Tchakirides Pulls Double Duty

by Paul Bass | June 11, 2009 2:33 PM | | Comments (9)

Four districts across town are receiving new top cops.

One of the police department’s top quality-of-life problem-solvers, Lt. Martin Tchakirides, will head the Westville/ West Hills district starting Monday. He moves there from Downtown/ Wooster Square, which he has overseen for the past five years.

For three weeks Tchakirides will do double-duty, continuing to run the downtown district, too. That’s because his downtown replacement, Lt. Rebecca Sweeney, will be in Boston during that time at a senior management training institute run by the Police Executive Research Forum (PERF).

Sweeney moves to downtown from the Newhallville/ East Rock district. According to Assistant Chief Kenneth Gillespie, who’s in charge of naming the district managers, the city doesn’t yet have a replacement for Sweeney at her old perch. Nor has he named anyone yet for Hill South to succeed District Manager Joe Streeto, who retires June 30.

The department usually puts lieutenants in district manager slots. But at least one of the two remaining openings will probably go to a sergeant unless more lieutenants slots are filled soon, Gillespie said. “It’s a good opportunity for a sergeant who wants to move up in management.”

DSCN1567.JPGTchakirides and Sweeney (pictured) both applied for the Westville/West Hills slot. They were the only applicants, according to Gillespie.

Tchakirides and Sweeney said Thursday that they’re each “excited” to take command of a new neighborhood with a new set of challenges. They’re also both returning to old turf.

Five years ago Tchakirides filled in for then-Westville/West Hills chief Peter Reichard for three months. He has run the Downtown/Wooster Square district since then.

Andy Orefice is following Tchakirides. Or vice versa. Orefice headed the Downtown/Wooster Square citizen management team while Tchakirides was the top cop there. Now Orefice has moved to Westville — and he just became head of the neighborhood management team there as well.

“I’m so excited to have [Tchakirides] come out here. I had a great working relationship with Marty,” Orefice said. “He was always really responsive. We’re looking to have that out in Westville. That’s what the neighbors have been clamoring for.”

At one point, he and other neighbors had been talking to Tchakirides about excessive noise from motorcyclists at the old Sidebar restaurant, Orefice recalled. Orefice came home one day to find a line of motorcycles illegally parked on the sidewalk in front of the restaurant. He called Tchakirides — who showed right up, spoke to the restaurant owner, and succeeded in clearing the area.

Another time a Crown Street juice bar was regularly attracting a crowd getting into fights, some of them ended in shootings. “He got the head of the state liquor commission to come down and put the heat on the clubs to close down.”

Click here to read about how Tchakirides defused one fight among regulars on the New Haven Green. Click on the play arrow here and at the top of the story to watch snippets.

“It was time for a change of scenery,” Tchakirides, who has 14 years on the force, said of his decision to seek a new post. Downtown he concentrated on problems connected to nightclubs and homelessness; on the west side he’ll encounter more burglaries and other residential-related issues. “I don’t know if I even have any homeless out there,” he said.

The raucous club scene’s ongoing challenges now await Sweeney, who has spent the last three years overseeing the Newhallville/East Rock district. “I’m ready for some new challenges,” she said. She knows the turf, though; she walked a downtown evening beat 10 years ago.

East Rock Alderman Roland Lemar said Sweeney “served our district well.” He acknowledged that the department sometimes needs to focus more of its resources to the Newhallville end of the district because it reports more major crimes. He said he hopes the new district manager works with East Rockers as well to tackle speeding, “petty street crime,” and the need for walking and biking beat cops.







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Comments

Posted by: citizen | June 11, 2009 2:43 PM

When is the fairhaven district getting someone new

Posted by: concerned [TypeKey Profile Page] | June 11, 2009 6:47 PM

Listening to the snips that Lt sure is going to be welcome in his new district. Now I like that kinda policing.

Posted by: Chair | June 11, 2009 10:14 PM

Not musical chairs but policical chairs.

Posted by: Fair Havener | June 12, 2009 9:16 AM

Our district manager is great. Though it does seem like the new management at 1 Union Plaza thought they could pull all of his staff because he had gotten the crime numbers down so far.

And obviously that did not work.

Hopefully this is a lesson learned. Being new, they made the mistake thinking that Fair Haven was one of the "safe" neighborhoods, not that a very good district manager with enough officers and smart community policing had turned the neighborhood around.

Honestly, the new administration blew it in Fair Haven when it first came in. Things seemed to have turned around now but that might just be on my block.

But any change here in the district manager would not be appreciated. The difference from before Casanova to now is night and day.

Bring back community policing though. Before Casanova we didn't really have it and the neighborhood got pretty darn crazy. And the new administration really weakened it here after some good years under Casanova -- then we saw the increase in crime.

Posted by: anon | June 12, 2009 10:21 AM

The PD gives out many traffic tickets (8,000+ in the first few months of the year) but only a tiny fraction of those have to do with speeding - last time I checked, fewer than 10 per day across the entire city when averaged out. Is the issue a lack of radar equipment (and if so, can Rosa DeLauro help)? Tickets for red light running are much more common, maybe because the PD doesn't need a radar gun?

It would also be helpful for citizens to know how many tickets were given in each neighborhood. Quinnipiac Avenue and Westville have crazy speeding, but maybe all the tickets are being given out on Whitney Avenue and downtown. Maybe some kind of quarterly report?

Posted by: notimon | June 12, 2009 10:48 AM

Boy this is great, with all of the shooting occurring in the Newhallville area, they move managers to "DOWNTOWN" and "WESTVILLE" hmmm yeah there are plenty of shooting in those area, NOTTTTT,and to make matters worst, they are delaying a replacement for Sweeney in of all Places Newhallville. No one cares about the tough areas.

Posted by: FairHavenRes | June 12, 2009 12:53 PM

Casanova is doing a great job. His relationship with the community is well known. He get's the job done.

I agree, any change with respect with Lt Casanova would be ill advised.

With the dismantling of community policing in New Haven, Casanova has been able to adapt to the "new model" offered by Lewis and his posee from the west. Again, I reiterate, any change in police command in Fair Haven would not serve nor protect the community.

Posted by: Carlos Verde | June 15, 2009 10:59 AM

In case you didn't know, Lt. Tchakirides recently said "Community Based Policing is dead in New Haven", and I think he truely likes that idea. I'm just glad he's not being moved to Fairhaven. Good Luck Westville!

Posted by: Morris Cove | June 15, 2009 12:05 PM

Carlos

The whole community policing concept is pretty much dead. When was the last time you saw a walking beat in the neighborhood?

I for one would love to see it make a come back, but there just not enough cops to go around, don't get me wrong the do a great job, but the idea of personalized cops, was a throw back to when I was running around Fair haven, and it's gone. Marty didn't say anything that wasn't true, but if you like your cops to be like your politicans then Fair Haven has the right man for the job.

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