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BROOKLYN WEEKLY, JUNE 21, 2020
Calling in the cavalry
BY JESSICA PARKS
Citing an uptick in crime,
hundreds of Mill Basin families
are pledging their support
to a proposed private
security patrol for the southern
Brooklyn peninsula —
and they feel so strongly that
they’re planning to cover the
cost themselves.
“The program is needed
because over the past fi ve
or six years there has been
a dramatic uptick in vehicle
break-ins and drug dealing
on many, many blocks
in our community and we
want this to stop,” said Bradley
Reisman, organizer of
the newly-formed group My
Mill Basin.
Reisman and a small
group of neighbors resurrected
the idea for a security
patrol — which Mill Basin
residents have previously
called for — on Sunday and,
just two days later, a whopping
300 families had committed
to paying the estimated
dues required to fund
the effort.
“Our group was started
48 hours ago,” Reisman said
on June 9. “We as a community
realize that if we want
our neighborhood to return
to the peaceful existence,
which we realize how much
we treasured, then we need
to do this ourselves and not
rely on someone else.”
Organizers allege a spike
in crime over the last fi ve to
six years and claim a private
patrol would be able to pay
more individualized attention
to the Mill Basin peninsula
than the 63rd Precinct
has the ability to, said Reisman.
“The police can’t be everywhere
and we don’t expect
them to be,” he said.
“They have their hands
full and it is simply impossible
for them to keep their
marked and NYPD vehicles
staffed in our neighborhood
just for the sake of observing.”
Overall, petit larcenies
in Brooklyn’s 63rd Precinct
— which patrols the
peninsula, as well as Marine
Park, Bergen Beach,
Flatlands and Georgetown
— are down, according to
city crime stats, but residents
stand by that crime
in Mill Basin is on the rise
and Reisman suspects that,
with added security in Mill
Basin, cops will have more
success in nabbing carjackers,
who are often long gone
by the time an offi cer gets to
the scene.
“Naturally, when someone
is observed trying to
gain access to a vehicle or
residence, the police are notifi
ed but in most cases, if
not all, the perpetrator has
long since disappeared before
the offi cers show up,”
Reisman said. “Because
of this, we would like our
neighborhood to have a
quicker response, a more
neighborhood-dedicated
safety layer.”
Reisman aims to attract
1,200 Mill Basin families
before moving forward with
the program. At the target
level of membership, he estimates
the service would
cost each family close to
$500 a year to cover the approximate
$750,000 annual
cost of three patrol cars.
The group has even enlisted
the support of local
religious establishments,
according to Reisman, but
neighborhood offi cials are
not as optimistic that the
plan will pan out.
“The Mill Island, Bergen
Beach and Georgetown
Civic Associations had
very successful security
patrol many years ago at a
fraction of the cost per family,”
said Dorothy Turano,
district manager of Community
Board 18.
The patrols, she said, fi zzled
out after locals lost enthusiasm
and began falling
behind on dues.
Area Councilman Alan
Maisel expressed doubt that
many families would agree
to additional costs.
“Times are especially
diffi cult for a lot of people
having who don’t see income
coming in,” Maisel
said. “So I am not too sure
how many are going to actually
subscribe to this.”
Turano is also skeptical
of the group’s infancy, and
called the politically charged
fl yer fl oating around “questionable.”
The fl yer, which lays
out the logistics of the proposal,
takes a jab at the peninsula’s
politicians, including
State Senator Roxanne
Persaud, specifi cally, for
not working towards lowering
the presumed spike in
crime.
Persaud’s offi ce did not
respond to a request for
comment.
Mill Basin residents push for private security patrol
Mill Basin residents are revisiting an old push for private security
in the neighborhood. Pexels