Finally, movement to help stem the rash of Bay Area freeway shootings.
After dragging their feet for a year, state officials have kicked into action and are now moving forward rapidly
to fund surveillance cameras from Richmond to Antioch.
It would be the first such state-funded project in California — and it can’t come soon enough.
Since November 2015, there have been 87 shootings, stretching from San Jose to the East Bay. Thirty-nine people have been injured. Eight have been killed, all in Contra Costa County, which is why this pilot project will be launched there.
Last year,
we called for such a camera surveillance system. This year, in March,
we upped the ante, calling out state officials who had failed to act.
Assemblyman Tony Thurmond, D-Richmond,
took exception to our criticism but, to his great credit, rose to our challenge, working with the California Transportation Agency to secure needed support and funding.
Local planning for the cameras has been in the works for a year now. Pittsburg offered money for cameras on their section of Highway 4. West Contra Costa County mayors, led by Hercules’ Dan Romero, pressed Gov. Jerry Brown for action.
Meanwhile, Senior Deputy District Attorney Mary Knox spearheaded the logistical planning. But they were all stymied by lack of money. Until now.
The transportation agency has pledged the necessary funds and Caltrans is now providing critical technical expertise. More meetings are scheduled for this week, and everyone seems to have a needed sense of the urgency.
Law enforcement officials say freeway shootings are tough crimes to solve. The assailants are already in their getaway cars, traveling at 70 mph. Which is exactly why the cameras are needed.
Many of the shootings are gang-related, which seems to be a wrong-headed reason that law enforcement officials often downplay them. Moreover, the shooters can often miss their targets.
DeMarcus Doss, a 24-year-old college student with no gang affiliation, was fatally shot in March while driving with a friend on Interstate 80 in Richmond.
Shanique Marie, a 25-year-old mother of four, was killed a year ago on Highway 4 in Pittsburg. Her family believed she was not the intended target.
To be sure, freeway cameras raise legitimate privacy concerns that must be respected. In this case, the video will be erased after 90 days unless it’s needed for evidence.
There’s no guarantee that the cameras will stop all the shootings. But this is an experiment that must be tried. The alternative is unacceptable.¹