Guardian Angels Visit River Bend To Promote Vigilante Justice, Despite Wishes Of Neighborhood, Police
An article on the Des Moines Register website outlined a visit this weekend by Guardian Angels founder Curtis Sliwa. Silwa formed the nonprofit Guardian Angels in 1979 to help safeguard New York City’s streets and subways.
During this weekend’s visit to Iowa, he announced that his organization has been approached about organizing patrols of trained volunteers through Des Moines’ River Bend neighborhood.
A band of Guardian Angels spent Saturday handing out fliers north of downtown Des Moines and urging people to visit www.guardianangels.org for more information.
“We’ve got a lot of educating to do, but I think we can help this community,” Sliwa said. “I think people want to improve, not move.”
According to the Register, River Bend, the city’s 28th-largest neighborhood, ranked fifth in June for most offenses reported to police. Sliwa’s news conference Saturday took place near the block where 35-year-old Michael Collins of suburban Ankeny was shot and killed last month, reportedly while trying to purchase crack cocaine.
Unlike typical neighborhood watch programs, Guardian Angels volunteers are taught to break up confrontations and detain bad guys if necessary.
“We get physical,” Sliwa said. “That’s the difference.”
Such involvement in crimefighting is not always welcome by police. Sliwa said Des Moines authorities have told him that the Guardian Angels are welcome if that’s what the neighborhood wants.
Officially, it probably isn’t, said Roger Thompson, a board member of the River Bend Neighborhood Association. Neighborhood leaders would prefer to give Des Moines police more time to deal with the crime problems. A new ordinance allowing city leaders to crack down on crime-ridden rental properties is expected to kick in next month.
“I really don’t believe there’s enough of a problem to justify” a group like the Guardian Angels, Thompson said. “I really don’t believe it will go anywhere.”
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