On Saturday, January 16th starting at noon, the Glassell Park Improvement Association together with TreePeople are holding their annual fruit tree giveaway.

The distribution will take place at the Glassell Park Recreation Center parking lot. A variety of fruit trees (as well as citrus) will be handed out on a first come, first served basis.

The Los Angeles Bureau of Sanitation will provide mulch, so bring bag or a bucket to take some with you. Citizen Foresters will be available and community supporter Tony Macias will provide information on how to plant, prune and care for the trees. Volunteers are also welcome.

If you may have any questions please contact Alonso Calderon from GPIA me at acalceves@yahoo.com or GPIA president Jim Kiehl at jekiehl@earthlink.net.

Here’s some excerpts from the Northeast Community Police Station newsletter from Captain Bill Murphy

Hello everyone. This newsletter will focus on giving all of you an overview of last year’s crime. We had a really good year – we reduced crime for the eight straight year. But our mission to continue this trend is going to be extremely challenging. I do not have to tell you how bad the economy is today – with an unemployment rate of almost 13% in the City (higher if you consider those who have stopped looking for work). But the most troubling issue we may face this year is the potential release of approximately 30,000 prisoners from our correctional system. It is estimated (no one knows the true numbers right now) the County of Los Angeles would possibly get half of these with the City of Los Angeles getting the lion’s share of this number. The release of the prisoners is due to two factors: a federal judicial mandate to reduce overcrowding in the correctional system; and a bleak state government budget that may require dramatic cuts in the correctional budget – hence pris oner releases.

As of right now, we are being told that the prisoners (if released) will be non-violent offenders. This means that they probably went to jail for property-related offenses such as GTA, BTFV, 459, or narcotics charges. Unfortunately, property crime happens to be NOE Area’s biggest crime problem – auto-related crime alone accounted for 52% of our crime – and we may very well get dozens or even hundreds of these types of prisoners released onto our streets. Know that we are already planning for this and will use every prevention, intervention, suppression, and re-entry strategy available to keep you safe and your quality of life high. With that let’s talk about last year’s crime.

Crime Terminology

187: Homicide

211: Robbery

BTFV: Car break-in

GTA: Car theft

AGG: Shooting, stabbing, or assault not resulting in death

459: Burglary of a residence or business

261: Sexual Assault (rape)

NOE Year End Crime Statistics

Homicide: Down 42.3% (15 vs. 26)

Rape: Down 47.4%

Robbery: Down 1.5%

AGG: Down 11.1%

Shots Fired: Down 18.9%

Shooting Victims: Down 30.3%

Total Violent Crime: Down 11.1%

Burglary: Down 20.1%

GTA: Down 15.0%

BTFV: Down 7.5%

Larceny: Down 14.0%

Total Property Crime: Down 12.8%

Part I (Total Crime): Down 12.5%

* Ended year with EVERY category of crime down – very hard to do this
* We had 836 less serious Part I crimes than the year before
* NOE Area ranked THIRD in crime reduction Citywide (out of 21 police stations). We held first place for almost nine months. Missed second place by one tenth of one percent

(probably 6-10 crimes out of over 5800 reported)

And for Echo Park, the Neighborhood Crime Update is:

We had a serial BTFV suspect hitting multiple vehicles all across NOE. An observant resident of Echo Park called in a suspicious person and a patrol unit responded immediately. They detained the suspect who was wearing a black hoodie (sweatshirt with hood) and gloves on his hands as he approached his vehicle. The officers conducted an outstanding investigation. The suspect’s vehicle was literally filled with stolen property from 16 different BTFVs he committed that day! Our Auto detectives came in on their day off to debrief the suspect. He copt-out to committing dozens of car break-ins throughout NOE. Auto detectives were able to get the judge on the case to increase the bail to 50 thousand dollars (high for a property crime).

Unfortunately, the suspect’s mother bailed him out immediately and we are monitoring his activities. This arrest led to a dramatic decrease in BTFV’s. We do have a strong case and will press for a fast prosecution. Our undercover officers actually arrested him hours after he was released with property from additional victims. He was brought back before the judge who imposed a $400,000 bail. Mommy could not bail him out of this amount!

Good News: Part I crime Down 12.4%, Homicides Down 66%, (3 vs. 1), AGG Down 34.8%, 459 Down 32.7%, GTA Down 29.4%, and BTFV Down 3.8%.

Needs Improvement: Robbery Up 13.% (4 crimes), and Larceny Up 10.9% (7 crimes).

Celebrate the Dragstrip 66 Grand Finale on Saturday, January 9 at the Echoplex. After 17 years, the popular drag dance party is shutting its doors for good.

“Frankly, our daytime careers have made it harder to give Dragstrip the time and attention we did in the past,” co-founder Mr. Dan Der Kacz told the L.A. Times.

For more information, check out the Dragstip 66 website.

Check out the Edendale Library book sale tomorrow (Wednesday, January 6) from 2-5:00 pm.

The branch is selling “over 1000 newly donated non-fiction books… donated by a local book dealer who has gone out of business.” You can find these books on the center tables in the Community Room, starting at ten cents a piece (case only). According to the posting, the library has “over 7,000 books in total, many rare, old, out of print, signed first editions and collectible.”

All proceeds go to library programs and books, and they need all your support!

For more information, please contact Sheila Anthony at 323-868-1243

The library is located at 2011 Sunset Blvd. in Echo Park.

Photo courtesy of an EPN reader

Many of you might notice the on-again, off-again work being done on the Pioneer Chicken building on Echo Park Avenue. After months of gathering dust and graffiti (which closed down last March), the old Pioneer Chicken is being turned into a Little Caesars pizza restaurant. According to the LA Eastsider last month, a plumbing permit was issued in December for the new franchise location.

Curious cats beware – according to the reader who submitted this photo, a “guy yelled bloody murder at me while I took the pic.”