10/28/2008 3:33 AM
Email this article Print this article  

Who watches the watchers?

This article has been read 687 times.

Aside from the mother-daughter team targeted - and arrested - last week on Broad Street by the Washington County Drug Task Force, residents of West End Washington haven't had much to cheer about, crimewise, in their homemade neighborhood war on crime.

In the more than a year that residents of select neighborhoods in the City of Washington (and across the line into Canton Township) began organizing, just about the only outward sign of action by crime and grime watchers has been to hold meetings and put up signs that warn do-badders that the do-gooders are watching. Hey, it's a start.

The neighborhood effort suffered what could have been a mortal blow when its chief spokesman turned out to be a law-breaker himself.

Bill Reihner, who is well-known to city and other area police agencies for multiple offenses involving myriad violations (suspended license and unregistered, uninspected and uninsured vehicles, to name a few) skipped a court date some months ago. He hasn't been seen since. Lately, he is suspected of making off with the proceeds from a drawing intended to fund more crime watch signs.




Rate This Story:
1 the lowest - 5 the highest
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Current rating:
"As of about four days ago, according to our sources, he's somewhere in South Carolina," Washington police Chief James R. Blyth said Monday. "Just where, we're not sure, but he'll show up."

Blyth, a 30-plus-year veteran policeman, said he was "apprehensive about his track record," regarding Reihner's leadership role in the neighbor watch effort.

"I don't want to take anything away from what he did organizing the various programs," Blyth added. "At least he focused community awareness on crime problems out in the neighborhoods."

"I'm really disappointed in that guy," said Ron Harton, Canton Township supervisor and an early, enthusiastic subscriber to the doctrine of individual involvement that Reihner preached. "We were making progress, and then this happens ..."

And then there's the matter of a $1,500 prize in a drawing that Reihner sold before he headed south with the Canada geese.

"The Canton program had nothing to do with that drawing," Harton said. "I told her that she'd probably have to go to a district judge over that."

Jodi Maxwell, a resident of the 700 block of Broad Street, close to the 8th Ward playground where gunfire March 31 stirred his involvement, is trying to arrange an area-wide citizens watch program.

"The way it is now, nobody's talking to anybody else. The 7th isn't talking to the 8th Ward; the 5th isn't talking to the 1st. If we're going to get anything done, we're going to have to start communicating with each other.

"That's what I thought was going to happen when Reihner left," Maxwell said. "Crime watch took a big slap because of him. If we start talking to each other, maybe we can save this."

"If we had a real watch program going, we could get out the information warning people to lock their cars overnight," Harton said. "We just had a report of unlocked cars being entered overnight on Malone Ridge Road. Crime is out there, too."




Home



0 comments
All comments will be reviewed by administrators and posted to their respective articles within 24 hours. Comments deemed inappropriate will not be posted.
Subject:
Body:
Poster:
captcha 193aa9920f5d4f52b9963cfded75804d
Enter text seen above:








Marketplace
Classifieds
Jobs
Cars
Real Estate
Rate card
Photo Store
News
Local
Obituaries
Police Beat
Business
State
Nation
World
Communities
Washington County
Greene County
South Hills
Sports
Headlines
Blogs
Columns
Opinion
Editorials
Letters
Submit Letter
Blogs
Columns
Forum
Lifestyle
Entertainment
Engagements
Weddings
Anniversaries
Births
Calendar
Announcement Forms
Service
Subscribe
Temp. stop delivery
About Us
Contact Us
Terms of Service
Facebook | Twitter
Newsletter
This page is best viewed using Firefox.
Spreadfirefox Affiliate Button
© 2009 Observer Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.