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News (Media Awareness Project) - US NJ: Won Their Nabe Back From Drugs And Thugs
Title:US NJ: Won Their Nabe Back From Drugs And Thugs
Published On:2009-01-10
Source:Jersey Journal, The (NJ)
Fetched On:2009-01-11 18:28:20
WON THEIR NABE BACK FROM DRUGS AND THUGS

It wasn't hard to tell when the New York Avenue Block Association
began winning the war against the drug dealers and crackheads in their
Jersey City Heights neighborhood.

Ross London, who founded the group in 2002, said on two occasions
bricks came flying through windows of his home. His car was repeatedly
damaged and one time they even left a dead bird on his windshield as a
warning.

But he wasn't alone. The properties of other residents were also
damaged and one was threatened with death if he attended another
association meeting, London said.

"We went through hell. It was rough," London said.

The block of New York Avenue between Franklin Avenue and Ferry Street
was a drug haven, said Sheena Begum, an area resident. Drug dealers
roamed around at night with their car stereos blasting and conducted
sales in the street, she said.

"They did it out in the open. They had this superior attitude," she
said.

London, a former municipal judge in Hoboken, had moved to the block in
2002 and was shocked by the crime he witnessed outside his home.

"The block had been pretty awful," said London, 59. "I figured I'd
stick it out for six months and see what happened. In the meantime, I
decided to do everything possible to see what could be changed."

He formed the block association. Then he rallied the police and local
politicians. The association also pushed landlords to hold their
tenants accountable for illegal actions.

London, now a professor at Berkeley College in Newark, set up a
surveillance camera outside his window and gave police footage of
crimes, he said.

The pressure paid off in 2005, when an undercover drug sting rounded
up some of the block's worst offenders, residents said. "The police
came through big," London said.

"By building partnerships and through teamwork, police and community
groups can create neighborhoods where people can live and work
safely," Police Director Sam Jefferson said.

Many of the residents credit London for the turnaround.

"That's all the judge's doing," Artie Gordon said of London. "Every
little spot was filled with drugs. Then he moved in."

London credits all his neighbors. "The key to political power is
political organizing," he said.

Now when residents look outside, they see children playing catch
instead of dealers cruising the street.

"With the community and police working as a team, we can accomplish
the goal of cleaning up the streets," Police Chief Tom Comey said.
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