Untitled Document
Comment: How long before these billboards bear the faces of 'political
dissidents' and other enemies of the state?
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Associated
Press/LISA CORNWELL | November 25 2005
CINCINNATI -- Wanted posters offering rewards for Jesse James and other
outlaws were a common sight in America's Old West. Now a modern twist on that
idea is showing up increasingly across the country: wanted billboards.
Many of the billboards, which typically include a suspect's photo or a sketch
drawn from witness descriptions, have resulted in tips leading to an arrest.
Eight of the 10 suspects shown on billboards in the Kansas City, Mo., area
have been arrested, seven of them because of the billboards, authorities say.
And police in Passaic, N.J., say a billboard was instrumental in catching a
man charged in the stabbing death of a police officer's son.
"This is an idea that is working fabulously," said Lt. James Wood,
leader of the Major Crimes Unit of the Passaic County prosecutor's office.
A high-profile supporter of the billboards is John Walsh, host of Fox's "America's
Most Wanted."
"We reach a lot of people through television, but billboards are seen
daily and serve as a constant reminder," said Walsh, whose 6-year-old son
was kidnapped and murdered in Florida 24 years ago.
But the billboards raise concerns for Marc Mezibov, a defense attorney in Cincinnati,
where the city's first went up recently.
"If a client's face and name were posted on billboards ascribing some
horrendous crime to him, I would certainly raise issues with the court about
whether he could receive a fair trial," he said, adding that he might request
the trial be moved.
Tips from one of the billboards in Kansas City led to the arrest of a man in
the 2002 slaying of 19-year-old Ali Kemp. Roger Kemp, who found his daughter's
body at the swimming pool where she worked, said the idea came to him while
driving.
"I was looking at billboards one day and thought, 'Why not try that since
so many people drive by them every day?'" Kemp said.
He asked Lamar Advertising Co. about renting a billboard, but the company offered
to donate one to post a suspect sketch and hot line number for anonymous tips.
Some billboards also include reward information.
Police were somewhat hesitant at first.
"We thought a generic sketch could create false leads," said Sgt.
Craig Sarver, coordinator of the Crime Stoppers program of the Kansas City Metropolitan
Crime Commission.
The billboard was so successful, however, that other area law enforcement agencies
have been calling to get photos of their fugitives put on billboards, Sarver
said.
So far, advertising companies have donated at least 14 billboards, whose values
run from about $1,500 to more than $5,000 each.
The Cincinnati billboard, donated by Norton Outdoor Advertising, has led to
some tips on the whereabouts of Michael Anthony Mitchell, 35, who is charged
with shooting a man to death over a parking spot.
"Even if not every subject is caught, this creates a better awareness
of crime and the need to do everything possible to stop it," said Chuck
Kreimer, director of Greater Cincinnati-Northern Kentucky Crime Stoppers.