. And in the areas most affected by gun violence—the ones where, if you bought any of this nonsense, you would think they'd be against me—I had the highest rates of support. We had rates of support that were 80 to 85 percent. That's what Philadelphia thinks about the person they freely and fairly elected.
People leading this are from hundreds of miles away. They do not live in Philadelphia. They're not permitted to vote in Philadelphia. They're from Beaver County. I did not make that name up. They are from Washington County and Adams County. Their point is, We may not live there, we can't even vote there, but our few votes out here as a legislature should allow us to remove you because we don't like your ideas. That is the end of democracy. That is the gutting of democracy. It's not a surprise that one party has a very large contingent of people who are either insurrectionists themselves, or they're election deniers, or they are essentially patronizing and supporting insurrectionists.
Are you optimistic that working toward a society that is not the most carceral country in the world will succeed?
I'm optimistic, but we've got to be honest about our history. If you look at the writings of somebody like [Just Mercy author and activist] Bryan Stevenson, he would argue that we didn't actually eliminate slavery. It morphed. It went from a strictly slave system to a system of mass incarceration. We see tremendous successes in the history of the United States, in my opinion, with things like the election of Barack Obama. And then you have the insanity of the election of somebody like Donald Trump, who I wouldn't actually let sell me a pair of shoes. Part of me knows how many people in this country are people of goodwill and resort to reason. They believe in history, science, and truth. That part of me is very optimistic. But we cannot deny the reality that there is a contingent in the United States who are fundamentally racist, who are either unscientific or anti-scientific, who do not care for democracy and probably never did.
This interview has been condensed and edited for style and clarity. The full interview can be viewed below.
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "Can Larry Krasner Fix Philly's Crime Problem?."
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You reelected him Philly now suck on it hard.
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Sadly they'll be sucking on blood from being shot or stabbed from the criminals who Krasner let out.
You prefer the depleted human residue -- half-educated, superstitious, bigoted, Republican, parasitic -- that remains in our can't-keep-up backwaters after generations on the losing end of bright flight?
But enough about thiose who voted for Larry Krasner.
Kuckland and company are why places like Kensington Avenue in Philly exist. YouTube that place.
Says a guy from the sticks, where a house costs less than my car.
Maybe my youngest son’s car.
If your youngest son’s car is $1.7M, grats to him.
If I lived in a $5k single wide, it would have no bearing on that statement.
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Well, in fairness, it would matter to someone like Kirkland who is literally the epitome of the selfish, moral, elitist that he claims to fight against.
The guy is the ultimate projection machine.
Arty dreams of one day owning a $5k single wide. But he’s too worthless to earn the tiny amount of bucks to make even his stunted dreams come true. I’m guessing Arty’s testosterone level is negative, like most democrat beta males.
Maybe my youngest son’s car.
Those things growin' from your ass ain't kids, Artie. They're infected pustules.
Your grandmawife got the clap from screwin' your earholes and stuck it where the sun don't shine.
Don't mind Artie, he's a severely inbred ...person... who was once kicked of the sidewalk near a diploma mill. He's the most educated ...person... in the trailer park down by the chemical waste site and likes to come here and shake his stumps at us.
Arthur, I'll be honest. I live close to Philly, and it is pretty bad. The quality of life has declined, and poverty has increased markedly in the last decade. There are things Krasner says I agree with (albeit, different reasoning) at a human level. However, the reality is that Krasner's policies are failing to deliver what Krasner advocates for. They are not working. The policies actually have to work to alleviate human suffering. Here, Krasner fails, and fails atrociously.
Kensington is truly an urban hellscape. I weep for the lives lost there; such wasted potential, a lot of it because of drugs.
It is sad, Arthur.
Kirkland doesn't care about honest debate or reality. Politics to him is simply an "owning the other side" game, and, thus, can't be based in reality.
"You may be referring to a small number of cases, a few percent, where we have law-abiding people who are having, for example, a first offense with a lawfully purchased firearm, but are in violation of not having a piece of paper that says you can carry on the street. In those situations, we hold them accountable with consequences including community service, long-term supervision, fines and costs, and things of that sort. But we give them a pathway to avoid a conviction."
That's very kind of him.
This is the biggest bunch of gaslighting I've seen yet from this fugazi libertarians shitrag in the last fifteen years, and that is REALLY saying something!
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Seriously. Why is this here? Krasner is the antipathy of everything libertarians stand for.
The pivot to progressive explains the astronomical murder and property crime rates.
(PSST — They have something to do with the high poverty rates he keeps carping on as well.)
Wait, I thought his whole shtick was to not prosecute crimes? That's like fixing a fire by ... doing nothing (while saying that fighting fires is racist).
Yeah, but he cut the (reported) crime rate!
If you do nothing while your city burns, of course others will be inspired to lute as well.
Inspired to lute? Quit harping on that stuff.
You calling me a lyre?
" . . . and it's also a city that's about 85 percent Democrat.
How the hell do you end up with this witch's brew? How is everything so bad all at the same time?"
The first part answers the following questions.
Things will only improve when those last few Republican troublemakers are driven out.
Let's try this:
1. Very few rules (and laws) based on the NAP.
2. Very quick and harsh punishment for those who break those rules.
That's the exact opposite of progressivism
Thank you.
sarc still gets an EBT card charged at the start of each moneth, right?
Of course! And does anyone else here envision him living in a refrigerator box located in a piss soaked alley? I assume he accesses the internet through a public library location.
Why is this here? Krasner doesn't care about freedom. He doesn't care about crime. He doesn't care about innocent people being hurt. There is a reason he was impeached.
He is a hard core progressive, and hates everything about libertarianism. He only cares about freeing criminals and making himself look good to his progressive friends.
Philly is less safe since he took over.
The article is a Philly cheese take?
More like ideological scrapple...
Because Reason is progressive gaslighting, and nothing but a toady for Soros.
Krasner is a Soros plant.
Spend your wasted internet time on Spiked.
Reason writers are only nominally interested in select parts of libertarianism. They pick a few libertarian concepts here and there to use to push their real agenda.
Reason editors believe that not incarcerating criminals is somehow libertarian.
A rising crime rate indicates failure on his part.
Articles like this are good in that they expose the authoritarians in the commentariat.
I smell gas!
Apparently, Reason is only allowed to interview exemplary libertarians:
https://reason.com/2023/01/21/can-larry-krasner-fix-phillys-crime-problem/?comments=true#comment-9888414
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Yes that's exactly right. If I want to read non-libertarians, I can read pretty much any other site. I come here for libertarian takes, not gaslighting for progressive anti-libertarian causes.
Locking people up for victimless crimes is authoritarian. Letting actual criminals out early, or not prosecuting them for minor crimes so they can gain experience and become better criminals is just stupid.
Define "early"? The punishment should fit the crime. After a half a century of being "tough on crime," punishments have far exceeded the crimes, all in the name of "deterrence". The problem with that is twofold. One it doesn't work because criminals don't count on getting caught, and two it results in people being needlessly locked up just to make politicians look tough. Something's got to give.
You are conflating victimless crime war (ie drugs) with victim crime non-war (ie violence).
Punishment fit the crime, but often they are let out early (ie way before the statutory requirement). It does work, because criminals don't want to get caught. And also, once they are caught, they are in a place where they can't commit more crimes. And the later is the big problem.
Yes the *wrong* people are being needlessly locked up. And the *wrong* people are being needlessly let go.
It’s hard to get locked up for victimless crimes these days. Not enough room in the jails and prisons.
This is the false narrative that's so prevalent anymore and is so obnoxious. It takes a lot to get one locked up in prison. The wives' tale of someone serving 25 years for possessing pot is simply that, a wives' tale. You have to be a special kind of awful to get to the point where you get imprisoned, at least at the state level.
Yes, at the federal level, it's different.
Yes, at the federal level punishment levels are basically archaic.
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Checking in on the Antiracist Research department at Boston University:
[Pic]
I wonder why Mr. progressive was not asked his opinion on so-called hate crimes and registries and restrictions imposed on so-called sex offenders. Nor was he asked whether he considers speech to be a form of harm. Funny how progressives don’t seem to have any objection to those forms of criminal punishment.
Obviously because Reason is a leftist magazine run by leftist leftists who ask leftists leftist questions because that's what leftists do.
Poor sarc.
Bingo! Finally got it.
Like, when they’re not diddling children.
Okay Scott.
I don’t believe Reason diddles children but they do allow users that have posted links to cp here to remain here.
Like Mike and Sarc’s good friend Shrike.
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Always fascinating when people become that which they complain about. Doing well with that, sarc.
Reducing crime in a dangerous city like Philadelphia should not be that complicated. Survey the 50 largest US cities, and see what features and policies differ between the 5 cities with the highest crime rates and the 5 cities with the lowest crime rates.
And letting more people out of jail and giving criminals shorter sentences or not prosecuting minor crimes has already been tried. And it's failed everywhere it's been tried.
The goal shouldn't be to reduce the number of people incarcerated, it's to make the city a safer place to live.
“see what features and policies differ between the 5 cities with the highest crime rates and the 5 cities with the lowest crime rates”
The honesty and accuracy of the crime reporting? (Hey, I watched “The Wire”.)
The only way to reduce incarceration without making cities less safe is to stop producing more criminals. Stop subsidizing the reproduction of indigent unwed women. In 25 years, the streets will be dramatically safer.
But, if you use real world information and data, how is someone still able to push their desired ideological narrative?
But most of the mental health services that declined were incarceration, just under different auspices.
Whenever anyone talks about less government money available for something, understand that it’s because it was all used for payrolls and pensions and union featherbedding.
There’s not less money. There’s more money. It’s all misspent. Intentionally.
The most relevant point is that he is being impeached by an opposition party for the policies he was elected on.
Just like Trump then.
Nope. Trump did not run on a policy of holding up Congressionally-apportioned funds for a quid pro quo</i to get dirt on a political opponent, nor on a policy of encourafing rioting outside the Capitol.
But you know this, surely?
They decided to impeach him long before that.
That would explain why on the first day of his presidency many on the left were demanding he be impeached and the formation of the "Resistance" occurred.
The democrats are a Marxist controlled organization that treasonously conspired against the legitimate Commander in Chief in an end run around the constitution. Which they despise.
But you know this, surely?
Policies that appear to be distinctly failing.
"It's not a surprise that one party has a very large contingent of people who are either insurrectionists themselves, or they're election deniers, or they are essentially patronizing and supporting insurrectionists."
He should be impeached for that quote alone. Someone who says stuff like that clearly has no intention of serving all the people of the community. He’s unfit to hold any office. And doubly unfit to be involved in the justice system. He might as well be a Klan leader — that’s how they talk about others in the community.
That's where he lost me. He makes a pretty good case up to this point. "Criminal justice" is a scam. It's purpose is to extract wealth from the citizenry and transfer it to politicians and government unions. Cops perjure themselves every day in every courtroom. Everybody involved knows this. Anybody that ever tried to defend themselves in traffic court finds out pretty quickly that money talks and your rights walk. It's a straightforward pay to play. There is of course a level of criminality that creates a political problem for the racketeers. Murder, rape, child molestation require public spectacles in the form of trials. Guilt or innocence doesn't enter into the decision to prosecute (see Kyle Rittenhouse) but politics does. Of course even in these situations sufficient cash and influence can keep the wheels of justice greased (see Jeffery Epstein) unless there is a threat to the whole racket (see Jeffery Epstein didn't kill himself). But when a public servant starts accusing his political opponents of being insurrectionists and election deniers I can not take him seriously. Piss off asshole.
In his first week as D.A., Krasner fired 31 staffers and replaced them with a new team that he described as "ideologically attached to the mission."
And here's where our problem starts. Quit taking every public service job and making it "ideological".
Quit taking every public service job and making it “ideological”.
Had you only now thought so, or did you think so during Bush and Trump admins as well?
One might describe this as moving towards a much less incarcerated city with a very perceptible increase in murder.
That is the gutting of democracy. It's not a surprise that one party has a very large contingent of people who are either insurrectionists themselves, or they're election deniers, or they are essentially patronizing and supporting insurrectionists.
Now go away, you're a cunty useless piece of shit.
Part of the mission was trying to figure out how you unravel that unique combination of economic failure that seems connected to criminal justice policies that don't make you safer and that tear the city down.
Well, Mr. Krasner, go back to the 1960s and the rise of New Urbanism and welfare, and you'll have your answer. Hint: Your fingerprints are all over the murder weapon.
AYFKM? Krasner IS Philly's crime problem. He's a hard-left, soros-funded progressive. His actions are Cloward-Pivenesque.
And I maintain that he's racist - if bodies were falling on Rittenhouse Square or Bala Plaza, he'd do something about it. But it happens in Olney and Kensington and all the other places where he doesn't go without a phalanx of cops surrounding him.
Krasner spent three decades as a criminal
and civil rights defense attorneyFTFY
Would someone intentionally trying to turn Philly into even more of a dangerous shithole put forth any different policies than this jackass?
Which is to say, they have the same rate of incarcerating criminals as the US, they just have a lower crime level. Which means the US doesn't have a mass incarceration problem, it has a mass crime problem.
You want to fix it? Well, there are a lot of things one could propose. But I note that Berlin, Germany employed 170 officers per homicide in 2021, while Philadelphia employed 12 officers per homicide in 2021.
17% arrest rate for shooting? That is failure. And then he plays the usual "racism and anti-science (whatever the hell a liberal art major lawyer knows about science). What a total jackass. You want to solve Phily's crime problem? Two words..Frank Rizzo. Under the great Frank Rizza (who was hated by Jewish liberals like this guy), Philly was safe. Cops kept the thugs and punks in line..Phily needs a Frank Rizzo like tought Irish or Italian American DA. No more Hungarian Bolsie Soros types...
Never forget this.
The same side calling for decarceration, defunding the police, non-prosecution of quality of life crimes...
...is the same side that wants to imprison people for peaceful possession of assault weapons.
If he wants to demonstrate that the crime increase isn’t his fault, he’d have to point to something which got worse at the same time he was prosecutor.
Of course, there is such a thing – Covid – and he duly blames it. I don’t know if he’s being fair to Covid.
But he also blames things which he doesn’t claim increased during his term – police abuse and the like. I’m sure there is police abuse in Philly, but I don’t think it suddenly spiked to coincide with Krasner’s term. And if that had happened, that would one more bad thing on his watch.
COVID, Poverty (the biggest factor which has been proven to result in increased social ills such as crime, addiction, mental illness). On top of those we have an overwhelmed mental health, addiction and healthcare system. It’s a nightmare cycle which WILL continue to get worse..but needs to be addressed both Federally and Nationally.
But it won’t. Our bought and owned politicians are focused ONLY on their own personal power and wealth with very few exception. We’d rather spend trillions of taxpayer dollars on a military industrial complex, foreign aid and subsidies and tax breaks for the wealthiest corporations in the world… hey, they’re the biggest political donors so while our politicians play with $billions in campaign funds..we the people don’t matter (unless of course you can afford to buy off..,sorry, DONATE, to your favorite puppet in Govt.)
I used to travel a lot and my late Son, another victim of our broken healthcare system, traveled even more. I speak to friends across the world a lot over the holidays. Most, “WTF IS WRONG with the US, WHY aren’t people in the streets protesting? Don’t people there see and understand what is happening? Your leaders are not only destroying YOUR country to fund the elite; this WILL spill over to the rest of the world! Do you have ANYONE in power who ISN'T OWNED? WHEN and WHY has the US lost all respect for human life, there in the US and abroad? WHY are you allowing ANOTHER president to send hundreds of $Billions to Saudi to destroy Yemen and its people-we thought if you elected a democrat this would stop? Do Americans realize that even their Allie’s view them as the bullies of the world; some even see YOU as the worlds most dangerous terrorists…Meanwhile everyday Americans are suffering. WTF?”
Those were just a FEW of the quotes I’ve gotten from some VERY disappointed, even terrified friends overseas. We KNOW the solutions..but ignoring Eisenhower’s prescient warning in 1959 and becoming a nation known for putting the almighty profit over people…I only see things getting worse.
No worries though..I’m sure we’ll continue to be fed lots more distractions, FEAR, division, lies and misinformation to help the US propaganda machine stay busy steering us away from our base problems. After all, next year is another election year! Yet another year of empty promises, demonizing “the other” and wasted votes for the better of two evils.
I'm sorry about your son. May his soul be bound up with the bonds of everlasting life.
Yes, indeed.
I wouldn't rely on the two parties, either. They've had their chance.
If it's poverty, why aren't rural areas murderous? They are just as awash in guns and drugs as the cities. I live in the meth capital of the world, Jefferson County Missouri, with a population similar to that of the neighboring St. Louis city, but murders are basically 2-3 people a year compared to 200
That’s bullshit. Even “poor” Americans are exceptionally wealthy by world standards, being entitled to big state and federal handouts.
That is also bullshit. The US is the biggest social welfare state in the world, both in absolute and relative terms. The US is among the top spenders on healthcare, education, infrastructure, etc. The US has the most progressive system of taxation in the world.
As an immigrant, let me tell you bluntly: you are greedy, entitled, ignorant, and utterly reprehensible. The fact that the country is filled with so many millions of idiots like you is why so many people in the US are suffering and why nothing gets fixed.
But people in other countries are right on one point: America is exporting your kind of idiocy, and other countries will suffer the consequences.
The solution is for Americans to start treating people like you as the self-righteous, entitled assholes you are. At the very least we can ostracize you and cause others to reject your belief system. With a bit of luck, we can get you to leave the country and not keep destroying it.
That's because Americans commit crimes at a very high per capita rate and because America has the resources to prosecute those crimes. Other countries either have much lower crime rates or a dysfunctional justice system.
Comparing countries this ways is the same nonsense when people compare other aspects of a society. For example, Americans have shorter life expectancies not because there is anything wrong with our medical system, but because Americans live less healthy lifestyles.
"Americans have shorter life expectancies not because there is anything wrong with our medical system, but because Americans live less healthy lifestyles."
And they know this. They always come with the disingenuous argument that we have "TERRIBLE MATERNAL / FETAL OUTCOMES!" compared to other countries without mentioning the counfounder of the poor people in this country being massively morbidly obese, while combining that fact with the same people not seeking any prenatal care. And im not talking the full prenatal route of multiple visits / ultrasounds, im talking about continuing to smoke, drink, do drugs, and not take OTC prenatal vitamins. You know, all the shit you can do for free.
But they sell this lie because what is their answer? You guessed it: more govt spending, more govt control. Our people dont do well because the govt doesnt do more. It always comes down to this.
Govt wants more power, and they are happy to sell people the lie that nothing is their faults its the ( RICH / GREEDY / CAPITALISTS / CORPORATIONS / WHITES / KULAKS) - pick one or many - it's their fault. Not yours. You didnt have a bad outcome because you have heart disease, diabetes, weigh 400 lbs, and smoked all through your pregnancy without any prenatal care, you would have done better if we just spent more govt money on health care!
Public executions probably wouldn't fix Philly's crime problem, it is that bad. Thank you woke democrats!
We don't have an incarceration problem, we have an urban black youth problem. We are to suspend reality and pretend it isn't cultural.
The Great Society
“We have seen tremendous success in other countries—Portugal is one”
What so many people get wrong about the drug policies of Portugal, Netherlands, et al is that related offenses (panhandling, loitering, larceny, trespassing, etc) are strongly entered. You might not get arrested for using heroin, but you aren't going to be allowed to sleep in the park or beg/steal to support your habit. You'll be arrested and offered the choice of mandatory rehab or jail.
"So the rate at which they're actually solving shootings means 83 out of 100 shooters get away with it. But among the 17 percent we actually get, we're getting convictions on almost nine out of 10 at the trial level."
Wow. So it's like a student saying the blew off over 80% of their assignments, but "hey, look how great the ones are that I turned in!"
In Philly you can literally get away with murder, no less than 83% of the time.
That also skews the racial crime statistics. I’m sure we all know here that the rate of committing murders is far higher for Blacks than for the rest of the US population, but remember that the race of the perpetrator doesn’t get counted in the stats unless there’s a prosecution. Because the closure rate of murder cases is so low in Black neighborhoods, the proportion of murders committed by Blacks must be much higher than the crime stats show.
IOW, “snitches get stitches”
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The mean ones, silly.
"What comments would you consider authoritarian?"
Anyone who doesn’t want innocent members of the public victimized by crime. Anyone who believes property shouldn’t be stolen or destroyed.
Throw the lambs to the wolves or else be name-called an "authoritarian".
WE ask the questions around here, not YOU!
^ That one.
The ones where people would like criminal laws to actually be enforced.
Did you just use "black people" and "plant" in the same sentence?
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Spam is a senior editor at Reason.
I guarantee that the Reasonista's hate the commentariat more than the spammers.
If the first ten posts are spam they hope that people won't scroll farther down and see the criticisms.
Reason gets paid for every post?
And its best writer.
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Better than Mike with his great articles?
Worse he used the word shrub. Get it? Bush as in Bushmen???
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Give him a point for calling them "people".
Actually, you may not be far off. When talking with advertisers, I wonder if "look at the level of article engagement" allows for the use of spam to count as engagement?
ENB obviously hates us. And based on his tweets, if Welch invites us to a wedding, I would skip it.