Downtown patrons react to possible safety changes in Fort Myers

2022-08-20 02:51:59 By : Mr. Changlong Xu

FORT MYERS, Fla.  — Thursday, the Lee County Sheriff’s Office deployed a mobile surveillance unit to downtown Fort Myers in a continuing effort to curb violence in the district. 

The unit was placed near the intersection of Main Street and Hendry Street after city council members called for extra safety measures in the area. 

In a Twitter post, Sheriff Carmine Marceno said LCSO had partnered with local law enforcement agencies to keep residents and visitors safe.

Sheriff Carmine Marceno has partnered with local law enforcement agencies to keep the residents and visitors safe. Today, this Mobile Surveillance Unit was deployed in downtown Fort Myers. A video feed is visible by our analysts in the #LCSO Real Time Intelligence Center. pic.twitter.com/feakSFdNJi

On Thursday, people who live in Fort Myers and frequent downtown talked with Fox 4 about other possible safety changes recommended by Fort Myers City Council members.

“I think they kinda need to have more police presence in that area, especially during closing hours,” said Bryan Richards.

MORE: As Chris Shaw reported in 2017, Chief Derrick Diggs said he would rely on computer analytics to help predict areas where crime prevention would be proactively needed. He said it was a program that worked well in his previous department in Ohio. Click here to read that story.

The area Richards talked about is a parking lot in downtown Fort Myers, where a Sunday morning shooting happened just after bar time, and now Fort Myers Police Department says they’re looking for a 29-year-old Jasmine Battle, who FMPD has identified as their suspect.

As police were trying to find Battle from the shooting that injured one person, Fox 4 had been following how the city council and even business owners are calling for more safety policies downtown.

Council member Johnny Streets has been one of the two main voices calling for policy change, and his list, has more than 40 suggestions:

One on that list would be a downtown safety ordinance similar to a law streets tells me Orlando uses in its downtown district, which allows certain parking lots to close after 10 pm.

On Wednesday we had cameras rolling when Fort Myers police walked into Fort Myers City Hall to go over these ideas with councilman Streets.

According to Streets, he would want an ordinance that would allow police checkpoints in certain parts of the city, with the goal to keep people from bringing weapons downtown.

An idea I asked people about who frequent the downtown area.

“Freedom is more important to me than a lot of that checkpoint stuff, I love the police presence that's very good, they can keep a lot of that,” said Bryan Richard.

"If it's going into clubs and facilities, they definitely should be doing pat downs and so forth to make sure there are no weapons or illegal substances, stuff like that," said another resident.

Another main recommendation from Streets would be to position security guards at night for parking lots like the one where the Sunday morning shooting took place.

Streets said either hiring security guards or having more police near certain parking lots could help deter some of the late-night violence downtown.

“That can’t hurt just the presence of not just law enforcement but people I think would stop a lot of that,” said Richard.