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Sheriff says police ‘omnipresence’ will stem Las Vegas Strip violence

Updated October 16, 2020 - 8:00 am

Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo acknowledged that the recent rash of violence on the Las Vegas Strip is a significant problem that could hurt tourism, but he said he is “100 percent confident” police will get a handle on it.

“If we ignored it, it would really be a big problem,” Lombardo said in an interview Thursday. “But, we haven’t ignored it, and we’ve allocated a significant amount of resources to address it.”

The recent violence includes a shooting in the valet of Aria, gunfire on the casino floor of the MGM Grand, a stabbing in The Venetian, a shooting in front of Paris Las Vegas, a shooting in front of the Miracle Mile Shops, and a melee in Encore at Wynn Las Vegas.

Lombardo said the Metropolitan Police Department is beefing up patrols by roughly 20 percent during late-night hours on the Strip from Thursday through Saturday nights in an enforcement operation known as Persistent Pressure.

“A big part of policing is that omnipresence,” the sheriff said. “It is not necessarily effecting arrests and being overbearing. It is just the presence of a police officer that creates deterrence.”

Police are conducting more vehicle stops for infractions in the area of the Strip with the help of the Nevada Highway Patrol. Police also have increased the presence of undercover officers with the assistance of the Department of Homeland Security, Lombardo said, “to be observers of things an officer in a uniform may not be privy to because of their uniform.”

“On a regular basis, especially during the bewitching hours of late Friday nights and Saturday nights, we bring a lot of resources throughout the Police Department to bear within that Strip corridor,” the sheriff said. “So we have an omnipresence, police officers in uniforms, spread out through the corridor, so we can have quick response if we do observe anything and be proactive.”

Focus on gun crimes

He said the primary problem on the Strip is an increase in aggravated assaults with an emphasis on gun violence. Aggravated assaults in the convention center area command, which includes the Strip, are up 29 percent in 2020 compared with the year prior though Sept. 19.

Police carried out a program called Operation Top Gun, which took 64 guns off people on the Strip in a 30-day period ending in September. Lombardo said 55 percent of arrests made by Las Vegas police on the Strip during enforcement efforts involved people from out of state.

He said the increase in assaults is attributable at least in part to lingering frustrations over COVID-19 shutdowns and resulting spikes in unemployment throughout society. As Las Vegas gaming properties reopened — many with lower hotel room rates accompanied by cheap airfare — some visitors brought their pandemic-fueled anxieties and disappointments with them, and at times those emotions boiled over.

“The entire United States doesn’t have the same feel that we are used to,” Lombardo said. “This pandemic has really changed the dynamics of what every jurisdiction is dealing with. In particular with Las Vegas and our close neighbor, California.”

This observation, that violent crime is rising as cities reopen in the midst of a pandemic, is not just anecdotal and exclusive to Las Vegas. Christopher Herrmann, assistant professor at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York City, said cities across the nation are experiencing the same phenomenon. Crimes with guns dropped during the shutdowns, then exploded as cities reopened, Herrmann said.

“Interpersonal violence is through the roof,” he said.

Herrmann mentioned New York City, Chicago, New Orleans, Milwaukee, St. Louis and Nashville, Tennessee.

“All of these cities normally have a pretty consistent level of crime, and it goes up in the summertime,” he said. “It typically goes up about 30 percent in the summer. But the numbers in March, April, May were really low because of all the COVID shutdowns. So, all this violence that would have normally taken place in March, April, May … is now taking place.”

Herrmann said higher unemployment and financial and mental stress due to COVID-19 also are playing a role in the spike.

“You’ve got a lot of people who are kind of angry and depressed, and gun violence is an easy way to take out your hostilities,” he said.

When cameras don’t deter

But why would people engage in crime on the Strip, where police and gaming property cameras document everything?

“Cameras are not good deterrence for gun violence,” Herrmann said. “All the camera does is get a good picture of the guy shooting the other person. When the violence level is high, when someone wants to kill another person, they are not going to look around real quick and say, ‘Oh, is there a camera? Should I shoot them here, or should I wait another half-hour? Should I go around the corner?’ When the stress and the violence level is high, cameras don’t deter.”

Lombardo said police are working closely with gaming properties, some of which announced they will be using metal detectors for increased security. He believes the violence on the Strip and resulting media coverage have created a false perception that violent crime is rising dramatically on the Strip as compared with the rest of the Las Vegas Valley.

“If you look at the total number of violent crime in the last 30 days across the valley as compared to the Strip, there is only a 1 percent (difference) there,” Lombardo said. “The Strip has experienced 1 percent more in numbers as far as violent crime as far as the rest of the valley.”

The Review-Journal is owned by the family of Las Vegas Sands Chairman and CEO Sheldon Adelson. Las Vegas Sands operates The Venetian.

Contact Glenn Puit by email at gpuit@reviewjournal.com. Follow @GlennatRJ on Twitter.

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