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Shots fired

During the past two months, shootings have spiked in Charlottesville—most recently on and near the Downtown Mall—further increasing concern among local politicians, law enforcement, violence interrupters, and other community members. 

On October 23 at around 1am, the Charlottesville Police Department responded to a shots fired report on the Downtown Mall, where they found a man and two women who had been shot. Two men had been involved in a fight at Lucky Blue’s, and one took out a gun and fired multiple shots inside and outside the bar. The injured man, later identified as Devonn J. Wilson, was rushed to the hospital, where he died of his wounds. The two women, who were bystanders, sustained non-life threatening injuries, and, as of October 24, are recovering at the hospital. No arrests have been made.

“We believe this is an isolated incident and not connected with previous acts of gun violence,” said the Charlottesville Police Department in a press release, urging anyone with information regarding the shooting to contact police. 

Just three days before the fatal bar shooting, Commonwealth’s Attorney Joe Platania announced that the CPD had arrested and charged three juvenile males, ages 14 to 17, in relation to a shooting that occurred near the downtown Omni Hotel parking lot on October 15. Two male juveniles were injured during the shooting, and the three teens in custody face felony charges.

While the commonwealth’s attorney’s office has partnered with “various law enforcement agencies” to respond to the increase in shootings, “it will take broad community partnerships to turn the tide and stem the violence,” said Platania in a city press release. “We have committed parents, teachers, coaches … that can intervene and guide our youth.”

The B.U.C.K. Squad says it has been mentoring local youth, in addition to intervening in conflicts before they turn into shootings—the group reports it has performed 48 successful violence interruptions this year. However, the squad needs more resources to offer programming, like sports and field trips, that can deter young people from getting involved in illegal activities.

“These kids don’t have no outlet. We want to get them off the streets,” says Assistant Director Bryan Page. “We need to rescue these kids before they get the gun in their hand. Jail and stuff like that do not work—it makes you worse.”

With extra funding, the violence interrupters want to start a junior B.U.C.K. Squad, in addition to other violence prevention programs. “If the kids that’s doing the shooting … if we could pay them to be violence interrupters among their peers, then we can address the problem,” says Page.

Last year, the squad, which also runs a re-entry program, received $70,000 from Charlottesville City Council, but Page and Executive Director Herb Dickerson say that funding has run out. This year, the group received a $100,000 grant from the Department of Justice, but Dickerson expects that money to be gone by spring. He hopes the city will provide additional funding before then, allowing the group to ramp up hiring, too—it currently has around 15 members, and needs around 45 more people in order to put a violence interrupter team in all of the city’s predominantly Black neighborhoods, says Dickerson.

According to acting field operations head Capt. Tony Newberry, the CPD is currently down 30 active duty officers, which he believes has led to an increase in shootings—over the past six months, the department has responded to approximately 162 shots fired calls, including another recent gun-related homicide. On September 17, police responded to a call on the 300 block of Third Street NE, and discovered a man who had been shot. He was later identified as 29-year-old Daquain Anderson, and was taken to the hospital, where he died of his injuries. No one has been arrested for his murder.

Police have yet to make arrests in connection to a string of other recent shootings. On September 10, the CPD responded to an incident on the Downtown Mall, but reported there were no injuries. On September 18, officers responded to a shots fired call in the area of Ninth Street NW and West Street, and found shell casings but no one injured on Hardy Drive. On September 28, police responded to an aggravated assault report on Anderson Street, and found two men who had been shot outside a home. (They were taken to the hospital in stable condition). And on October 16, officers responded to a call on Hardy Drive and found shell casings but no victims. 

To recruit more officers, Newberry urges the city to increase pay. “Our competition in this area primarily comes from the university or the county,” he told The Daily Progress.

Charlottesville Mayor Lloyd Snook says City Council is working with the CPD, City Manager’s office, and Platania to address the shootings—however, he stresses the limits of policing and encourages witnesses to assist with investigations. 

“Unless a police officer was standing outside [of Lucky Blue’s], I don’t think this could have been prevented by a different police presence,” wrote Snook in an email to C-VILLE. “Some of the shootings are going unsolved because eyewitnesses who saw what happened won’t talk to the police.”

Downtown businesses are also working together to “keep their patrons and staff safe,” said Friends of Charlottesville Downtown Executive Director Greer Achenbach in an email. The CPD “is increasing officer presence on the mall … [and] we still believe that downtown is a safe place.”

“Our first priority remains for the safety of our guests and associates,” wrote Omni Hotel manager Paul Maher in an email, “and that is where we place our focus.”

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You’ll never walk alone

This fall, UVA will debut a new app, Rave Guardian, designed to help keep students safe on Grounds.    

The app is a one-stop shop that allows users to read safety alerts, locate phone numbers for SafeRide, Dean on Call, and CAPS on Call, submit tips to the school’s Just Report It tip line, anonymously text the university police department, and call 911. The app also has a virtual escort feature, where users can invite trusted people to virtually walk with them when they’re walking alone. 

The Rave Guardian app was developed by a third party and sold to organizations that want to provide safety resources for their people. (Other customers include Cornell and the University of South Carolina.) The app came with an upgrade to UVA’s emergency alert software and costs the school’s emergency management office around $7,800 annually. Downloading the app is not required for students, but it is encouraged. Users will need a virginia.edu email address to log in. 

According to Sergeant Ben Rexrode of UPD, the app is anonymous. UPD does not know who is using the app unless the user allows, such as identifying themselves when reporting a tip. Rexrode did clarify that in an emergency situation, the police are able to ping users’ locations, just like when someone calls 911. 

“We’re not able to gather data off of it, or anything for our personal use or gain,” Rexrode says. “We’re really just trying to offer it to the community for larger community safety.”

Student safety is a concern among students, parents, faculty, and staff alike. On June 29, a woman was sexually assaulted after falling off a scooter near the UVA medical center. On July 3, a woman was raped in the area of 14th Street NW and Grady Avenue, a popular residential area for students. 

Abby Palko, director of the Maxine Platzer Lynn Women’s Center at UVA, says the app looks promising. “I think safety tools that empower students, particularly women, and empower them to feel confident moving across Grounds are important,” she says.

“At the Women’s Center, we are huge fans of having multiple options for students,” Palko continues. “The issues that we work on and engage with students on are really big, complex issues, and there isn’t a one-size-fits-all answer to them.” 

Palko points out that due to the pandemic, 75 percent of undergraduates this fall will have never completed a full year on Grounds. Many students, women especially, share their locations with others while walking at night, but new underclassmen may not have people  they trust enough to track them in Apple’s Find My Friends app or Snapchat Map. The new app’s virtual walk feature could help in those situations. 

“Something we try to discourage is traveling alone, especially at night,” says Rexrode. “As a student, you’re sometimes just going to be by yourself at night. It’s not realistic to say never walk by yourself.”

When asked whether there’s more the Office of Emergency Management and/or UPD could be doing to increase student safety, Palko says that safety is a community issue. She encourages people to think about how they move through the university and city, and how they might contribute to community safety. “It sounds corny but it really is on all of us,” she says.

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Safe and sound: New locks, ID scanners at county schools

Walking into an Albemarle County school, a parent may notice new security measures. Although some are subtle, others, like a new identification scanning system, are hard to miss. In an era in which deranged gunmen have been known to target school children, local administrators say they are working to make sure students and teachers are as safe as possible.

In early September, Governor Terry McAuliffe awarded $6 million in school security equipment grants to schools across the commonwealth, and Albemarle County received $83,914. The funds will go to upgrading security cameras at the three high schools—Albemarle, Western Albemarle and Monticello—and to making improvements to classroom doors at Brownsville, Hollymead, Stony Point and Woodbrook elementary schools, according to county schools spokesman Phil Giaramita.

“In the elementary schools, we are expanding a program that began last year—improving locks on classroom doors and installing protective film on classroom door windows,” Giaramita says in an e-mail. “Both of these measures increase the difficulty of an intruder being able to enter a classroom.”

Lindsay Snoddy, assistant director of building services for environmental, health and safety for the school district, says the button locks are an extra protection for teachers or administrators.

“It makes it easier for teachers to lock down, if they are in that situation,” she explains. “It just takes out that one extra step of needing to know where your key is and having it on your person.”

The emphasis on efficiency and a quick response is central to this new technology shift, and Snoddy says the new security measures were carefully selected. The district keeps an eye on what area schools are doing, and it runs a pilot program before instituting a new initiative district-wide.

One new security measure, the identification-scanning system, is becoming operational at all schools, but is not part of the state funding, Giaramita says.

The system asks visitors to provide a government-issued identification. Then their name is run through the sexual offenders database to make sure the visitor isn’t prohibited from entering the school.

Crystal Myers has children who attend an elementary school in the district. She says she is onboard with all the changes being implemented, and she believes the ID scanning is beneficial.

“I think it’s important that the school systems remain up to date with safety,” Myers says. “You want to know who is sitting next to your child at lunch.”

Others, such as former school board member Gary Grant, have raised questions about the program and how undocumented parents—who may be in the country illegally—will be able to gain access to schools.

Snoddy says there are different ways a parent can enter, such as with a Social Security card or military or work ID. She also says if the visitor is known to the office staff and can answer a series of questions about the child, then access will be granted.

In all, the school district says it has gotten positive feedback about the new safety measures. Snoddy says the district has received this type of state funding for the past four years and has continued to improve its safety system.