Holiday weekend a quiet one for police
Deepa Bharath
The last day of the much-talked-about year 2000 quietly disappeared
into the darkness at the stroke of midnight making way for another new
year -- and it all happened without hype, fear, elaborate police
preparations or doomsday prophecies.
The cities of Newport Beach and Costa Mesa saw fewer incidents and
arrests than they would during an average weekend, officials said Monday,
adding that no significant incidents were reported on city streets,
freeways or the beach.
The Costa Mesa Police Department received about 15 calls from
residents complaining about noise, said Sgt. Loren Wyick.
“We got about six or seven calls about fireworks and three or four
about shots being fired,” he said. But officers did not find bullets or
injured people in those areas, said Wyick.Other complaints were mostly
about loud music or revelers who partied into the early hours, he said.
There were a few DUI arrests and collisions, some alcohol-related but
none of them serious, said Wyick.
Costa Mesa police did not deploy additional officers to patrol on New
Year’s Eve, he said.
“We did have an extra DUI team,” said Wyick. “But otherwise it was the
usual number of officers.”
Last year, as a precautionary measure, Costa Mesa had 35 additional
officers patrolling neighborhoods as opposed to six or seven on any other
New Year’s Eve.
There were no significant incidents last year either except for one
shooting that sent a 21-year-old Anaheim man to the hospital and led to
the arrest of a 22-year-old Costa Mesa man on attempted murder charges.
Newport Beach Police Department’s “arrest activity was lower than a
normal weekend,” said Sgt. Jim Kaminsky.
“We had a few incidents of people drunk in public and some drunk
driving,” he said. “But the incidents on New Year’s Eve have been
decreasing with every year.”
Kaminsky said that was because of the Police Department’s proactive
approach.
“Our traffic department always has more officers out on the field
during the holidays,” he said. “That has helped to a great extent.”
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