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Criminal Arrests Up 42 Percent this Summer in Point Beach

But 33% fewer borough ordinance violations

 

There were more criminal arrests, but fewer borough ordinance violations, in Point Beach this summer compared to last summer.

There were 42 percent more criminal arrests, which are arrests for the more serious offenses, this summer, when there were 431, compared to last summer, when there were 304, according to data supplied by the Point Beach police department (see attached PDF).

There was a decrease of nearly 33 percent in the number of borough ordinance violations this summer, which was 852, compared to last summer, when there were 1,270, according to the data. (The PDF says 37 percent, but that number has since been corrected to about 33 percent.)

The way the numbers play out in the final analysis is no surprise to anyone who works for the police department, the mayor and council members, who were getting reports from the police every few weeks, and those who have regularly attended council meetings where those reports were read by Councilmember Bret Gordon, the council's police department liaison, and discussed.

The pattern of fewer ordinance violations, but more criminal arrests, showed up regularly in the reports throughout the summer.

In response to council questions about why the number of borough ordinance violations may be down, Police Chief Kevin O'Hara has said that one reason might be because the police have been spending more time processing those arrested on criminal charges, which means they spend less time on the street issuing the violations for lesser offenses.

Criminal arrests require processing such as fingerprinting, photographing, filing reports and doing other paperwork in the police department in Borough Hall on New Jersey Avenue.

From the week of Memorial Day to the week of Labor Day, the number of criminal arrests this year were 431, compared to 304 last year and 310 in 2010, according to the data.

The number of borough ordinance violations were 852 this year, 1,270 in 2011 and 770 in 2010.

The number of motor vehicle accidents were 373 this year, compared to 216 in 2011, or an increase of 73 percent.

The number of first aid calls were 544 in 2012 and 432 in 2011, or an increase of 26 percent.

The number of PATS System parking tickets, which does not include the hand-written tickets, was 9,607 this summer, down from 10,770 last summer, for a decrease of about 12 percent.

PATS tickets are generated by the hand-held ticket computers used by parking enforcement officers, O'Hara explained. The hand-held ticket computers generate an almost plastic-like paper ticket.

The police department does not maintain running totals of the handwritten tickets. Patch will follow up by asking the municipal court for that information.

Related Topics: 2011, 2012, Arrests, Crimes, Criminal Arrests, Point Beach, Point Pleasant Beach, Superior Court, borough ordinance violations, and indictable offenses

SoylentGreen

11:27 am on Monday, September 17, 2012

Wonder if cutting the PD down to 11 full time officers like some clueless councilman of the past suggested is still feasible?

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outofthebeach4now

12:20 pm on Monday, September 17, 2012

There goes Mr NO Commonsense again dragging up the past council memebers. GET OVER IT, THERE DONE. What the headlines don't tell you is the "incidents" Ord. violations plus Criminal Arrests are down ~20% in 2012. Can the fair cheif explain that? And why so many more car accidents? Its also interesting to compare the year 2010 vs, 2011 Ord. Violations. Looks like there was a "Blue Flu" for writing tickets because the council wanted to cut full time officers, right? Lets here the explanation about that one Cheif Ohara.

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SoylentGreen

3:51 pm on Monday, September 17, 2012

I brought it up because there are still radical Insurgents in town that still believe in that number. And number of summons issued is like rainfall, sometimes you have a little, sometimes you have a lot. You simply can't predict it.

JD

1:55 pm on Monday, September 17, 2012

I'm surprised as I thought this year the boardwalk was better...
less people..
that is why lower number of parking tickets.
could also be instead of giving an ordinance violation... they find some quasi criminal instead... then call it a disorderly persons... so, need to evaluate last year to this year... they types of criminal and the types of ordinance.

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JD

2:01 pm on Monday, September 17, 2012

Look at the real numbers....
Criminal UP by 130...
Ordinance DOWN by 420...
overall... that seems better in my opinion... instead of looking at the percentages.
The net is DOWN 290...

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Joseph Woolston Brick

3:14 pm on Monday, September 17, 2012

There were less people alright, Including me and any visitors I had over the summer, we went to Great Adventure instead of getting ripped off by the parking and the boardwalk greed that permeates Point Beach. Almost 11 tickets to ride that antiquated piece of crap two second kiddie roller coaster! I'm putting the Point Pleasant Boardwalk on my bucket list, said no one ever!

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SoylentGreen

3:52 pm on Monday, September 17, 2012

That's what is great about this country, freedom of choice.

JHill

4:16 pm on Monday, September 17, 2012

Good. It goes to show the police were out arresting criminals instead of handing out BS tickets to tourists.

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M.O.D.

2:56 pm on Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Is it so hard to comprehend that MAYBE some people finally realized that Pt. Beach cops aren't putting up with their crap anymore? Possibly even the PREVENTION efforts, the ones to keep the stupid crap from happening in the first place, might have actually worked??? Nothing satisfies you people...

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Home Sweet Home

9:18 pm on Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Great job by the Barrella-dependents Gordon Tooker Corbally and Barrella. Police presence leads to quiet streets and no more pissing on lawns so ordinance violations go down but bad publicity from emphasis on few bad apples, done to justify the unecessary parking plan and the inane bar closing extortion, brings the rowdies and drives the family's away. As Corbally said in the APP "It’s been a rough three or four months from a public relations standpoint and the council has had something to do with it. . . "

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