America’s Head-On Collision: A Culture of Violence and Crisis of Character
REAWAKENING AMERICA LLC
iN PARTNERSHIP wITH THE
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF CHIEFS OF POLICE
School and college violence, domestic violence, workplace violence, shootings, sexual assaults, and terrorism are never ending headlines.
Columbine, Virginia Tech, Newtown, Parkland, Uvalde and 9/11
immediately paint the sobering picture.
Our scandals are appalling and within every segment of
society. Government, educational, corporate, sports, entertainment, and even
faith-based morally bankrupt and apathetic leaders wreak havoc on society.
America is called to be the land of freedom, democracy, and
security. Unfortunately, our head-on collision of violence and character crisis
may intensify before our culture improves.
A Culture of Violence: Active Shooter
and Mass Shooting Crisis
On Thursday, January 19,
2023, I presented my monthly remarks to 90 attendees of the Bergen County
Police Chiefs Association in Wood-ridge, New Jersey.
“These remarks, delivered
for 21 consecutive years, address issues of ethical leadership, violence
prevention, and public safety.
“At this event, my remarks
focused on America’s active shooter and mass shooting crisis, and as follows:
“America’s culture of
violence is inseparable from our emergence to a nation of trauma. The violence
is horrifically illustrated by our active shooter and mass shooting pandemic.
“Some working definitions of each are in order.
“According to the FBI, an active
shooter is an individual actively engaged in killing or attempting to
kill people in a populated area.” [i]
“The Gun Violence Archive,
a nonprofit research group that tracks gun violence using police reports, news
coverage and other public sources, defines a mass shooting as one in
which at least four people were killed or injured.
“The Gun Violence Archive
(GVA) counted 648 mass shootings in 2022, with 36 having four or more
fatalities.
“The GVA recorded 690 mass
shootings in 2021, with 28 involving four or more fatalities.
“According to the GVA,
there were 610 mass shootings in 2020 with 21 having four or more
fatalities. [ii]
“As of today, January 19,
2023, there have been 33 mass shootings in America, 4 or more people shot in
one incident, so far this year, an average of more than 1 per day.
“The latest, 2 days ago in
Salt Lake City, Utah, with a man shooting to death his wife, her mother, and
their 5 kids before killing himself. Records show warning signs were present
years before with investigations of child abuse, but prosecution was declined.”
[iii]
“Remain vigilant chiefs,
as these are violent times here in America.
Remember, your work is noble, necessary, and appreciated.”
The following horrific tragedies, during last year and the
beginning of this year, tragically highlight the violence:
Feb. 13, 2023,
Lansing, MI
Three people have died and five are injured after a shooting
Monday night at Michigan State University in Lansing, police said. All the victims were MSU students, according
to officials, and the wounded students remain in critical condition.
Jan. 30, Lakeland, FL
At least 10 people were wounded in a drive-by shooting police
said, and two are in critical condition.
Jan. 23, Half Moon
Bay, CA
7 killed in apparent workplace violence shooting at two
sites, a mushroom farm, and a related facility.
Jan. 23, Baton Rouge
12 injured in mass shooting at nightclub.
Jan. 23, Des Moines,
IA
2 student’s dead, employee in serious condition in shooting.
Monterey Park, CA,
Jan. 22
At least 11 people are dead and another 9 hospitalized after
a mass shooting according to the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department.
The shooting happened at a dance studio near a Lunar New
Year festival celebration.
HAZEL GREEN, AL, Jan.
19
VISALIA, CA, Jan. 16
Six people — including a 17-year-old mother and her
6-month-old baby — were killed in a shooting early Monday at a home in central
California.
Houston, TX, Jan. 15
One person was killed and four others were wounded when a
carload of armed assailants unleashed a barrage of over 50 shots on patrons outside
a suburban Houston nightclub early in the morning.
CLEVELAND, OH, JAN.
13
A man shot and killed his father, sister and nephew and
injured a man and his 8-year-old daughter r.
HIGH POINT, NC, Jan.
9
A shooting that left five dead in North Carolina occurred
when a man shot and killed his wife and his three children before killing
himself.
ENOCH, UT, Jan. 5
Eight family members were found dead, five of whom were
children, from gunshot wounds in their Utah home.
WASHINGTON, DC, Jan.
4
A man was killed and three people including an 8-year-old
child were wounded in a Tuesday night shooting in Washington, D.C., police
said.
Violence in 2022
STOCKTON, CA, Dec. 28
A man suspected in Northern California serial killings has
been charged in four additional slayings this week, bringing the total to seven
deaths since April 2021.
Chesapeake, VA, Nov.
22
A Walmart employee opened fire in a break room killing six
people. The gunman was found dead,
apparently from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, according to the police.
Colorado Springs, CO,
Nov. 20
Five people were killed and 17 injured by a gunman at an
L.G.B.T.Q. nightclub.
Charlottesville, VA,
Nov. 13
Three University of Virginia football players were killed
and two were wounded when a gunman, a former football player, opened fire in a
garage after a field trip.
Moscow, ID, Nov. 13
Four students at the University of Idaho were found dead
near campus in what a local official described on Monday as a “crime of
passion.”
Raleigh, NC, Oct. 13
A gunman, described by authorities only as a “white male
juvenile,” killed five people, including an off-duty police officer, and
wounded two others.
The Brooklyn Subway
Shooting, Apr. 12
A gunman unloaded 33 bullets into a subway car in New York
City’s Sunset Park neighborhood, leaving several people injured.
Memphis, TN, Sept. 7
Memphis was locked down during an hour’s long manhunt for a
gunman who killed four people while streaming some of the violence on Facebook
Live. The rampage included several shootings and carjacking’s during the day.
Greenwood, ID, July
17
A 20-year-old gunman opened fire in a mall food court,
killing three people and wounding two others.
Highland Park, IL, July
4
Seven people were killed and dozens more, ranging in age between
8 and 85, were wounded by a gunman. The killer climbed onto a rooftop with a
rifle and begun firing into a crowd gathered for a Fourth of July parade.
Newark, NJ, June 30
Nine people were shot and wounded in what the police said
appeared to be a stolen car incident.
Harlem, NYC, June 20
A 21-year-old was killed and eight people were wounded in an early-morning shooting at a popular picnicking area.
Philadelphia, PA,
June 4
Three people were killed and 12 injured in a shooting in
downtown Philadelphia.
Another six people were killed and dozens were injured in
several other shootings over the same weekend, including in Arizona, South Carolina, Tennessee and
Virginia.
Tulsa, OK, June 1
Five were killed, and several others shot at a medical
building near Saint Francis Hospital.
Uvalde, TX, May 24
A gunman killed 19 children and two teachers at Robb
Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, about 80 miles west of San Antonio.
A Crisis of Character and Culture of Scandal
The rampant corruption, leadership deficiency, and scandals are
within every segment of American life.
Compounding, these issues is our crisis of integrity. Even in American court rooms with the swearing before God under oath, there are blatant lies, and the twisting of truth to deceive and manipulate.
America’s culture of scandal includes these recent cases posted on the FBI
website under Public Corruption News:
01.19.2023 Edward Mullins, Former President of NYPD Sergeants’
Union, Pleads Guilty To Defrauding Union And Its Members (Department of Justice
Statement) [iv]
“Edward Mullins
promised to look out for the thousands of hard-working NYPD Sergeants who are
members of the SBA. Instead, as admitted
today in federal court, he stole hundreds of thousands of dollars from them to
fund his lavish lifestyle.” U.S.
Attorney Damian Williams
01.19.2023 Three Men
Sentenced for Roles in Bribery Conspiracy
“As this prosecution demonstrates, the Department of Justice
is committed to prosecuting public officials and their enablers who award
infrastructure contracts based on corrupt connections instead of merit.”
Assist. AG Kenneth A. Polite, Jr., Justice Department.
01.11.2023 Former
Louisiana State Senator and Chair of State Political Party, Sentenced to 22
Months Imprisonment for Role in Nearly Seven-Year Scheme to Defraud Campaign
Entity, Donors, and Political Party Organization
“Former State Senator Peterson illegally used campaign funds
and state political party funds for her personal use during the majority of her
tenure as a state senator. She broke the
law, deceived contributors, and violated her duty to the voters and the
political party with which she was affiliated on dozens of occasions. Such crimes feed public frustration,
cynicism, and civic disengagement.” United States Attorney’s Office
01.06.2023 Former
West Virginia Parole Officer Pleads Guilty to Federal Civil Rights Offense for
Sexually Assaulting Female Parolee
“The defendant abused his position of power and trust by
sexually assaulting a vulnerable woman who was trying to re-enter society,”
said U.S. Attorney Will Thompson for the Southern District of West Virginia.
“This immoral and illegal conduct will not be tolerated in this District.
01.06.2023 Former Senior
Athletic Department Administrator at the University of Southern California
Sentenced to Six Months in Prison in College Admissions Case
“For approximately four years, Heinel misled USC’s athletic
admissions subcommittee by presenting the students as recruits to USC’s
athletic teams when, in reality, the coaches had not recruited them and some
did not even play the sport they were purportedly being recruited to play. In
some cases, Heinel falsified students’ athletic credentials when presenting
them to the athletic admissions subcommittee. In exchange, Heinel received more
than $1 million in payments from Singer and his clients to university accounts
she oversaw.”
01.06.2023
Ex-Correction Officer Charged with Accepting Bribes to Smuggle Contraband into
Rikers Island Jail
“The corruption of correction officers undermines the
orderly running of the institution and endangers the safety of other
incarcerated individuals and Department of Correction personnel,” stated United
States Attorney Peace. “We will continue to prosecute those who enrich
themselves instead of serving the public and work with our federal and local
law enforcement partners to stop the flow of illegal narcotics and other
contraband into correctional facilities.”
01.06.2023 Enumclaw,
Washington Woman Sentenced for Criminal Scheme to Steal Flood Control Tax
Dollars
“Allan and Joann Thomas didn’t just defraud their neighbors
by stealing tax dollars, they abused a position of public trust, eroding faith
in government,” said U.S. Attorney Nick Brown.
“The Thomas’ theft caused some 700 neighbors in Enumclaw to pay higher
property taxes, which many can ill afford, and for which they got no services.”
01.05.2023 Former
Judge Arrested for Bribery and Obstruction of Justice
“A former local district court judge in Arkansas was
arrested today in Little Rock on criminal charges related to his alleged
solicitation of sex in exchange for agreeing to take action on a criminal case
pending before his court.”
01.03.2023 Four
Muncie Public Officials, a Former Police Officer, Two Contractors, and a
Private Citizen Convicted and Sentenced for More Than $3 Million in 'Pay to
Play' Schemes
“The citizens of Muncie placed their trust in a small group
of government officials—many of whom were on a first-name basis with their
constituents. This systemic public corruption not only resulted in more than
$1.5 million of taxpayer money lost, but also caused immeasurable distrust in
local government,” said Zachary A. Myers, U.S. Attorney for the Southern
District of Indiana. “These prosecutions and sentences demonstrate that ‘pay to
play’ schemes will not be accepted as the way governments do business…
“Ultimately, greed caught up with these defendants and they
were held accountable for it. The citizens of Muncie deserved better and
hopefully the dedicated work of our agents to uncover this systemic corruption
will help restore public trust,” said FBI Indianapolis Special Agent in Charge
Herbert J. Stapleton.
01.03.2023 Former
Wayne County Employee Pleads Guilty to Stealing More Than $1.7 Million in
County Funds
"The actions of this individual are nothing short of
disgraceful,” said Sheriff Raphael Washington. “To brazenly steal from
hardworking taxpayers and fraudulently line his own pockets while holding
positions of public trust make these crimes all the more deplorable.”
12.27.2022 Third
Former Correctional Officer Charged in Cover-Up at CSP-Sacramento Arrested and
Five Count Indictment Unsealed
“According to the Indictment, Villa was a correctional
sergeant supervising other officers at California State Prison – Sacramento
when correctional officer Arturo Pacheco unlawfully assaulted an inmate under
color of law. Villa and other officers, including Pacheco and Ashley Aurich,
assisted in covering up the details of the assault by submitting false reports.
Villa also lied under oath to the federal grand jury investigating the
incident.”
12.22.2022 Four Local
98 Employees Plead Guilty to Illegal Use of Union Assets
“United States Attorney Jacqueline C. Romero announced that
Michael Neill, 56, Marita Crawford, 53, Niko Rodriguez, 31, and Brian Fiocca,
31, all of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and all employees of Local 98 of the
International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (“Local 98”), entered pleas of
guilty this week before United States District Court Judge Jeffrey Schmehl to
federal charges arising from their personal use of the assets of Local 98 in
ways that did not benefit the membership of Local 98 as a whole, including
embezzlement of labor union assets, wire fraud, and theft from a union employee
benefit plan.”
Safeguarding American Communities
America’s flag continues to fly at half-staff too often due
to violent rampages.
Visionary leadership must inspire vigilance and
collaboration to prevent violence. We must have the determination, commitment,
and courage to protect ourselves and others.
Training initiatives, security assessments, sound security
measures, building police-community partnerships, professional security
personnel, and responding effectively to warning signs are a few of the
critical safeguards against active shooter tragedies.
These pillars must be inseparable from securing our
communities against mass shooting tragedies and essential to reawakening the
nation.
Character: Key to America’s Ethical
Renaissance
Regarding our crisis of character, the heart of America
demands virtue. It is the only antidote
to our current crisis of moral decency.
Character is the virtue which animated the great leaders in
our history.
The resuscitation of our character is our responsibility.
Character must be cultivated and inspired in our homes, workplaces, courts,
communities, social media activities, and government.
It took time for America to reach this crisis point, and it
will take time for our recovery. Our
recovery will only be successful when we make character education a priority in
our schools.
American Students: The Future of the
Nation
Our youth deserve inspiration from our educators, as they
must carry the torch of character and cultivate a renaissance of ethical
behavior.
A reality of our educational system is that millions of
students spend exorbitant time hearing lectures, writing papers, memorizing
facts, and pushing themselves with extracurricular activities. This would be a
tragic waste of time if instilling character is not the heartbeat of the
educational community.
Our educators, through the power of good example, kindness,
respect, affirmation, and encouragement, must inspire character into the heart
of America’s students.
Final Reflections: Law Enforcement, Vital to Character Development
Law-enforcement agencies also have a golden opportunity for
youth character development through the communities and schools.
One outstanding example of success is the student mentorship
programs of the Bergen County Prosecutors Office as noted with this recent
Twitter posting:
During #NationalMentoringMonth,
#BCPONJ wants to raise awareness of our mentorship programs. For high school
students, we offer the Youth Police Academy plus school presentations by
Prosecutor Mark Musella on the diversity of careers in law enforcement. Also
offered is an internship program for college and law school students where they
work closely with our criminal justice professionals. Through these programs, students
gain valuable experience and create relationships for future opportunities. For
more information, visit www.BCPO.net
https://www.nytimes.com/article/mass-shootings-2022.html
May 24 – Nov. 22 2022 listings are
paraphrased from NYT article.
RELATED ARTICLES / REFERENCES:
Crisis of Leadership: A Response to the Virginia Tech Panel Report
School Violence: Toxic Personalities, Warning Signs, Countermeasures
SPECIAL
REPORT: AMERICA’S SCHOOL VIOLENCE CRISIS
America’s Active Shooter Crisis Demands Visionary Leadership
Safeguarding America’s Protectors: A Community Responsibility
Echoes of Columbine: School Violence Awareness and Prevention
American Government Requires Leaders of Character
America’s Schools: Security, Character, Academics
America’s Head-On Collision: A Crisis of Violence and Scandals
America's Mass Shooter Crisis Demands Police-Community Unity
Mass Shootings, Police Fatalities: America’s Culture of Trauma
About the Author
works. His most recent books are Reawakening America and Listen to Their Cries.
Bove is recipient of the FBI Director’s Community Leadership
Award, former confidant of the New York Yankees, and served as spokesperson for
a coalition of Virginia Tech tragedy victim’s families.
For 20 years, Vincent has been a Board Certified Protection
Professional (CPP), Board Certified Crime Prevention Specialist, Certified
Police Training Commission Instructor, Crime Prevention Practitioner, and USDOJ
Certified Community Anti-Terrorism Instructor Trainer.
Bove is also a licensed State of New Jersey / Division of
State Police SORA Instructor, owner of Reawakening America LLC, and co-founder
of Global Security Resolutions LLC, an international investigative company. www.vincentbove.com Contact:
vincent@vincentbove.com
Note Well: Published by the National Association of Chiefs of Police for The Chief of Police, Feb. 16, 2023
Photos:
1. NYPD counterterrorism officer, Veterans Day Parade, Nov. 11, 2016, Fifth Avenue, NYC. (Reawakening America LLC, Vincent Bove) in the NACOP, The Chief of Police published work, Feb. 2023.
2. America’s
Active Shooter article collage, published by The Chief of Police, Oct. 27,
2022.
3. Bergen
County Police Chiefs Association meeting, Wood-ridge, NJ, Jan. 19, 2023.
(Reawakening America LLC, Vincent Bove)
4. The
Chief of Police Cover Story, Summer 2018.
5. Bergen
County Prosecutors Office collage of youth initiatives. (Credit: BCPO via
Twitter)
6. Headshot,
Vincent J. Bove with Bergen County Police Chiefs Association chiefs, May 18,
2017, River Vale, NJ. (Reawakening America LLC)
[i] Active Shooter Safety Resources
https://www.fbi.gov/how-we-can-help-you/safety-resources/active-shooter-safety-resources
[ii] https://www.gunviolencearchive.org/past-tolls
See also Mass Shooter Tracker https://massshootingtracker.site/data/?year=2023
[iii] Police investigated Utah man for abuse years
before murder-suicide
Labels: Campus Security, Character, Character Education, Character Training/Development for Students, Gun Crime Prevention, Law Enforcement, Leadership, Policing
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