Officers fight rising crime near Haven For Hope, west side

Reported by: Emily Baucum
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Updated: 11/04/2012 4:30 pm
SAN ANTONIO – People on the west side have told San Antonio’s police chief crime is up, and they blame the new neighbors at Haven For Hope.

The shelter helps families every day. Officers describe most of the residents as people who have fallen on hard times and need some help to turn things around.

News 4 WOAI spent the day with officers who describe the problem in terms of location. They say in the days of the old SAMM Shelter, the homeless congregated under a bridge so the problem was contained.

Now, at no fault of Haven For Hope, officers say once people leave the shelter, there’s just no where to go but the west side neighborhoods.

Meanwhile, officers have to toe the line between the rights of the neighborhood and the homeless.

"How are you doing,” Officer James Shirley asks a homeless man.

The 18-year veteran of SAPD is on a first-name basis with many of San Antonio’s homeless.

"We deal with the same ones day after day after day,” Officer Shirley says. "This is something I do every day when I first get in. My job is to run them off."

He’s a SAFFE officer so instead of responding to calls, he’s usually trying to keep them from happening.

"We have the time to go out there and take care of problems,” Officer Shirley says.

And a big problem is hiding in plain sight: homelessness. It’s always been an issue downtown, but neighbors of Haven For Hope say it’s only gotten worse since the shelter moved to the western edge of the city’s center.

Officer Shirley says it’s not that simple.

"They say it's the Haven's fault. It's the SAMM's fault,” Officer Shirley says. “The people that are inside that shelter that are trying to get the help, we have families in there. Mom and dad, for whatever reason, lost their homes and things. You don't hear from those people."

Instead, he says the problems stem from a small group of people that go to Haven for the free food and clothes but don’t want to play by the rules.

"You can see they have their beer bottles beside them right there,” Officer Shirley says while driving past a bike patrol officer issuing tickets to several people drinking in public.

The area around Haven has plenty of signs that make it clear: no stopping, no standing.

"These bridges make really good hiding places,” Officer Shirley says while driving underneath the I-10/I-35 interchange.

He took News 4 into the bushes between the lanes of I-10.

"Let's see what they have in here,” Officer Shirley says while pulling aside branches.

We found cardboard beds and liquor bottles – instead of tent cities, bush cities, where life zips by at 60 miles an hour.

"This house we're going to right now has been used for years for prostitution and drugs,” Officer Shirley says.

We found a squatter’s den on Santiago Street. The smell of feces and urine permeated the air.

"They take all the copper wiring out as soon as they find a vacant house so they can sell the copper wire,” Officer Shirley says about the dilapidated home.

He says when neighbors complain about Haven For Hope and crime, this house is an example of why they’re upset.

"On the floor right there, the condoms,” Officer Shirley says. "They use this [soda can] to cook heroin in. This is part of a syringe."

There’s nothing left to salvage so the city knocked it down Friday morning.

"There's a lot of times we're doing this and the citizens actually come out and say thank you,” Officer Shirley says as a crew demolishes the structure.

The process took just ten minutes. Officers say they get some satisfaction from seeing it demolished, but there’s always going to be another one.

“They find somewhere else to go,” Officer Shirley says.

But he says at least one block gets some peace from the intersection of a life of crime and a life spent on the streets.
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The views expressed here do not necessarily represent those of News 4 WOAI (WOAI.com)

trutex - 11/4/2012 8:16 AM
0 Votes
Those who are down on their luck and need a helping hand to get back on their feet are not the ones causing the problems. It is the vagrants who have no desire or intention of every doing anything other than being a bum who cause the problems. And yet they are all lumped into the same category of 'homeless'. If I were ever one of the former I would be pissed off to no end about being grouped in with the latter.

tecolote - 11/3/2012 10:14 AM
3 Votes
The neighbors of the Haven for Hope site were worried about this crime before construction of the facility began. They were very unhappy and felt that the deal had been struck without their input--but that they would have to live with the consequences. Perhaps the rich philanthropists that thought this was a good idea should take a turn patrolling these neighborhoods to protect the residents from their generosity...or pay for more city police for foot patrols.

mountain mike - 11/3/2012 10:11 AM
2 Votes
carmen....well said! your my hero !

Pastor Bob - 11/2/2012 9:51 PM
7 Votes
The city isn't going to solve anything by getting these heathens together and feeding and watering them. Well, I guess they don't drink any water, but that is beside the point. They eat up all the free food and then steal anything that isn't tied down to use for dope and whiskey. The city needs to stop giving them free food and get them some Jesus. They only way they are going to stop defiling the city is to stop their sinning. Feeding them only makes it worse. They ought to put chains and strong locks on the doors of the evil place. They already have a fence around it and it would make a fine jail. Once they lock all those wretches up, it would be OK to go on and feed them until they can be deported to Louisiana or some place like that. Any that accept Jesus could go ahead and stay, but, having accepted Jesus, they wouldn't want to hang around with drunks and fornicators stealing things and leaving turds laying around, so they would not be a problem.

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