Omar McDew may never be able to count all the car thefts his football team has prevented.
But this coach says giving children who live in one of the nation鈥檚 poorest communities something to do is the best crime-prevention strategy out there.
鈥淭hose are 30-something kids that are not out in the streets stealing cars. We start in June, we don鈥檛 wait for football season, and part of the reason is to keep those kids busy and tire them out so all they want to do is go home and go to sleep.鈥
But when the pandemic hit, the structured activities shut down 鈥 many for more than a year.
鈥淟atin club. African American club. The Polish Club. Ski Club. Robotics. Auto body shops. Young entrepreneurs ...鈥 McDew recalls.
McDew is also in charge of this city鈥檚 Juvenile Review Board, which is where children are sent when they get caught shoplifting or committing other low-level crimes.
鈥淎 lot of my kids during COVID went right down the tubes because they missed that face-to-face interaction,鈥 McDew said. 鈥淢y kids do not respond to Zoom. My kids I work with, they need a face-to-face, they need to see people and feel people care about them.鈥
During those long months when kids were stuck at home with nothing to do fears also grew across the state about crime.
A string of high-profile car thefts made the headlines. Some were violent, and some involved teenagers.
The issue came to the forefront in June when a stolen SUV struck and killed a jogger in New Britain. a 17-year-old with a record of past offenses was behind the wheel, and a 15-year-old was in the passenger seat. They were being chased by another driver.
That crash reignited a debate over how 黑料吃瓜网 handles juvenile crime.
Across the country, vehicle thefts were up during the pandemic. Recently released show that between 2019 and 2020 the rate of thefts increased nationally by 11% compared to 41% in 黑料吃瓜网.
In New Britain, the number of cars stolen in compared with the same time before the pandemic.
Statewide, car thefts increased by in some months. This uptick followed decades of .
Critics say there鈥檚 something behind 黑料吃瓜网鈥檚 recent spike.
New Britain Police Chief Christopher Chute and others believe the state gives young offenders too many chances, and they blame children for the uptick.
鈥淲e鈥檙e definitely under the confident belief, it鈥檚 because of the juveniles. Whatever they鈥檙e trying to do in the juvenile justice system, it is not working,鈥 he said.
But Chute can鈥檛 say for sure because so few thieves are caught and arrested. The number of children arrested in New Britain and charged with stealing cars is
Fear in the suburbs
Pandemic thefts aren鈥檛 just a city issue 鈥 it鈥檚 also driving fear in the suburbs.
鈥淲e have gotten to the point where we do not feel safe in our homes, our yards, our cars,鈥 Democratic state Rep. Jill Barry said during a summer forum in Glastonbury after a took place in her well-off suburban town. 鈥淲e fear for our children, and the thought of them riding their bikes, playing outside and waiting at the bus stop.鈥
The suspects in the Glastonbury theft got away, but Barry and others believe the offenders were juveniles.
Car thefts in Glastonbury early in the pandemic and arrests have remained in the .
The state鈥檚 top prosecutor, Rich Colangelo Jr., was at that same forum. He鈥檚 been a of the laws state legislators have adopted that dictate how children who break the law are treated by the criminal justice system.
鈥淲hat we鈥檙e doing now is not working, and that鈥檚 really why we鈥檙e here," he told the crowd.
While state data show there was an uptick in car thefts after the pandemic began, only so far this year were carjackings or associated with other violent offenses. Most of the remaining cars were stolen when the owner wasn鈥檛 around.
Despite the fear, a of state car theft suggests violent thefts are not on the rise.
Delays in the juvenile justice system
Those who work with teenagers suspect what really drove the uptick was the sudden slowdown of the juvenile justice system during the pandemic.
Many kids were left with nothing to do, said state Rep. Robyn Porter.
鈥淚dle time is the devil鈥檚 playground,鈥 she said. 鈥淕ive these kids something productive to do, invest in them so that we can yield some interest. We can鈥檛 keep throwing them away.鈥
The Democrat from New Haven joined others outside the state Capitol over the summer to beg the state to not overreact to the headlines by locking up more children.
鈥淧eople. Not prisons. People. Not prisons,鈥 the crowd chanted.
The juvenile justice system plays an important part in enrolling teens in extracurriculars and summer jobs and connecting them with therapy and other supports.
But a by 黑料吃瓜网 found that during the height of the pandemic, it took months for some juvenile offenders to be steered into beneficial programs.
For many, those referrals often come only after the case is closed. And for months, courts here were behind. That鈥檚 because the number of juvenile courts hearing cases dropped from 15 to two. The courts slowed down so much that hundreds more kids were waiting more than six months for their cases to be resolved.
Many of those teens were just waiting at home, including Crystal Sanchez鈥檚 15-year-old son. The single mom in Bridgeport can鈥檛 stay home with her three kids during the pandemic because she has to work so that she can pay her bills.
鈥淭he neighborhoods we live in, there鈥檚 nothing for the kids to do out there. And if there is, it cost so much money. It鈥檚 difficult,鈥 Sanchez said. 鈥淧arents got to work two jobs, and then to pay for the extracurriculars, it鈥檚 just a lot. My son, he likes cooking and beat making. They don鈥檛 have anything like that. And even the sports, the school that鈥檚 closest to us, they still don鈥檛 even have a basketball team, or football, baseball, none of that.鈥
Her son has been charged with stealing multiple cars during the pandemic. But Sanchez and others with children who鈥檝e gotten into trouble for stealing cars told 黑料吃瓜网 that they鈥檝e struggled to get their kids help.
Because the courts backed up, cases for children like Sanchez鈥檚 were taking especially long to be resolved.
And so Sanchez鈥檚 son wasn鈥檛 getting enrolled into programs.
鈥淚 did notice that he was going down the wrong path. The thing is with the court, they wait until the child does it multiple times, or commits a very serious crime before they actually give us help,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檝e been asking for a program from the very first time. I guess you have to wait until you get into probation to get into the programs.鈥
Her son eventually got into more serious trouble and is now incarcerated in a prison in the adult system. He鈥檚 still waiting for his case in juvenile court to be resolved.
鈥淚 believe if he would have got a program, a bracelet, or some type of soft punishment, I believe it would have helped him a lot,鈥 she said.
With the court-referral pipeline stalled, many providers who work with these teens say they struggled to help them during the pandemic.
Albert Ray Dancy and his staff at the Pen or Pencil mentoring program took it upon themselves to get Bridgeport kids involved. The schools also stopped sending cases their way for months because the city鈥檚 point person to make that connection got sick.
鈥漌e weren鈥檛 getting the referrals. I finally had to go out into the community and knock on doors to get kids on board,鈥 Dancy said.
But enrollment was still way down.
鈥淚f there has been an increase in car thefts, it is primarily due to the amount of time that the juveniles have had on their hands,鈥 he said.
Not being able to conduct face-to-face programs also had an impact.
Hector Glynn, chief operating officer of The Village for Families & Children, runs some of the largest juvenile justice programs in the state. The Judicial Branch didn鈥檛 allow him and many providers to resume in-person treatment until 16 months into the pandemic.
He thinks that was too long to go remote.
鈥淢ost mental health services are built on relationships. And so if you can't build those relationships, especially if you鈥檙e dealing with children who are either angry or exhibiting those types of behaviors, it鈥檚 very difficult to do that through Zoom,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here was a huge disruption to the service delivery system. We were advocating for more in-person earlier.鈥
The pandemic has taken a heavy toll on children, he said.
鈥淥ur phones are ringing off the hook,鈥 he said, 鈥渂ecause parents are finding their kids are either exhibiting these externalizing behaviors 鈥 aggression, fighting 鈥 or they鈥檙e becoming suicidal.鈥
It will take some time for the state to really understand the impact the pandemic had on juvenile crime, said Gary Roberge, who鈥檚 in charge of court operations for the Judicial Branch.
鈥淚 think the trickle of kids coming into those programs is just a result of the environment that we were in,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e got to wait until 12 months out, 24 months out and see what the outcomes of those cases are with respect to recidivism, successful program completions, things like that. So it鈥檚 going to take us a little while to catch up."
Car thefts subside after courts and structured activities reopen
While the two sides hash out whether the pandemic or a too-lenient juvenile justice system is to blame for the increase in car thefts, an of theft data by 黑料吃瓜网 found that car thefts have begun to slow down.
During the first three months of the pandemic, thefts jumped 36% compared with the same three months before the pandemic. Then between October and November, thefts shot up by 48% compared with the same months before the pandemic. During the first three months of this year, thefts rose by 7% 鈥 and then between April and June, they decreased by 10% compared with before the pandemic. Data from the summer months can鈥檛 be analyzed yet because several police departments are behind in reporting their data to the state鈥檚 Crime Analysis Unit.
Back in New Britain, Omar McDew's football team and other extracurriculars have resumed and school has returned full time, though with a bit of a .
And in this city, too.
Coming Thursday: Part 2 in our "Juveniles, Joyrides, and Justice:" series: a look into what happens when children keep getting into trouble, and whether the state鈥檚 move to lock up as few kids as possible is working to deter crime.