Perilous
Times
Police scramble to fight flash-mob mayhem
By Ashley Fantz, CNN
August 18, 2011 2:33 p.m. EDT
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
* Law enforcement is scrambling to monitor crime planning on
the Web
* London, Philadelphia and other cities have faced flash mobs
of violent youths this summer
* Police says they believe these groups organize on
social-media sites
* Official: Authorities should befriend suspects on social
media to diffuse potential crime
(CNN) -- This week in Germantown, Maryland, it took less than a
minute for a flash mob of teenagers to descend on a 7-Eleven,
ransack shelves and make off with hundreds of dollars worth of
stuff.
It's going to take much longer for police in Montgomery County to
figure out how to prevent it from happening again.
"We had always thought flash mobs happen in big cities. We are
unprepared. We don't have anyone who has social-media expertise,"
said county police spokeswoman Janelle Smith. "Even if we did, our
budget looks like every other law enforcement agency in the
country. It's not pretty."
Police in Maryland are not alone in their scramble to find
creative, affordable and efficient ways to fight mayhem from flash
mobs -- groups of people who gather in one location quickly after
being summoned online. Law enforcement in big cities and small
towns are all scrambling to, as Smith put it, "catch up with
teenagers" when it comes to monitoring crime planning on the Web.
This summer, spontaneous incidents of group violence -- dubbed
"flash robs" -- have happened in Minneapolis, Chicago, Cleveland,
New York and Washington, among other cities. Most episodes
involved groups of young people looting stores or assaulting
pedestrians and then running off.
Authorities said they believe at least some of these incidents
were triggered by calls on social-networking sites to meet up and
wreak havoc, although they cannot say for certain.
Facebook riot inciters get jail time
Violent flash mobs slowed by new curfew
Once fun, flash mobs now feared
Philadelphians react to teen mob attacks
By far, the worst flash-mob violence has occurred over the past
few weeks in the United Kingdom. Angry hordes terrorized
neighborhoods in London, Birmingham and elsewhere. Buildings were
torched. People were beaten. Homes were vandalized and looted.
British authorities said the rioters communicated their intent for
destruction through BlackBerry Messenger, a private
mobile-messaging system that's popular with young people in the
UK. One reported text read: "If you're down for making money,
we're about to go hard in east London."
Police playing catch-up
At least one expert believes most members of law enforcement are
far behind the times when it comes to battling flash robs.
"Part of the challenge is generational. Older officers in
management positions -- the ones making decisions -- are often not
as savvy as younger officers with social media," said Nancy Kolb,
who oversees the International Association of Chiefs of Police's
Center for Social Media. "It's important to empower your younger
officers, or those with expertise, to teach everyone else."
Many authorities said they believed for years that flash mobs were
not a threat. The impression among officers was that flash mobs
were harmless groups of strangers responding to a text or e-mail
inviting them to gather to perform a cute choreographed dance
routine in a public place, Kolb said. Witness the recent AT&T
commercial about an ill-timed flash-mob dancer in New York's Grand
Central Terminal.
In October, the police executives group sent a survey to 728 law
enforcement agencies in 48 states asking if flash mobs were a
problem in their community. Eighty-one percent of respondents said
no.
More than 70% of responding agencies also said they had not
identified any goals for officers' use of social-media tools such
as Facebook and Twitter, even though the vast majority of law
enforcement officers were using them. Sixty-six percent of
respondents said they had received no training in how to use
social media.
When the group's Center for Social Media opened about a year and a
half ago with Justice Department funds, flash mobs had only begun
to show a dark side. Today, investigators are asking themselves:
Why did flash mobs seem to go suddenly from fun to frightening?
Jeff Gardere, a California psychologist who lectures widely on the
motivations of young people, said he's not surprised by the shift.
"We're at a point where everyone understands the power of a flash
mob," he said. "People inevitably started thinking this was
accessible to them, and of course it is -- everyone has a phone."
Gardere said he believes that part of the reason flash mobs have
gotten violent is that young people are discontent and bored. They
don't have jobs. They hear their parents talking about the lack of
jobs. They feel their options are winnowing every day.
"This isn't just in England or Philly or Germantown but
everywhere," Gardere said. "You've got a group that feels angry
and powerless, and they're trying to assume a sense of power."
A curfew in Philadelphia
Until recently, most law enforcement officials assumed flash mobs
only happened in large cities. "It was Philadelphia who had the
problem -- that seemed to be the thinking," Kolb said.
Since the spring of 2010, police have reported a series of violent
flash-mob incidents in central Philadelphia. In one episode last
year, a crowd of some 200 lawbreakers, mostly teenagers, roamed
the streets robbing bystanders and breaking windows. Authorities
suspect the group gathered after seeing a call on Facebook or
Twitter to meet up.
Last month another flash mob Video of about 30 teens allegedly
beat two apparent bystanders near Philadelphia City Hall, knocking
one unconscious and breaking another person's jaw. That incident
came just weeks after a gang of youths, who Philadelphia
authorities say were stoked by a call on social media, attacked
diners leaving restaurants and robbed train passengers. Other
flash robbers swarmed stores, grabbed what they liked and walked
out.
The violence prompted Mayor Michael Nutter and police to enforce a
citywide curfew mandating that anyone over 18 be indoors by
midnight. Parents of violators would be fined $500, they warned.
Law enforcement experts believe that has been the most significant
step to date in calming flash mobs Video. Philadelphia police
investigators also have been friending younger Philadelphians on
Facebook in the hopes of monitoring chatter about potential
mayhem.
"The curfew idea was a great one, but temporary. The Facebook idea
is where we need to go," said Los Angeles County Sheriff's Capt.
Mike Parker, a leading expert on how law enforcement should use
social media to fight crime.
Name the social-networking site, and Parker has used it to help
track down a criminal or do a background check. The skill he most
often teaches other officers is how to recognize a Facebook
posting or a Twitter hashtag that suggests flash-mob planning is
under way.
'Flash calling' and The Game
Parker is helping lead the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department
investigation of hip-hop artist The Game, who sent a Twitter
message last week that contained the phone number to a sheriff's
station. Hundreds of the rapper's 580,000 Twitter followers
overwhelmed dispatchers with calls, effectively preventing the
public access to emergency help.
The Game apologized for his tweet on CNN on Wednesday. It's
unclear if he will be charged.
That raises another question for law enforcement -- how should a
person who encourages mayhem in a tweet be treated by the justice
system?
UCLA law professor Eugene Volokh said he believes they should be
prosecuted the same way as someone who incites violence in person.
"We don't need to create a new set of laws for an old set of
problems," Volokh told CNN.
But Parker said police don't have a solution yet on how to stop
flash calling.
"Just when we thought flash mobs were a problem, we have this to
deal with," the sheriff's captain said. "But that's technology.
There's always going to be something (new)."
Authorities fight back online
Many law enforcement agencies across the country are financially
strapped and understaffed. In Los Angeles County, the sheriff's
department has lost 500 officers recently to budget cuts, Parker
said.
Parker recommends that local agencies pool staff and budgets to
train officers on social-media tools. He also suggests they set up
websites for posting video -- such as surveillance-camera footage
of a suspect -- that authorities want the public to see, promoted
through the department's Twitter and Facebook accounts.
"This is so basic, but if you know there's going to be a dance,
you have to get on the invite list," Parker says. "You have to be
on these sites -- Facebook, Twitter, Foursquare, Flickr -- with
the mindset that you're not just watching passively. You're
engaging."
Parker urges fellow officers to network with citizens on Facebook
and Twitter as a way of monitoring chatter and increasing
cooperation with police.
"Make yourself a friend, approachable. You have to position
yourself in a way that isn't threatening, because we really are
not there to shut down anyone's fun," he said.
Parker said the online chatter about flash mobs is often full of
boasting. Would-be flash mobbers usually assume the police are the
enemy, he said, so they amp themselves up for a fight.
"If you see that, try to get involved in the discussion and dispel
it," he said. "It's all basic communication. Let me try to
understand you, and you try to understand where I'm coming from."
Police in Maryland acted quickly and creatively after the 7-Eleven
robbery. Within hours, investigators posted surveillance camera
footage on YouTube and blasted out that link on local media.
Detectives then headed to a local high school, where they asked
the principal and students to help them identify faces. Within a
day, they had identified at least half of the alleged thieves,
said Smith, the police spokeswoman.
No arrests had been made as of Thursday morning.
"But we feel confident," Smith said. "Technology and old-fashioned
police work are on our side."