Hey, there! Log in / Register

Police: Armed Jamaica Pond muggers held up six people in two incidents last Wednesday; tied one to a tree

Boston Police report a total of six people were held up on the night of Sept. 24 around Jamaica Pond by two men, one armed with a gun, the other with a knife.

According to police, the men are black, Hispanic and in their early 20s.

Police said that around 11 p.m. on Wednesday, two people entered the E-13 station to report that they and three of their friends had just been mugged on the footpath that goes around Jamaica Pond:

One of the suspects displayed a black firearm while the second suspect had a knife. One of the suspects then placed his hand on the victim’s shoulder and demanded the victim’s possessions. The suspects then searched both of the victims for additional possessions. The suspects then fled the area on foot.

About 30 minutes later, police say, the two went after a man walking with his bicycle on the footpath near Pond Street:

One of the suspects displayed a black firearm while the second suspect had a knife. The suspects then forced the victim toward a wooded area and robbed him of his possessions. The two males fled the area on foot and left the victim bound to a tree.

Neighborhoods: 
Topics: 
Free tagging: 


Ad:


Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!

Comments

Just great. I guess I'll be bringing a gun when I visit JP from now on.

up
Voting closed 0

Weapons: If there's a reasonable chance that a given targeted, law-abiding citizen is carrying one, such perps would think twice about such attacks.

But in greater Jamaica Plain and for miles and miles around, such perps have no such fear. And so they go about their business largely unimpeded.

Massachusetts--underestimating the concept of deterrence...forever.

up
Voting closed 0

But I don't think we will solve these kinds of problems by making sure everybody has an efficient method for killing people.

up
Voting closed 0

You don't? Well, then, perhaps you should re-read nira's last sentence.

up
Voting closed 0

Street crime is virtually unheard of in places like Florida and Texas.

up
Voting closed 0

maybe then we can all just shoot-to-kill any time we think we feel a tad threatened, or a little cranky.

up
Voting closed 0

What's the difference between that and those useless bottomfeeders that use the same weapon for their motives?

up
Voting closed 0

Maybe you can't trust yourself not to discharge a weapon at someone you have a minor spat with, but I guess thats more of a reflection on you.

I don't think having a bag tied to your head and left secured to a tree overnight is a case of being "a tad threatened" or "cranky".

I do not own a gun, and I don't want to own a gun. Though I can guarantee I would not be happy at that moment in time that I chose to stick to my beliefs rather than being able to defend myself.

up
Voting closed 0

Hey, it's worked so well in Florida to contain crime.

Right?

Right?

up
Voting closed 0

Since X did not work in a given unique circumstance

Then X shall not work in all other unique instances going forward

up
Voting closed 0

For many citizens, anonamonster, it's just a matter of time until that happens. They, too, will feel not so happy.

Law-abiding people in this part of the country does not wish to deal with guns even as a means of deterrence and, if necessary, self-defense. Instead, they focus strictly on them as "killing machines" or something.

Quite naive and unthinking, if you ask me.

up
Voting closed 0

Nope - try informed.

A gun owned for "personal defense" is vastly more likely to be used against you, or result in an serious injury or fatal accident than it is to be used in self-defense.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9715182
http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/hicrc/firearms-research/gun-threats-and-self...

Those aren't good odds. Sorry.

up
Voting closed 0

I'd be interested in knowing if the sample contained only instances of legal and/or illegal gun owners?

Maybe it makes that distinguishment and I didn't see it.

Though I'd be willing to bet most of the times guns are used, it is by illegal gun owners.

The pandoras box is already open, you cant close your eyes and wish guns away. If it was that easy I'd already done so.

Do you feel police militirization is a good reason for an armed populace? Not being snarky here.

up
Voting closed 0

.

up
Voting closed 0

Their crime rate was much higher per capita until the laws were relaxed.

up
Voting closed 0

And yet we've relaxed nothing. You might want to investigate why crime in general has declined since the 1980s.

up
Voting closed 0

Violent crime in MA is up overall compared to bordering states. Boston's decline has a lot to do with gentrification.

up
Voting closed 0

I know you're just a silly troll BSer, but it's so easy to go to the DoJ's Uniform Crime Reporting Statistics site and confirm it.

Here's a relevent excerpt from a generated table for violent crime rate in the New England states since 2000. The columns represent the year, total population, and total violent crime rate per 100k.

You can see that MA's rate is higher (and has been since the 60s - long before modern differences in gun control laws). We're a much larger state than the others (pop wise) and much more urban.

But in terms of the reduction in the violent crime rate, MA has been trending down for quite a while now. The rate peaked here in '93 (804.9), and has gone down by nearly 50% since then.


YEAR    MA      CT      ME      NH      VT
2000   476.1   324.7   109.6   175.4   113.5
2001   477.8   334.6   111.7   170.2   105.1
2002   484.9   312.5   107.8   161.3   106.7
2003   473.1   316.8   108.6   150.3   114.2
2004   460.2   289.0   103.7   169.5   114.8
2005   461.0   273.0   112.0   135.0   126.0
2006   500.5   299.7   116.0   138.8   145.1
2007   441.7   301.1   118.8   144.1   129.1
2008   463.8   306.7   119.4   156.1   137.5
2009   462.6   300.9   119.9   160.4   134.6
2010   468.9   282.0   122.1   167.4   131.0
2011   427.3   275.7   123.3   217.3   147.6
2012   405.5   283.0   122.7   187.9   142.6

up
Voting closed 0

replace "violence crime" with "homicide" and you get a different picture

everyone with a brain knows violent crime has nothing to do with guns and everything to do with demographics (but we aren't allow to talk about that)

up
Voting closed 0

Some (almost always anonymous) yahoo trots out this baloney once or twice a year around here - and it keeps getting debunked.

Here's the MA rate (per 100k) for Murder and Non-negligent Homicide in MA since 1974. Since the absolute numbers of these events are small, there's a fair amount of year-to-year variance. But the overall 40-year trend is easy to see - and it is down.

1974 4.4     1987 3.0     2000 2.0
1975 4.2     1988 3.5     2001 2.2
1976 3.3     1989 4.3     2002 2.7
1977 3.1     1990 4.0     2003 2.2
1978 3.7     1991 4.2     2004 2.7
1979 3.7     1992 3.6     2005 2.8
1980 4.1     1993 3.9     2006 2.9
1981 3.6     1994 3.5     2007 2.9
1982 3.8     1995 3.6     2008 2.6
1983 3.5     1996 2.6     2009 2.6
1984 3.6     1997 1.9     2010 3.3
1985 3.5     1998 2.0     2011 2.8
1986 3.6     1999 2.0     2012 1.8

Here's a quicky graph with simple linear interpolation for the trendline:

IMAGE(http://i58.tinypic.com/2d7ixvm.jpg)

(Oh, and btw - sorry to burst your persecution-complex but we're allowed to talk about pretty much anything relevant here - however, dog-whistle BS like yours will tend to get called out. So sorry.)

up
Voting closed 0

Oddly the trend has been trending up the past decade with only last year being the outlier downward.

Anyone check to see if the FBI stats differ from the DoJ stats for the state?

up
Voting closed 0

How about we start in 1998 with Mass's last big round of gun control?

up
Voting closed 0

You do realize we have superior trauma treatment vs the 70s, 80s, 90s, even just 10 years ago?
People who died from gunshot wounds, stabbings, etc. in the past would have had a better chance to live another day, and do, in the second decade of the 21st century.

A better overall barometer would be violent crime rate, serious assaults,etc., not just the homicide rate. The homicide rate is however probably the most honest and least manipulated crime rate, you either died or didn't; most other crime stats can and are manipulated in a variety of ways.

up
Voting closed 0

actually no...adam censors things he doesn't agree with....fairly cowardly move (and typical of pseudo intellectual "progressives")

up
Voting closed 0

Damn right. Here's how to combat my evil ways: Go set up your own site and you can rail around the clock about all those horrible minorities and evil libruls that are keepin' you down. And I won't be able to stop you!

up
Voting closed 0

Own a few, like to shoot a lot too.

On this board I've been called in idiot, been virtual bitch slapped by Swirly, had a few words with John Costello, had some disagreements with Anonymous. This is all after posting my very unpopular views (I know I've got some weird ones and own them).

You know what else? I've NEVER been censored by Adam.

up
Voting closed 0

Adam has posted alot of the crap I spew when I'm having a bad day (which I'm positive he doesn't agree with) - though he usually gives a sound, deserved thrashing after the fact.

up
Voting closed 0

Street crime is virtually unheard of in places like Florida and Texas.

so are sidewalks

up
Voting closed 0

You mean street crime in gated communities where everyone drives. There are no people on the streets there! Street crime in the inner cities of Texas and Florida is just as high as here, perhaps higher. Guns are NOT a deterrent to murder or robbery. This country, one of the most armed in the world, has much higher violent crime rates than less armed countries in the world. The difference is ADEQUATE policing and strong gun control. This country's Liberals fight surveillance cameras stupidly on the basis of privacy rights, for example. Conservatives support a gun industry that makes the illegal firearms which often fall into criminal hands due to poor gun control. There are no simple answers, but reversion to the Wild West won't make this a safer society for anyone.

up
Voting closed 0

Yeah, because things like this never happen in other parts of the city.

up
Voting closed 0

Now would be a good time to bring back the BPD mounted unit which used to patrol these paths.

up
Voting closed 0

Give it up.

up
Voting closed 0

you could use some street smarts and stay off poorly lit, low-traffic paths after dark unless it's 100% absolutely necessary for you to be there.

Jamacia Pond is a park. Nothing good happens in parks after dark.

up
Voting closed 0

When this kind of thing happens in a park I always look to see what time it was. Most, if not all, of the attacks on the esplanade, for example, happen late at night. The people who are attacked are usually alone. Why would anyone expect mounted cops out there that late? Why would anyone walk there that late? Not that we should let our parks be unsafe at night, but it's just common sense to avoid, no?

up
Voting closed 0

Neither of these attacks were against a single person. If I was with three other people, I certainly wouldn't expect to get robbed in JP.

I'm also surprised there are enough people at the pond at night to make it worth lying in wait to rob people. It seems like hanging out near an orange line stop would be a higher percentage move by the muggers.

up
Voting closed 0

The fewer people go out at night the more criminals are emboldened due to a lack of witnesses or potential intervention. Having MORE people out and about at night is SAFER.

up
Voting closed 0

I understand that and agree.

I'm just surprised that someone who wanted to commit a robbery thought the somewhat well lit Pond St. part of the Pond was a good place to go. They were right apparently. Unless the pond is a favorite hangout for the criminally minded, it seems kind of like a random choice.

up
Voting closed 0

It's hard to predict this stuff of course but there's a lot of foot traffic around the orange line stops, whereas the Pond gets pretty quiet after a certain hour. You have traffic racing by on the Jway but no one nearby to hear you scream, and a lot of easy ways for the perps to disappear quickly if someone does intervene. Scary.

up
Voting closed 0

Why would't you expect ot be robbed in JP? Because JP is some sort of cool we don't get robbed because we wear skinny jeans mecca now? Robberies happened in the 70's, 80's, 90's, 00's and now. You live in the city and all you can get robbed anywhere at anytime in the city or the burbs. Does it suck? Yes. Is it a fact of life? Yes. Would a patrol or two arond the Pond and other parks like it at night be helpful? Yes. WIll it happen? Probably not.

What is even more concerning is the fact that my mom had to hear about it from an email sent around by neighbors and not anything on the news, or a robo call from local police. They have been calling the police & now mayors office to find out why no one in the area knew about it and what they can do to help (both police and neigborhood).

up
Voting closed 0

http://spotcrime.com/ma/boston

JP is a low crime part of the city. Getting mugged by the pond isn't completely shocking but yes, I would much less expect to get robbed JP than in downtown, or the South End or Southie or Roxbury.

I totally expect to eventually get my house burgled in Roslindale but not to get mugged in Roslindale.

up
Voting closed 0

There were several muggings at the Rozzie Sq commuter stop earlier this year. It happens. A few years ago in JP ppl were trying ot rob houses in the same area in JP.

up
Voting closed 0

I wouldn't go by that website. JP is not a low-crime area. It's *lower* than some areas, but it's not as safe as people like to pretend it is. We just don't want to freak out all the people who've moved over from Brookline.

up
Voting closed 0

I know right! Cower in fear inside and let the thugs own the night. What is this the 1970s?

up
Voting closed 0

We should institute a curfew too.

up
Voting closed 0

"Jamacia Pond is a park. Nothing good happens in parks after dark."

One time I went for a midnight stroll around the pond with a lady friend. I got an HJ in the adjacent field. That wasn't just good, it was GREAT.

up
Voting closed 0

Do we know if they sent a car to the Pond after the first mugging?

up
Voting closed 0

Easy there, you want the BPD to actually work? They only respond to muggings if the victim is politically connected.

And by respond, I mean hold community meetings about how people need to be more careful, not do any actual investigations.

up
Voting closed 0

last Wednesday. Seems as though people should have been told about the incidents last week. A lot of people walk that route.

up
Voting closed 0

Someone sent an alert to neighbors via nextdoor.com with the added details that the person tied to the tree had a bag put on his head and was also forced to divulge laptop and phone passwords before they left. That little detail got me -- it's way beyond what the usual grab-and-run thieves do. Scary.

up
Voting closed 0

Yea, hence my comment about the gun. If you try to rob me while I am armed I will run away crying like a little girl after dropping my wallet on the ground in front of you. If you try to take me into the woods and tie me to a tree while I am armed, one of us will be leaving in the back of an ambulance.

up
Voting closed 0

hey Rambo, stop it with the 'little girl' derogatory comments -- it just makes you sound like an ass

up
Voting closed 0

An armed citizen makes a comment about knowing when to simply hand their wallet over to a mugger and both live to see another day, and when to actually make a stand to defend their lives using their weapon....and this is what you got from their comment.

Yes, very Rambo'esque. The similarities are striking /sarcasm

At least you'll be please to know girls everywhere from the ages of 3-8 are applauding your efforts not to have their good name sullied.

up
Voting closed 0

throws a ball like a girl
fights like a girl
runs like a girl

Sick and tired of 'like a girl' being an accepted put-down. Make your point without putting others down -- is that too difficult for you?

up
Voting closed 0

When I was a little girl I used to beat the shit out of weenies like you when they tried to push me around. Funny how they would cry foul afterward.

Let me guess, you're that "tough guy" who never leaves his "castle" for dread fear of statistically improbably events that will "absolutely happen" if he does.

up
Voting closed 0

You're carrying. You are stopped by these guys, who demand your possessions. You throw your wallet on the ground. Ok so far, I guess (although I'm not sure that I believe that anyone who is armed is going to do that, particularly if one of the assailants produces a gun).

Then you seem to suggest that you are going to somehow draw your weapon when these guys are taking you into the woods (and after they have already searched you for other stuff, as the original post says happened)?

Given this chain of events, I don't really understand how these guys don't end up with your gun to complement theirs unless you use it to shoot them very early on in the confrontation.

How do you envision it would go down?

up
Voting closed 0

Throw down wallet and beat feet. If they pursue my gun is coming out.

up
Voting closed 0

So the possibility of being able to defend yourself is trumped by the possibility of not being able to defend yourself. Got it.

up
Voting closed 0

The mugging I hear about seem to be split 50-50 between "late at night" and "broad daylight".

Also, many are on or near main streets, not dark alleys.

* and by scientifically, I mean what I read on Uhub, tweets from BPD, Boston Courant Police blotter, and my neighborhood blogs, etc.

up
Voting closed 0

My question is why the police wait a week to warn anyone. These were promptly reported crimes and responded to by police. To make it worse, I've been around the pond around dusk several days in that week and only yesterday, AFTER they finally warn the public, did I see a patrol. I guess they finally had to with the news crews coming yesterday.

If there is a compelling reason to hold the info from the public, fine. But I presume that reason would be to catch them in the act the next day, or next day, or next day. But I saw no signs of them for week, until the press began to show up and the criminals had fair warning they knew what happened.

And better yet, who were they hiding the info from in the last week, who were they neglecting to warn? Not just us local residents, but how about the hundreds of people and their families who were taking part in the race on Sunday that included 9 laps around the pond, a race to benefit, and which included the participation of, people with challenges and disabilities.

I was there as the race was wrapping up, when the runners/walkers were thin but there was still inspiring, courageous disabled people, some with one assistant at their side, still making their way around.

They have no idea how courageous they were being. It's just unacceptable.

up
Voting closed 0

That's what the Boston Police always do. I have zero faith that the perpetrators will be caught.

They're having a community meeting, just as I predicted, at 4:30 on Friday. God forbid they hold it when people have time to get home from work.

up
Voting closed 0

"To shirk and deflect".

up
Voting closed 0