The first thing you notice about Camden, New Jersey, is that pretty much everyone you talk to has just gotten his or her ass kicked.
Instead of shaking hands, people here are always
lifting hats, sleeves, pant legs and shirttails to show you wounds or
scars, then pointing in the direction of where the bad thing just
happened.
"I been shot six times," says Raymond, a
self-described gangster I meet standing on a downtown corner. He pulls
up his pant leg. "The last time I got shot was three years ago, twice in
the femur." He gives an intellectual nod. "The femur, you know, that's
the largest bone in the leg."
"First they hit me in the head," says Dwayne "The Wiz"
Charbonneau, a junkie who had been robbed the night before. He lifts
his wool cap to expose a still-oozing red strawberry and pulls his
sweatpants down at the waist, drawing a few passing glances. "After
that, they ripped my pockets out. You can see right here. . . ."
Even the cops have their stories: "You can see right
here, that's where he bit me," says one police officer, lifting his pant
leg. "And I'm thinking to myself, 'I'm going to have to shoot this
dog.'"
"I've seen people shot and gotten blood on me," says
Thomas Bayard Townsend III, a friendly convicted murderer with a tear
tattoo under his eye. "If you turn around here, and your curiosity gets
the best of you, it can cost you your life."
Camden is just across the Delaware River from the
brick and polished cobblestone streets of downtown Philadelphia, where
oblivious tourists pour in every year, gobbling cheese steaks and gazing
at the Liberty Bell, having no idea that they're a short walk over the
Ben Franklin Bridge from a full-blown sovereignty crisis - an un-Fantasy
Island of extreme poverty and violence where the police just a few
years ago essentially surrendered a city of 77,000.
All over America, communities are failing. Once-mighty
Rust Belt capitals that made steel or cars are now wastelands.
Elsewhere, struggling white rural America is stocking up on canned goods
and embracing the politics of chaos, sending pols to Washington ready
to hit the default button and start the whole national experiment all
over again.
But in Camden, chaos is already here. In September,
its last supermarket closed, and the city has been declared a "food
desert" by the USDA. The place is literally dying, its population having
plummeted from above 120,000 in the Fifties to less than 80,000 today.
Thirty percent of the remaining population is under 18, an astonishing
number that's 10 to 15 percent higher than any other "very challenged"
city, to use the police euphemism. Their home is a city with thousands
of abandoned houses but no money to demolish them, leaving whole blocks
full of Ninth Ward-style wreckage to gather waste and rats.
It's a major metropolitan area run by armed teenagers
with no access to jobs or healthy food, and not long ago, while the rest
of America was ranting about debt ceilings and Obamacares, Camden
quietly got pushed off the map. That was three years ago, when new
governor and presumptive future presidential candidate Chris Christie
abruptly cut back on the state subsidies that kept Camden on life
support. The move left the city almost completely ungoverned - a graphic
preview of what might lie ahead for communities that don't generate
enough of their own tax revenue to keep their lights on. Over three
years, fires raged, violent crime spiked and the murder rate soared so
high that on a per-capita basis, it "put us somewhere between Honduras
and Somalia," says Police Chief J. Scott Thomson.
"They let us run amok," says a tat-covered ex-con and
addict named Gigi. "It was like fires, and rain, and babies crying, and
dogs barking. It was like Armageddon."
Not long ago, Camden was everything about America that
worked. In 1917, a report counted 365 industries in Camden that
employed 51,000 people. Famous warships like the Indianapolis were built
in Camden's sprawling shipyards. Campbell's soup was made here. Victor
Talking Machine Company, which later became RCA Victor, made its home in
Camden, and the city once produced a good portion of the world's
phonographs; those cool eight-hole pencil sharpeners you might remember
from grade school - they were made in Camden too. The first drive-in
movie was shown here, in 1933, and one of the country's first planned
communities was built here by the federal government for shipyard
workers nearly a century ago.
But then, in a familiar narrative, it all went to
hell. RCA, looking, among other things, for an escape from unionized
labor, moved many of its Camden jobs to Bloomington, Indiana. New York
Shipbuilding closed in the Sixties, taking 7,000 jobs with it.
Campbell's stuck it out until the Nineties, when it closed up its last
factory, leaving only its corporate headquarters that today is
surrounded by gates high and thick enough to keep out a herd of
attacking rhinoceroses.
Once the jobs started to disappear, racial tensions
rose. Disturbances broke out in 1969 and 1971, the first in response to a
rumor about the beating of a young black girl by police, the second
after a Hispanic man named Rafael Gonzales really was beaten by two
officers. Authorities filed charges against the two cops in that case,
but they initially kept their jobs. The city exploded, with countless
fires, three people shot, 87 injured. "Order" was eventually restored,
but with the help of an alarmist press, the incidents solidified in the
public's mind the idea that Camden was a seething, busted city, out of
control with black anger.
With legal business mostly gone, illegal business took
hold. Those hundreds of industries have been replaced by about 175
open-air drug markets, through which some quarter of a billion dollars
in dope moves every year. But the total municipal tax revenue for this
city was about $24 million a year back in 2011 - an insanely low number.
The police force alone in Camden costs more than $65 million a year. If
you're keeping score at home, that's a little more than $450 a year in
local taxes paid per person, if you only count people old enough to file
tax returns. That's less than half of the $923 that the average New
Jersey resident spends just in sales taxes every year.
The city for decades hadn't been able to pay even for
its own cops, so it funded most of its operating budget from state
subsidies. But once Christie assumed office, he announced that "the
taxpayers of New Jersey aren't going to pay any more for Camden's
excesses." In a sweeping, statewide budget massacre, he cut municipal
state aid by $445 million. The new line was, people who paid the taxes
were cutting off the people who didn't. In other words: your crime, your
problem.
The "excesses" Christie was referring to included
employment contracts negotiated by the police union. A charitable
explanation of the sweet deal Camden gave its cops over the years was
that the police union had an unusually strong bargaining position.
"Remember, this was the only police force in South Jersey whose members
regularly had to risk their lives," says retired Rutgers-Camden
professor Howard Gillette. The less-charitable say these deals were the
result of a hey-it-isn't-our-money-anyway subsidy-mongering. Whatever
the cause, until Christie came along, the Camden police had a relatively
rich contract, with overtime up the wazoo and paid days off on
birthdays. If a cop worked an overnight, he got a 12 percent "shift
enhancement" bump, which made sense because of the extreme danger. But
an officer who clocked in at noon under the same agreement still got an
extra four percent. "Every shift was enhanced," says a spokesman for the
new department.
But a big reason that Christie hit Camden's police
unions so hard was simply that he could. He'd wanted to go after New
Jersey urban schools, which he derided as "failure factories." But a
series of state Supreme Court rulings based on a lawsuit originally
filed on behalf of students in Camden and three other poor communities
in the Eighties - Abbott v. Burke, a landmark case that would mandate
roughly equal per-pupil spending levels across New Jersey - made cuts
effectively impossible. The courts didn't offer similar protection to
police budgets, though. By New Year's 2011, the writing was on the wall.
After Christie announced his budget plans, panicked city leaders got
together, pored over their books and collective-bargaining agreements,
and realized the unthinkable was about to happen. Camden, a city that
even before any potential curtailing of state subsidies made Detroit or
East St. Louis seem like Martha's Vineyard, was about to see its police
force, one of its biggest expenditures, chopped nearly in half.
On January 18th, 2011, the city laid off 168 of its
368 police officers, kicking off a dramatic, years-long,
cops-versus-locals, house-to-house battle over a few square miles of
North American territory that should have been national news, but has
not been, likely because it took place in an isolated black and Hispanic
ghost town.
After the 2011 layoffs, police went into almost total
retreat. Drug dealers cheerfully gave interviews to local reporters
while slinging in broad daylight. Some enterprising locals made up
T-shirts celebrating the transfer of power from the cops back to the
streets: JANUARY 18, 2011 - it's our time. A later design aped the logo
of rap pioneers Run-DMC, and "Run-CMD" - "CMD" stands both for "Camden"
and "Cash, Money, Drugs" - became the unofficial symbol of the
unoccupied city, seen in town on everything from T-shirts to a lovingly
rendered piece of wall graffiti on crime-ridden Mount Ephraim Avenue.
Cops started calling in sick in record numbers, with
absenteeism rates rising as high as 30 percent over the rest of 2011.
Burglaries rose by a shocking 65 percent. The next year, 2012, little
Camden set a record with 67 homicides, officially making it the most
dangerous place in America, with 10 times the per-capita murder rate of
cities like New York: Locals complained that policing was completely
nonexistent and the cops were "just out here to pick up the bodies." The
carnage left Camden's crime rate on par with places like Haiti after
its 2010 earthquake, and with other infamous Third World hot spots, as
police officials later noticed to their dismay when they studied U.N.
statistics.
At times in 2011 and 2012, the entire city was
patrolled by as few as 12 officers. Police triaged 911 calls like an
overworked field hospital, sometimes giving up on property and drug
crimes altogether, focusing their limited personnel mainly on gun crimes
committed during daylight hours. Heading into 2013, Camden was sliding
further and further out of police control. "If Camden was overseas, we'd
have sent troops and foreign aid," says Chuck Wexler of the Police
Executive Research Forum, a guy Chief Thomson refers to as his "wartime
consigliere."
Then, this year, after two years of chaos, Christie
and local leaders instituted a new reform, breaking the unions of the
old municipal police force and reconstituting a new Metro police
department under county control. The old city cops were all cut loose
and had to reapply for work with the county, under new contracts that
tightened up those collective-bargaining "excesses." The new contracts
chopped away at everything from overtime to uniform allowances to
severance pay, cutting the average cost per officer from $182,168 under
the city force to $99,605 in the county force. As "the transfer" from a
municipal police force to a county model went into effect last May,
state money began flowing again, albeit more modestly. Christie promised
$10 million in funding for the city and the county to help the new
cops. Police began building up their numbers to old levels.
Predictably, the new Camden County-run police began to
turn crime stats in the right direction with a combination of beefed-up
numbers, significant investments in technology, and a cheaper and at
least temporarily de-unionized membership. Whether the entire thing was
done out of economic necessity or careful political calculation,
Christie got what he wanted - county-controlled police forces seemed to
be his plan from the start for places like Camden.
In fact, just a few months ago, Christie publicly
touted Camden's new county force as the model he hopes to employ for
Trenton, and perhaps some of Jersey's other crime-sick cities. (For a
state with one of the highest median household incomes in America, New
Jersey also has four of the country's biggest urban basket cases in
Camden, Trenton, Paterson and Newark.) Local county officials, echoing
Christie, called Camden the "police model of the future for New Jersey."
In recent months, Christie has visited Camden several
times, making it plain that he puts the daring 2011 gambit here in his
political win column. And not everyone in Camden disagrees. One ex-con I
talked to in the city surprised me by saying he liked what Christie had
done, and compared Camden's decades-long consumption of state subsidies
to the backward incentive system he'd seen in prison. "In prison, you
can lie in your bed all day long and get credit for good time toward
release," he said, shaking his head. "You should have to do something
other than lie there."
No matter what side of the argument you're on, the
upshot of the dramatic change was that Camden would essentially no
longer be policing itself, but instead be policed by a force run by its
wealthier and whiter neighbors, i.e., the more affluent towns like
Cherry Hill and Haddonfield that surround Camden in the county. The
reconstituted force included a lot of rehires from the old city force
(many of whom had to accept cuts and/or demotions in order to stay
employed), but it also attracted a wave of new young hires from across
the state, many of them white and from smaller, less adrenaline-filled
suburban jurisdictions to the north and east.
And whereas the old city police had a rep for not
wanting to get out of the car in certain bad neighborhoods, the new
force is beginning to acquire an opposite rep for overzealousness.
"These new guys," complains local junkie Mark Mercado, "not only will
they get out of the car, they'll haul you in just for practice."
Energized county officials say they have a plan now
for retaking Camden's streets one impenetrable neighborhood at a time,
using old-school techniques like foot patrols and simple get-to-know-you
community interactions (new officers stop and talk to residents as a
matter of strategy and policy). But the plan also involves the use of
space-age cameras and military-style surveillance, which ironically will
turn this crumbling dead-poor dopescape of barred row homes and
deserted factories into a high-end proving ground for futuristic
crowd-control technology.
Beginning in 2011, when the city first installed a new
$4.5 million command center - it has since been taken over by the
county - police here have gained a series of what they call "force
multipliers." One hundred and twenty-one cameras cover virtually every
inch of sidewalk here, cameras that can spot a stash in a discarded pack
of Newports from blocks away. Police have a giant 30-foot mobile crane
called SkyPatrol they can park in a neighborhood and essentially throw a
net over six square blocks; the ungainly Japanese-robot-style device
can read the heat signature of a dealer with a gun sitting in total
darkness. There are 35 microphones planted around the city that can
instantly detect the exact location of a gunshot down to a few meters
(and just as instantly train cameras on escape routes). Planted on the
backs of a fleet of new cruisers are Minority Report-style scanners that
read license plates and automatically generate warning letters to send
to your mom in the suburbs if you've been spotted taking the Volvo
registered in her name to score a bag of Black Magic on 7th and Vine.
The streets have noticed the new technology. Dealers
and junkies alike have even begun to ascribe to the police powers they
don't actually have. "They have facial-recognition on cars, man," says
Townsend, the homeless ex-con with the murder sheet. "So that when you
go by 'em, they see if you are wanted for anything."
For sure, there's bitterness on streets in Camden over
the fact that the city was essentially abandoned three years ago. But
misery loves company, and this is a place where even the police seem
shellshocked. Some of them, you get the sense, feel abandoned too - cut
off from the rest of America just like everyone else here. Very few of
them have the pretend-macho air you get from hotshot cops in other tough
cities. Camden police will come straight out and tell you stories about
getting their faces kicked in and/or beaten half to death. And they all
talk about this place with a kind of awe, often shaking their heads and
whispering through the worst stories.
"The kid happened to be on a bike," begins a 20-year
police vet named John Martinez, closing his eyes as he remembers a story
from July 2011. He was riding with a rookie partner that day. The city
at the time was still in near-total chaos, with drug dealing mostly
going unchallenged by the police. But on that hot July afternoon,
Martinez spotted a teenager doing a hand-to-hand on Grant Street,
shrugged, and decided to pursue anyway.
"[The dealer] saw me walking up to him. I told the
rookie to stay in the car, because 90 percent of the time, they run."
The kid started pedaling away. The rookie gave chase in the car, then
stopped, jumped out and went after him on foot. Martinez started to
follow, but then looked back at the car and realized his newbie partner
had left it running.
"I started to run with him," he said, "but I thought, 'Yeah, this'll be gone.'"
By this, Martinez meant the car. Last summer, in fact,
a male-female pair of suburban junkies stole a squad car parked right
in front of police headquarters, ran over the cop it belonged to (he
survived, but his leg was shattered, his career over), tore across the
bridge into Philly pursued by a phalanx of Camden cops ("You can imagine
the public's bewilderment, seeing police cars chasing a police car,"
recalls Thomson), and crashed in Philly after a long chase - only to
flee on foot, double back, and steal another car, this time a
Philadelphia police cruiser.
"Junkie Bonnie and Clyde" were eventually caught, but
the point is, you can't leave a car running in Camden, especially a
police car. So on that July day, Martinez went back to his cruiser
instead of helping out his partner. Eventually, another experienced
officer showed up, also toting a rookie partner. The two rookies ended
up catching the suspect on foot and were trying to get him cuffed when
Martinez started to sense a problem. A crowd of about a hundred formed
in the blink of an eye and started pelting the cops with bottles and
rocks. Martinez ended up chasing onto a porch a teenager who'd thrown a
bottle.
Next thing Martinez knew, he was jumped by "women,
older women, men, kids. . . . As soon as I grabbed the kid, everybody
started trying to forcibly take him from me. They're punching me in the
back, on the side of the head. . . . "
In the struggle, Martinez and the kid ended up
crashing backward through the porch railing and tumbling to the street,
where Martinez suddenly found himself looking up at 100 furious people,
with an angry teenager on top of him, reaching for the gun in Martinez's
thigh holster. The three other cops rushed to his aid - the two rookies
making another mistake in the process. They'd cuffed the original
suspect and put him in the back of the car, but in the rush to save
Martinez, they again left the cruiser unlocked. Backup arrived a few
moments later, but when Martinez got back to his feet, he realized the
crowd had left them all a big surprise.
"We go back to the original police car where that
drug-dealing suspect was, and the back door is open and he's gone,"
Martinez recounts. The neighborhood had taken the suspect back, cuffs
and all. "But I'll take that."
The moral of the story: Arrests in North Camden, the
most stricken part of town, sometimes just don't take. Many cops here
have stories about busts that either didn't happen or almost didn't
happen when the streets made an opposite ruling. "Ninth and Cedar. I
remember chasing a guy a block and a half - he had a Tec-9," says Joe
Wysocki, a quiet, soft-spoken 20-year Camden vet. "Handcuffing him, I
remember looking up and there were, like, 60 people around me. I threw
the guy into the car, jumped in the back seat with him, and [my partner]
took off."
"Telling the prisoner, 'Move over,'" joked another cop in the room.
"Yeah," says Wysocki. "Sometimes you just have to scoop and run."
Nobody in North Camden calls the police. When the
county installed the new "ShotSpotter" technology that pinpoints the
locations of gunshots, they discovered that 30 percent of all shootings
in the city go unreported, many of them from North Camden. "North Camden
would generally like to police itself," says Thomson. "Rather than
getting a call of an adult who had assaulted a child, generally you'll
get a call to send an ambulance and a police officer to the corner of
7th and York because there's a person laying there beaten nearly to
death with chains."
Late October 2013. It's nearly three years after the
layoffs. A trio of squad cars flies through North Camden. Over the
police radio, a voice chimes in from the RTOIC, or Real-Time Tactical
Operational Intelligence Center, a super-high-tech, Star Trek-ish bridge
of giant screen displays back at the metaphorical Green Zone that is
police headquarters. There, a team of police analysts monitors the city
using six different advanced technologies, watching those 121 camera
feeds via 10 42-inch monitors and six different listening stations
tracking cruisers by GPS. Somebody back there apparently spotted a drug
deal through a camera near where this police convoy is cruising.
"Black male, white shirt, bald head," the radio crackles. "White shirt, bald head."
The cars take off like rockets and screech to a halt
at exactly that same spot where John Martinez once almost punched his
ticket, the 400 block of Grant Street. We're right in front of that same
house. The wooden railing through which Martinez crashed backward two
years ago has been replaced by an iron one, and leaning against it is a
similar crowd of angry onlookers, glaring at the cops. Around the
corner, near the house with the new porch railing, a young black dude in
a white shirt stands surrounded by police, trying not to make sudden
moves. About 10 yards off from the "suspect," barking loudly and
standing next to his handler-partner, Sgt. Zack James, is Zero, a black
Czech shepherd police dog. Everything connected with crime in Camden
breaks some kind of record, and Zero is no exception - he's dragged down
65 suspects in foot chases, something only one other canine in
state-police history has done. Zero is friendly enough in nonworking
situations (he even drops to his back and sticks his tongue out to the
command "Cute and cuddly!"), but the department's male cops still cover
their balls reflexively, even from great distances, if they see him
loose in the parking lot.
Sgt. James, a burly officer who lives and works with
Zero full-time, seems like he's ready to do a Lambeau leap in
celebration, if only someone would try to run on his dog and become
number 66. But in this case, they've got the wrong guy. There's a brief
interrogation, the guy walks away slowly, and dog and humans pile back
into their respective cars and screech out at high speeds, disappearing
as quickly as they came.
Any reporter who's been embedded in Iraq or
Afghanistan will find these scenes extremely familiar - high-speed
engagements backed by top-end surveillance technology, watched by crowds
whose reactions range from bemusement to rage to eye-rolling
disappointment. In that latter category is Bryan Morton, a
fortysomething community leader of sorts who still lives in the North
Camden house where he was born. Morton went away in his youth for eight
and a half years for armed robbery and drug dealing, got out, went
straight, got his college degree, worked for years running local
re-entry programs, founded a North Camden Little League, and had things
looking up for himself, before he was laid off last May. Fortunately,
he'd bought a food cart six years before that, which he left in his
backyard as a backup plan; he now drives across town before dawn every
day, setting up next to the McDonald's in Camden's pinhead-size
"downtown."
Handsome, articulate, charming, Morton had just been
robbed the day I met him. The guy he hired to fix up his cart bolted
after the last payment, taking big chunks of his cart's sheet metal with
him. There had also been another murder in North Camden the day before,
a drug killing a few blocks up from Morton's house. Asked how bad
things have been in North Camden since the 2011 layoffs, he laughs
faintly. "Hell, the police gave up on this neighborhood long before
that," he says, hoisting the cart onto his pickup truck's trailer hitch
in the predawn light in front of his house. For years, he says, cops
would drive through his block once every half-hour or so, pretending to
police the place, but they wouldn't stop unless they had to.
"We know you're afraid to get out of the car," he says. "We know that."
North Camden is one of a few neighborhoods in the city
that still feels less policed than occupied. There's even an infamous
brick housing-project tower here called Northgate 1 where the middle
floors carry the nickname "Little Iraq," for the residents' reputation
for being not quite under government control. In fact, when the state
raided the tower to serve warrants a few years back, they were so
concerned with ground-level resistance that they invaded from the sky,
like soldiers in Afghanistan, rappelling onto the roof by helicopter.
The state police believed they'd sent a message, but there are locals
who reacted to the Rambo-commando episode with the same
you've-gotta-be-kidding-me incredulity you see on faces of kids
surrounded by multiple squad cars and millions of dollars in technology,
busted for loitering or a few lids of weed. "They pussies," is how one
Camdenite put it.
Thomson, the city's energetic young police chief - he
carries an uncanny resemblance to Homeland lead actor Damian Lewis - is
trying to provide a counterargument to the alien-occupier vibe. His plan
is to stabilize the city with foot patrols one neighborhood at a time.
On an October afternoon he drives me through Fairview, that
once-dazzling planned city full of brick homes built for New York
Shipbuilding workers nearly a century ago.
A little overgrown still, the place now looks, well,
nice, with few of the rat-infested vacant homes and factories that
dominate much of the rest of the city. Conspicuously, there's no obvious
drug traffic here. "A year ago, this space was controlled by
gangsters," Thomson says proudly. "Now you have kids playing there."
He nods in the direction of a street corner, where a
policeman in a paramilitary-style uniform, all steel-blue with a
baseball-style cap, stands on guard. There's one of these sentries every
few hundred feet, each seemingly within eyesight of the other, each
standing bolt upright and saluting military-style when the chief drives
by. We watch as a few elderly black pedestrians amble by, and if you
listen carefully you can catch the street patrolmen diligently offering
RoboCop-ian greetings to each one as they pass.
The plan is to deploy more and more of these
getting-to-know-you details, moving neighborhood by neighborhood,
working their way up to places like North Camden, where the police will
eventually answer once and for all the question of whether they will lay
it all on the line for America's most unsafe neighborhood.
Thomson is engaging and smart, and has the infectious
enthusiasm of a politician, except that he seems sincere. Driving
through Camden, watching these grim scenes of pseudo-occupation that in
this part of the world count as progress, my overwhelming feeling was a
weird kind of sympathy: None of this shit is on him. In another life,
actually, he and someone like Bryan Morton might have been co-workers,
or political running mates, since both men - the chief with his foot
patrols, Morton with his pan-Camden Little League - say they're working
toward the same thing: trying to create safe places for people to go in a
city that historically isn't terribly safe even across the street from
police headquarters.
But Thomson's optimism is based, again, upon the
assumption that if you create enough safe streets and parks in a place
like Camden, jobs will return, and things will somehow go back to
normal. But what if the jobs stay in China, Mexico, Indonesia? Then the
high-tech security efforts in cities like this start to feel like
something other than securing a few streets for future employers. Then
it's the best security money can buy, but just for security's sake,
turning a scene like Camden into a very expensive, very dark nihilistic
comedy: a perpetual self-occupation. Thomson clearly doesn't believe
this. He has hope - he's as intensely focused on development gains like
the opening of a new $62 million Rutgers-Camden nursing building as he
is about locking people up - but even he at times can't help but sound
like a military commander charged with recapturing alien territory.
"What you lose in one month, it takes five or six
months to get back," he says, referring to the footing the police lost
after the layoffs. "After what we went through, that's five to seven
years we don't have."
Early afternoon, I'm parked near a little stretch of
grass and chain-link in the shadow of the "Little Iraq" Northgate 1
tower. I'm riding with Kevin Lutz, a one-time homicide detective from
the old municipal police days who's just become a sergeant in the new
force. Lutz doesn't have any issues with getting out of any cars. In
fact, he seems to get along with most everyone, even the local crew
chiefs. We passed one earlier, a ripped character with a shaved head and
a bushy Sunni beard who, word is, someone from another block had
incompetently tried to assassinate the day before.
"Hey, what's up?" Lutz asks him. "How's your health?"
"I'm all right, man, I'm all right," the guy says, waving.
Lutz smiles and drives on. "He took one right in the
chest yesterday, center mass," he says. "It was just buckshot, though.
But check him out, walking around the next day, like it's nothing."
Later, we're near the towers. Lutz spots a white girl
sitting on a brick wall ringing the Northgate 1 parking lot, wobbling,
then suddenly falling backward over onto her head. He drives over and
the girl, obviously a junkie, gets up and is walking around,
disoriented. She starts spinning an impossible-to-follow tale about her
friend being attacked in adjacent Northgate Park, a story that within
minutes changes to a new story about that same friend just heading
toward Northgate Park to get some chicken. The constant in the story is
that she needs to get to Northgate Park. There's nowhere to get chicken
in Northgate Park, but you can get all the dope you want.
"Hey, go home," says Lutz. "OK? There's nothing good in that direction. We both know what's going on."
"But I've got to find my friend!" the girl screams.
"Go home," Lutz repeats, driving off.
She starts in the right direction, back toward Philly,
but in the rearview mirror Lutz sees her doing a 180 and heading back
to Northgate. He casually turns around. About 85 percent of the heroin
customers in this city are like this: young, white and from the suburbs.
At all hours of the day, you can see junkies plodding across the Ben
Franklin Bridge, usually carrying a knapsack that contains a set of
works and, very often, a "Homeless and Hungry" sign they've just used to
panhandle in Philly. The ones who don't come on foot come by car, at
all hours of the day, and they come in such huge numbers that police say
they couldn't deal with them all if they had a force of 5,000.
This is another potential hole in the policing plan:
The fact that broken suburbs - full of increasingly un- or underemployed
young people - send a seemingly limitless supply of customers for
Camden's drug trade. The typical profile is a suburban kid who tore an
ACL or got in a car accident back in high school, got an Oxy
prescription, and within a few years ended up here. This city,
incidentally, has a reputation for having the best dope on the East
Coast, which partly explains the daily influx of white junkies ("Dope,"
jokes Morton, "is a Caucasian drug"). In fact, when Camden made the
papers a few years back after a batch of Fentanyl-laced heroin caused a
series of fatalities here, it attracted dope fiends from hundreds of
miles away. "People were like, 'Wow, I've gotta try that,'" says Adrian,
a recovering addict from nearby Logan Township who used to come in from
the suburbs to score every day and is now here to visit a nearby
methadone clinic. "Yeah," says her friend Adam, another suburban white
methadone commuter. "If someone dies at a dope set, that's where you
want to get your dope."
While I was talking to Adam and Adrian in the city's
lone McDonald's, an ambulance showed up - somebody OD'd in the parking
lot. Adrian craned her head and nodded, watching the paramedics. She
says she and Adam often sit at the city transportation center in the
mornings and watch the steady flow of fights and drug-induced seizures.
"The thing about Camden is, when you come back here,
you can always say, 'At least my life is better than what I thought,'"
says Adrian. Two minutes later, she's in full McNod, head all the way
back, eyes completely closed, zoned out from a methadone dose she got at
a nearby clinic.
A decade or so ago, you wouldn't have seen white
people just hanging out in downtown Camden. Now they're here by the
hundreds every day. "There wasn't no white people up in this
motherfucker," says Raymond, the self-described gangster who was shot
six times. Now, he says, the city is full of white kids on dope. "The
last few years, it's like an epidemic surge," he says.
That's the crazy thing about this city. The Camden
story was originally a controversial political effort to isolate urban
crime and slash municipal spending by moving political power out of
dying nonwhite cities. And they do it, this radical restructuring backed
by the best in Baghdad-style security technology, and for a second or
two it looks like it's working - only the whole thing might be rendered
moot in the end by the collapse of the rest of America. All over the
country, we've been so busy arguing over who's productive and who isn't
that we might not be noticing that the whole ship is going down. There's
no lesson in any of it, just a giant mess that still isn't cleaned up.
Back in Northgate with Sgt. Lutz, we've circled around now, and Lutz shouts at the girl, who's made it all the way to the park.
"Hey, I told you to go home!" he shouts.
"But I need to get some fucking chicken!" she shouts back.
Lutz laughs, shakes his head, drives off, nodding toward Northgate Park.
"Best chicken in Camden," he says.
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