A neighborhood watch with firepower

James 'Jackrabbit' Jackson keeps an eye on Detroit's streets at a time when police are scarce.

April 26, 2010|By Robert Faturechi, Los Angeles Times

Reporting from Detroit — As far as neighborhood welcomes go, this one was a bit rough. James Jackson knew as much, but in Detroit's bleak Jefferson-Chalmers neighborhood, there isn't much time for subtlety these days.

"Just so you know," he told his newly moved-in neighbor. "There's probably gonna be some shooting tonight."

An older woman across the street had testified in court that morning against associates of a suspected drug dealer who was purportedly known to shoot up witnesses' homes. Anticipating revenge, Jackson had promised the woman he'd stand watch.

"What do you mean shooting?" the new neighbor asked. "Should I call the police?"

"Call the police?" Jackson shot back. "Shoot, I am the police."

In many ways, that's true. For three years, the 61-year-old Jackson, a retired Detroit police officer, has patrolled the streets of a neighborhood that was once propped up by the city's mighty carmakers but is now a mausoleum for vacant homes.

With his video camera, he films the criminals who have filtered in: drug dealers working off the stoops of abandoned homes, burglars casing houses still occupied, chop-shop operators dismantling cars.

Some people grumble about Jackson's methods, but generally criticism is rare. For many residents, his unsanctioned crime-fighting is a godsend, a source of hope for the neighborhood after the city closed and consolidated the police precinct, along with several others, as Detroit's revenue and population fell.

Surveillance cameras are mounted on many of the vintage 1930s homes, installed by Jackson and residents he's joined forces with, and more are on the way via a local business group. Street corners are spotted with bright yellow signs with a blunt warning: "See what you do today on TV at 36th Dist. Court tomorrow."

On the night he kept watch for the woman who testified, he sat on his porch across the street from her house. A clock radio murmured old-school R&B melodies, just low enough to pique Jackson's hearing and keep him alert to other sounds, a technique he learned on a special unit of the Detroit police force.

A couple hours after midnight, a Chevy Suburban — probably belonging to the suspected drug dealer — rolled onto Chalmers Street, just beneath the road's canopy of naked dogwood branches.

It crept past boarded-up brown brick homes before climbing Jackson's driveway. Its headlights panned across the front porch.

Jackson's face was still cloaked in darkness, but in his hands the black metal of the 12-gauge shotgun gleaned in the light. Both men were motionless.

"I was more worried about the … paperwork," Jackson said. "It's a whole lot of paperwork when you shoot somebody."

The Suburban backed out, and drove off.

The ‘Jackrabbit'

Rumbling through Jefferson-Chalmers in his flat-bed truck, Jackson surveys his turf, his torso — stocky like a snowman's — bobbing in the cab.

Neighborhood residents, good and bad guys alike, know him by one name: Jackrabbit. The nickname originated decades ago when he was looking to name the towing operation he started on the side. It was suggested by his then-4-year-old son and plays off Jackson's fast and friendly service.

On patrols these days, he can hardly go a block without hearing the shouts.

"Jack-RAB-bit!" called one man, strolling with two women.

"You gonna get in trouble hanging out with them big-legged women," he shouted back, his chuckles like toots from an air horn. They all laughed.

Jackson isn't alone in his crime-fighting. Frustrated about police cuts — today's department is down to 2,960 officers, from almost 4,000 in 2002 — some communities have commissioned private patrols.

Local media have been abuzz with the case of Tigh Croff, 31, who was charged with shooting and killing a man he found burglarizing his house. Croff, a resident of the notoriously underserved east side, had been victim to multiple break-ins before. When he pulled into his driveway in December to find two men in his home, police say, he chased one down.

"I told him he was going to die, and I shot him," Croff reportedly told police.

Some commentators have sympathized with Croff. One columnist even compared the chances of a burglar on the east side getting arrested to winning the lotto.

A place abandoned

The Jefferson-Chalmers neighborhood wasn't always this way.

Its waterfront location along the Detroit River once made the neighborhood a prime location for factory workers and professionals, a solidly middle-class group — and lured Jackson there in the 1960s.

He remembers the Vanity Ballroom on Jefferson Avenue as a hotspot for upscale nightlife, drawing tuxedo-clad men and women in flowing skirts. The majestic red, green and orange brick Art Deco structure is now closed, its rusted steel gates falling off the hinges.

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