In many homicide investigations, there is specific talk to others on social media on different platforms about violence, he said. “As if it’s like a trophy I am holding up, and it’s all bad things.”
Police Commissioner Danielle Outlaw added that the youth who are involved in shootings are getting younger and younger.
“These kids are looking for a sense of belonging, and we have to just find ways and outlets [for them],” she said. Outlaw spoke about doing “dumb stuff” during her youth but added that children today have “instruments of harm” and the tools and equipment to commit serious violent acts.
Erica Atwood, senior director of the Office of Policy and Strategic Initiatives for Criminal Justice and Public Safety, said they are moving teams of people back into neighborhoods to work on the violence issue now that COVID-19 numbers are trending down. Atwood spoke about the need to “be together and see each other, to get to know each other and to hear from one another as a part of this return to in-person events.”
Atwood said one such event is an expungement and pardon clinic with Philadelphia Lawyers for Social Equity, a place Philadelphians who have a criminal record despite being found not guilty in a case can clear their name. The clinic will be Saturday from 12-2 p.m. at the Lenfest Center at 3890 North 10th Street.
Atwood also pointed to continuation of the office’s community listening tour, which is designed to hear feedback and help steer the city’s gun violence prevention strategies.