Views on Tenleytown crime mixed as theft rises slightly

WASHINGTON- Citizens and visitors in Tenleytown expressed mixed views on crime as theft increased by a small amount in the past year, according to interviews and Metropolitan Police figures.

Theft crimes from July 2013 to July 2014 increased to 119 from 107 during the previous year in an area 1500 feet from Tenleytown’s center, according to Washington, D.C. Metropolitan Police Department figures.

On Monday, people stepped around shattered glass outside the Best Buy store on the corner of Wisconsin Avenue. Police line tape was put up on the sidewalk outside the store. A police officer near the scene would not comment on the incident.

A shattered window of the Best Buy on Wisconsin Ave.
A shattered window at the Best Buy on Wisconsin Avenue on Monday, July 7.

Trey Polston, a 25-year-old baseball coach at Woodrow Wilson High School, hasn’t experienced crime since he moved to the area in August 2013 and said he doesn’t know any one who has. But, Polston did say he feels slightly uneasy when encountering a homeless person.

“Usually on the bench, there’s usually a guy, or two, but they don’t really mess with us too much or anything, you know? They’re just trying to live themselves,” Polston said.

In contrast, a Tenleytown native sees another group as a threat to safety: high school students. Although police statistics didn’t reveal the specific ages of crime perpetrators Carlyn Hackney said teenagers in the area can be a “potential threat.”

“Just ’cause they’re rowdy, you know, and they’re always up here in the masses,” said Hackney, a 24-year-old nanny who grew up in the area.

Amanda Corvelli, a long-time employee at American Valet, had a similar perspective to Hackney.

Corvelli has witnessed Woodrow Wilson students fighting after school and seen people stealing from the Wisconsin Avenue CVS store.

Despite those incidents, she said Tenleytown is still a safe area, especially compared to other metropolitan neighborhoods.

“I mean there’s crime, but there’s crime everywhere,” Corvelli said.

 

 

 

 

 

Fourth of July in D.C. marks first for some at AU’s summer programs

WASHINGTON, D.C.- Excitement looms around American University’s campus as students and faculty prepare to celebrate the Fourth of July in Washington, D.C., some for the first time.

While living in the nation’s capital this summer, many students are trying to take advantage of the activities that the city has to offer for the Fourth of July, including seeing the 17-minute fireworks display on the National Mall.

“I am thinking about going to the Mall and hangout,” AU junior Olivia Hoppe said. “I am going with friends, whoever is still in D.C.”

Every year, the National Park Service holds a celebration of Independence Day at the National Mall. According to the National Park Service website, the events this year include the Folklife Festival, a concert by the U.S. Navy Band, a Fourth of July parade, as well as one of the largest firework displays in the country.

With the installation of 18,000 feet of chain link fence, 14,000 feet of bike rack, and almost 350 portable toilets throughout the Mall, according to the NPS website, large crowds are expected to participate in the festivities this year.

But that massive crowd won’t include Mike Ridley, a 34-year-old AU employee.

Ridley, who works for Fire and Life Safety, is looking forward to a more simple celebration.

“There is going to be a big cook out, kegs, beer, and fireworks,” Ridley said. “I am going to be spending it with friends and family.”

Although Independence Day was originally created to celebrate the 13 colonies declaring their independence from England, people from other countries, such as a 34-year-old native from Ghana, still take part in this Fourth of July holiday.

“I am going to have fun and am going out with friends,” said Festus Allotey, an AU library staff member. “I am worried about traffic. You have to time what time you want to leave.”

While Allotey originally migrated from Ghana, he still has family around the D.C. area he visits around the Fourth of July.

While working on a project for a summer leadership program, 17-year-old Kristine Luna described her hometown traditions.

In her hometown of McAllen, Texas, local businesses and organizations help the city in running a community parade, with activities including video games and dancing, which Luna has previously participated in with her summer dance camp. Everyone at the parade then goes to the town high school to watch the fireworks display.

Luna is currently a student at the National Student Leadership Conference for Journalism, Film, and Media Arts, a program focused on the development of leadership and individual interests in the field of communication of high school students from all over the country.

For Brenda Vega, a 16-year-old from Los Angeles in Washington, D.C. for the NSLC program, this is her first time in the city celebrating Independence Day.

“I am looking forward to the fireworks because I usually watch them on T.V.,” Vega said. “But now I get to experience them up close and everybody feels the same emotion as they watch.”

Lee France, an AU junior from New York, will spend July Fourth with friends.
Lee France, an AU junior from New York, will spend July Fourth with friends.