| > And this was in Seattle, where cops are reputedly much gentler than many other places. SPD are not gentler than many other places. They've been absolutely blasted for police brutality in a 2011 DOJ investigation. [1] Now, to SPD's credit, it has been taking steps to improve since then. [2] What you can count on, though, is them usually ignoring homelessness - if nobody complains. There's just too many homeless people in Seattle for them to do anything proactive about it. If somebody does, and it's a slow day, the homeless person in question will get ran off by them. Law enforcement against the homeless is incredibly selective, which is one of the reasons why being homeless is so hard - you always live in fear of being the target of essentially random violence. You never know if you're actually going to get 8 hours of sleep, or if you're going to be kicked (Or shouted) awake half-way through it. [1] https://www.seattlepi.com/local/article/Feds-findings-in-Sea... [2] https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/crime/in-major-ste... |
Two years ago there was a homeless woman in my neighborhood who began screaming in the middle of the night as though she were being murdered. I called 911, obviously. An hour later she was still screaming and there were no police in sight. The next night she was still screaming. A week later she was still screaming. Thankfully she wasn't being murdered, not that the police would know, because they never came.
Incidentally this experience gave me a new perspective on the bystander effect. After I stopped calling 911 because it was accomplishing nothing, what if one night she really was being murdered? But what is somebody meant to do, call 911 every night until they stop taking your calls?