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By Bill Forry
Managing Editor
Several veteran Boston crime fighters are among
the nucleus of a newly formed branch of a
Washington, D.C. non-profit organization which
hopes to enlist Congress in a renewed war on gun
violence in America. The New England chapter of
Reaching Out to Others Together (ROOT) was unveiled
at a press conference on Tuesday morning at the
Columbia Road headquarters of the Massachusetts
Association of Minority Law Enforcement Officers
(MAMLEO).
The Boston chapter of ROOT is led by former
Boston Police Superintendent William "Billy"
Celester, who pledged Tuesday that the Boston board
would seek to bring other anti-violence
organizations together and galvanize Boston area
support for ROOT's national efforts. Other people
who have joined the board of directors for the
local chapter include Nation of Islam Minister Don
Muhammad, former state Senator Bill Owens, and
James Dilday, the past president of the New England
Bar Association.
Kenneth E. Barnes, who started the Washington
D.C.-based organization after his own son was
gunned down in the in 2001, was on hand for the
announcement. The organization's chief mission
presently is to advocate for legislation - dubbed
the Community in Action Self-Help Initiative of
2008 - which Barnes said will be filed later this
month by Maryland Congressman Albert Wynn. The
legislation, Barnes said, would pump new monies
into anti-violence programs in American cities.
"We have an epidemic in America today. And that
epidemic is death by gun violence. It is the number
one killer of African American males in America
today. It is the number two killer of young people
in America today. And even when somebody isn't
killed, because only five percent of actual
incidents of gun violence end up in a homicide, the
95 percent that don't cause an average of $150,000
for every individual to be treated," Barnes said.
"The costs are staggering and enormous. For every
victim like myself who's lost a son to violence,
there's a ripple effect that takes place."
Barnes said that he and others across the United
States still regard Boston's dramatic crime
reductions of the 1990s - dubbed the "Boston
Miracle" by some - as a model that can be
replicated here and in other U.S. cities.
Leonard Lee, the former executive director of
the ABCD's Dorchester Neighborhood Service Center,
is among the local activists who have been drawn to
the new ROOT chapter. Lee's own nephew, Warren
Daniel Hairston, was found murdered last January on
Dewey St. in a case that remains unsolved.
"I've been a community activist all my life. I
buried about 34 kids in about three-and-a-half
years that came through my program. One day last
year I got a call about 12 o'clock at night. My
nephew was found murdered with a bullet in his
head," said Lee.
"When I heard about the initiatives of ROOT, it
talks about real work, not about agendas," said
Lee.
Celester, 65, is a former Boston Police official
who headed Newark, New Jersey's police force until
he was jailed after a corruption scandal rocked
that city in the late 1990s. More recently,
Celester lost a campaign held in 2006 to replace
longtime lawmaker Shirley Owens-Hicks in the Sixth
Suffolk district.
On Tuesday, Celester volunteered that it was no
accident that all of the New England ROOT board
members, so far, are men.
"You're going to see a lot of women part of
ROOT, but the men have to stand up," Celester said
during remarks at the press conference. "And the
men have to lead the way. I'm so sick of seeing our
women lead the way. The men have to lead the way
and this is the beginning of it."
Celester said that young people- another
demographic not represented at Tuesday's press
conference - would also be recruited to help the
organization engage at-risk youth. He described the
older men who make up the core of the emerging
Boston chapter as "pioneers and architects" of
Boston's successful crime strategies of earlier
eras.
"I look at TV every day and I see the mayor
trying to do the best he can, different community
groups trying to do the best they can," Celester
said. "But I see splintering. I see everybody with
their own agenda. One thing ROOT is going to do in
Boston is try to bring those people together as one
voice and look at the programs that have worked,
not the programs that have failed."
Asked if he was worried about duplicating the
work of existing organizations, Celester said he
felt that there could "never be too many" groups
attempting to confront urban violence.
"I think each organization is unique. We have to
set aside some of the groups that their programs
have not worked and get them involved in programs
that are working.
"We cannot just say it's a religious issue and
just talk to the ministers," Celester told the
Reporter. "The Boston Miracle was possible because
you had everybody involved, not just ministers. And
this is not casting aspersions on ministers, but I
think everybody has to come to the table
together."
The New England chapter of the organization,
Celester said, would be based from a second-floor
office inside MAMLEO's headquarters at 61 Columbia
Road.
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