If members of the LGBTQ community find themselves getting harassed on the streets of Baltimore, the city's police department has launched a program called "Safe Space" to protect them. (Image source: WJZ-TV video screenshot)
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LGBTQ members harassed in Baltimore can run inside businesses with 'Safe Place' signs for refuge
June 14, 2018
If members of the LGBTQ community find themselves getting harassed on the streets of Baltimore, the city's police department has launched a program to protect them.
It's called “Safe Place,” and LGBTQ members under attack or harassment can run into any business bearing a Safe Place sign on its doors or windows to seek refuge, WJZ-TV reported.
"Sometimes when people are victims of a crime, it happens on the street," Sgt. Kevin Bailey, the police department's LGBT liaison, told the station. "A person uses their cellphone to call police, but then they have nowhere to go."
Image source: WJZ-TV video screenshot
Bailey told WJZ the only requirement for participating businesses is that employees call 911 if a victim enters.
What businesses are participating in the program?
Starbucks is the main company taking part in the program with a dozen area stores participating, the station said, but Bailey said he will recruit other businesses as well.
Department officials told WJZ the idea for the Safe Place program came from Seattle, which gave Baltimore police guidance on how to get the initiative started.
Not coincidentally, Starbucks is based in Seattle.
“What the Baltimore PD is doing here is about bringing the community together," Jeff Danley, a Starbucks employee, added to the station. "To say that harming people — it’s not OK."
Bailey also noted to WJZ that while the Safe Place program "started out for LGBTQ members," the initiative is "really for any victim of a crime."
While Baltimore police look to solve this issue, there are big problems in the department
- Two members of the department's corrupt Gun Trace Task Force, including the task force’s leader, were sentenced to lengthy prison terms for their crimes — such as executing illegal arrests and searches and seizing stolen property for their personal gain — earlier this month.
- A new police commissioner, Darryl De Sousa, was brought on board specifically to fight police corruption in Baltimore.
- But he was soon forced to resign when it was revealed he failed to file income taxes for three consecutive years. De Sousa was ultimately criminally charged for tax evasion.
- And the corruption exposed by the trial may yet lead to thousands of cases involving the task force officers to be dropped.
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Sr. Editor, News
Dave Urbanski is a senior editor for Blaze News.
DaveVUrbanski
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