April 18, 2006
WELL, OF COURSE SQUAD CARS WERE A MISTAKE:
A New Crime Fighter, for $10 in Hay and Oats (ANDREW JACOBS, 4/18/06, NY Times)
[A]fter decades of consignment to Central Park patrols, ceremonial trots down Fifth Avenue and the occasional cameo at a raucous demonstration, these horses — and 85 of their brethren — have begun patrolling high-crime neighborhoods, making late-night shows of force through Times Square and taking the lead during search-and-rescue missions along thicket-filled riverbanks and wooded urban parkland.Posted by Orrin Judd at April 18, 2006 7:31 AMAnd there soon will be more of them: Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly is increasing the budget for the mounted troop, 75 horses and officers over the next three years, to eventually bring the total to 160, giving mounted patrols a larger role in battling crime.
"There's a reason we call them the 10-foot cop," Mr. Kelly said. "You can see them from blocks away, they're great at crowd control and they're probably the most photographed piece of equipment we have. I'm a huge fan."
So are police departments around the country. After decades of being viewed as a quaint 19th-century throwback, horseback policing is undergoing a resurgence in cities like Honolulu, Las Vegas and Oklahoma City.
Given the utter lack of free-range pasture in the Las Vegas area, that feed expense will soon come back to bite the Las Vegas Metro PD, and hard.
OKC, however, is totally another matter.
Posted by: Brad S at April 18, 2006 8:58 AMIt will certainly change the meaning of pursuing a white Bronco.
Posted by: Rick T. at April 18, 2006 9:46 AMBrad;
No, I suspect it will be what the feed turns in to at the other end that will cause the most complaints.
Posted by: Annoying Old Guy at April 18, 2006 10:31 AM Horse patrols are used extensively at Vandenberg Air Force Base. ( http://www.vandenberg.af.mil/~MSG/security_forces/fish_wildlife/horse/default.asp?HLMSG=y&HLSFS=y )
Join the Air Force -- ride a horse.
Don't they make them wear those horse diapers?
(And let's not forget that the automobile was once heralded as the solution to a huge pollution problem which plagues any city dependent on horse-drawn vehicles.)
It's a shame they couldn't mount the officers on little wee choo-choo trains.
Posted by: Jim in Chicago at April 18, 2006 11:28 AMNo, but they could assign a few of the 10-foot cops to the NYPD's Transit Police division. Would make for interesting subway rides home during rush hour.
Posted by: John at April 18, 2006 12:10 PMHorse 54, where are you?
Posted by: Noel at April 18, 2006 12:25 PMOne plus for using vehicles is that they can take a few bullets. Is there Kevlar for horses?
Posted by: Just John at April 18, 2006 2:17 PMJim, best laugh today. I'm picturing the uber-tummied police around here in one of those little choo-choos they have in playground for kids.
Posted by: erp at April 18, 2006 6:42 PM