By LIZ
GOFFSince the attack on the World Trade Center, security at
Queens public buildings has been stepped up.
At a Borough Cabinet meeting on Oct. 16, Borough President Claire
Shulman assured those present that security has been stepped up at Borough Hall with
guards checking the identification of everyone entering the building.
At presstime, Shulman was holding talks with court officials to
determine whether the installation of metal detectors was necessary at the municipal
buildings side entrance.
Courthouses in Queens remain
the safest of all municipal buildings in the borough.


This Queens Boulevard building which houses offices of the
Queens D.A. and Newsday was the target of a bomb threat late last month. Workers were
evacuated as a precaution (top).
Press Photos By Ira Cohen
|
At the Joseph Addabbo Federal
Building on Sutphin Boulevard, which houses Queens Civil Courts, extra security is
in place but officials there would not reveal the precautionary measures against
suspicious packages, or armed persons threatening the freedom they protect.
Almost 700,000 people
passed through metal detectors and high-tech scanners in 2000 at Queens courthouses. Once
they have been "scanned," the same people must go through a "body
check" by court officers using a hand-held scanner, said Bill Bodie, chief of Court
Security for New York State.
While performing the scans, Queens court
officers seized more than 2,000 weapons, said Captain Paul Christopher, head of security
at Queens courthouses.
The weapons, an assortment of knives,
razors, nunchucks, brass knuckles, guns, blackjacks and box cutters were most likely
intended for use inside the boroughs courtrooms, said Major Jewel Williams,
supervisor of uniformed court personnel. The weapons are confiscated, tagged, and shipped
to a central police location where they are destroyed, Williams said.
Amazingly, many of the people found
"carrying" expect that the weapons will be returned when they leave the
courthouse, he said. A percentage of violators are arrested, and others are issued
summonses, Bodie said.
"We agree that each individual should
be arrested," he said. "But the sheer number of incidents makes that impossible.
If we were to arrest each offender, we would do nothing all day but make and process
arrests."
State officials said they are considering
establishing a unit at courthouses to do just that, so all offenders will go through the
system. At present, only people who try to bring a gun into the courthouses are arrested.
"The gun is taken and the person goes," Bodie said. But in light of the recent
necessity for airtight security, that is bound to change. "We are determined to do
everything we can to prevent a tragedy," he said.
QUEENS
DISTRICT ATTORNEY'S OFFICE |
In Kew Gardens, the offices
of Queens District Attorney Richard Brown are housed in two locations, several blocks
apart.

Queens Borough Hall, which once had "non-existent"
security, is reportedly improving safety measures greatly. |
Browns office remains attached
to the Kew Gardens courthouse. The offices themselves are a veritable fort, protected on
all sides by cameras, security guards, police and locking doors that require visitors to
be "buzzed in."
Strict measures are taken once inside,
including a metal scan and a strict requirement of a photo ID for those who wish to enter.
Amazingly, these same measures are used on a daily basis and when hoards of media
arrive to cover a press briefing or other "event."
Just last week, a security guard spotted
and reported a suspicious package in the lobby of Browns other office
complex on Queens Boulevard, setting off a frenzy of police activity and resulting in the
evacuation of the entire building, the courthouses and surrounding buildings. The
"bomb" scare was a dud but security at the offices proved effective, and
quick to respond to the emergency.
The second set of offices is located at
80-02 Kew Gardens Rd., in the same building that houses the editorial offices of Newsday.
There are two uniformed police officers at
a "dedicated post" in the lobby of the building. Once visitors obtain clearance
there, they must go through a series of checkpoints leading into the actual offices on an
upper floor.
Clearly, no one is getting into these
offices without clearance and proper identification.
Police Officers are checking
identification of every person entering Queens Borough Hall. Dan Andrews, press secretary
to Borough President Claire Shulman, said that meetings are going back on schedule, the
Borough Board and Cabinet are addressing the concerns of Queens, and although there is
hightened security at Borough Hall and traffic is backing up, people are attending the
meetings. However, he admitted attendance is not what it was before Sept. 11. Shulman
announced at a recent Borough Board Meeting that she plans to meet with court security
administrators to establish metal detectors and other means of security at the lower-level
entrance to the Criminal Court Summons part at Borough Hall.
Security specialist and
former NYPD detective Bo Dietl remembers security at Borough Hall as
"non-existent." He strongly urged Shulman to install some sort of security
system to stop anyone who might try to bring a weapon or explosive device into the
building.
"If someone is going to attack, your
first line of defense is finding a weapon or device," Dietl said.
"You can minimize any risk by
establishing a red zone, a freeze zone that only approved people can pass through."
Another reason for concern is the fact that the
Criminal Court Summons Section is located in the basement of Borough Hall. On a daily
basis, more than 800 people file through the summons part to answer to a judge. In some
cases, more than 25 members of the Latin Kings or Crips street gangs have arrived there to
answer summonses, sources said.
"How do we secure the building from
guns and other weapons? And who do we turn to when a tragedy occurs?," the source
said.
To explain in detail the
measures the American people should take to protect themselves against another vicious
attack like World Trade Center, the 103rd police precinct will hold a conference at York
Colleges Performing Arts Center auditorium at entrance located at the corner Guy
Brewer and Liberty Avenue.
For more information, call the college at
262- 2000.
Michelle Sellers contributed
to this story