Stop Snitching Fears
April 11th, 2007In study, teens open up about ’snitching,’ fear of reprisal
One teenager described seeing a witness pistol-whipped for reporting a rape to police. “His eyes were completely red; you couldn’t see any white,” the unidentified youth said in an interview with researchers for a study on witness intimidation released yesterday. “They threatened to kill him and his family.”
Another said: “I’d get in trouble if I reported a violent crime. Gangs would be mad at me.”
A third teenager recalled deciding not to talk to police after witnessing a shootout.
“If I told them, the drug dealers would come back to me and make more trouble,” the teenager said. “I told my mom, and she was scared. She went back to the drug dealers and told them that I didn’t say nothing.”
Teens interviewed at Boys and Girls Clubs across Massachusetts told researchers they are afraid to cooperate with police against gang members, citing widespread violence and the power that gang members have in their neighborhoods.
The interviews were conducted for the study “Snitches Get Stitches: Youth, Gangs, and Witness Intimidation in Massachusetts,” sponsored by the state Executive Office of Public Safety and the National Center for Victims of Crime, a nonprofit advocacy group based in Washington, D.C.
Twenty-five percent of survey participants said that none of their neighbors would report a gang-related crime, with 64 percent saying that people don’t report such crimes because they are afraid of being beaten up or killed.
“Witness intimidation remains a significant problem that seriously undermines the effectiveness of the criminal justice system,” the report says.
Mary Lou Leary, a former Middlesex prosecutor and executive director of the National Center for Victims of Crime, said her organization chose to profile Massachusetts because the state made significant inroads against gun violence and witness intimidation in the 1990s and is experiencing a resurgence of both problems now.
Researchers suggested that officials provide anonymity to witnesses whenever possible, reach out to parents, and keep in touch with witnesses throughout the legal process.
Leary said legislation passed last year to establish a state witness protection program puts Massachusetts far ahead of much of the country when it comes to protecting witnesses at the local level.
Despite the state’s leadership on public safety issues, Leary said she was startled by the high percentage of young people at the Boys and Girls Clubs who had experienced gun violence. Seven percent reported being the victim of a shooting, 20 percent reported witnessing a shooting, and 18 percent reported a family member or friend being shot at.
“When you live in those high-crime communities, even if you are not involved in gang activity, you’re exposed to it all the time,” Leary said.
Youths participating in the study agreed, telling researchers they resent the gangs’ power.
“You can’t walk through a street without looking back,” one said. “They just think everything is theirs. They want to be the president of the block.”
Another youth said gang members sometimes say they are protecting the neighborhood. “But they’re not keeping us safe, because a bullet [doesn’t] have a name on it; it can hit anybody,” the youth said.
Researchers interviewed 39 young people ranging from 13 to 21 at seven participating Boys and Girls Clubs across the state, from Roxbury to Springfield, and collected anonymous surveys from 641 young people, most between 12 and 18, who frequent the Boys and Girls Clubs.
While 38 percent reported hearing of a threat against a schoolmate related to reporting gang crimes, only 12 percent of youths who had personally reported a crime said they had been threatened.
And young people said schools offer no relief from their fear.
Many gang members attended his school, attracting rival gangs to campus, one youth said. “We’d have lock-downs; we’d have police, metal detectors. People came from other schools to fight people at my school. It felt like a prison.”
Another said: “The kids are out of control. The students don’t only fight students, they fight teachers, too.”
Boston Police Commissioner Edward F. Davis downplayed some of the report’s findings in an interview yesterday, saying that witness intimidation is more perception than reality. “The fear is much more widespread than the actual incidents,” he said.
Community leaders disagreed. “We find it very difficult to get young people to testify, even when they’re the victims of the crime, not just witnesses,” said Emmett Folgert, director of the Dorchester Youth Collaborative. “If they’re a victim of a gang crime, they usually are directly intimidated.”
District Attorney Daniel F. Conley said 90 percent of the gun and gang cases his office handles feature some form of witness intimidation.
“We do have many potential witnesses or witnesses who do come forward who have been overtly threatened or have been actually assaulted,” Conley said.
At least 42 families or individuals statewide have been relocated under the witness protection program, and about 35 of those lived in Suffolk County, according to Conley’s office.
Conley said many youths complain about overly aggressive police officers, which he said intensifies youths’ reluctance to cooperate with law enforcement.
Many youths interviewed for the study said they have tense relations with police. Some said they rarely see police in their neighborhood and others said they only see them driving by in cruisers.
“They are jerks,” one youth said. “They abuse their authority . . . giving people dirty looks, going about everything the wrong way.”
Davis said that he expects officers to treat everyone well and that most officers are friendly and respectful.
Suzanne Smalley can be reached at ssmalley@globe.com.

