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The video was shot by Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) officers on Sunday amid the grime and litter of Skid Row, the name given to an expansive area of downtown that is said to be home to 12,000 homeless people. Earlier this year, rumours abounded that hospitals and other police forces were dumping discharged patients and released offenders there, partly as a way to avoid having to deal with the thorny problem of what to do with people who might not have anywhere to go, and partly because they believed Skid Row had a wealth of agencies equipped to deal with the homeless. For these reasons, some local hospitals said when confronted, many patients demanded to be taken to Skid Row.
Sixty-year-old Johny Williams, however, didn't want to go to Skid Row when he was discharged from hospital on Sunday. He wanted to go to a convalescent nursing home in Pasadena. Instead, the ambulance driver took him to Skid Row, where he was videotaped by police.
'This is where they dumped me off at,' Williams told investigating officers.
Marcus Joe Licon, 62, wanted to be taken to his son's house when he was released from hospital, where he had gone with a painful knee. After being given some painkillers, the ambulance took him to Skid Row. The police took him home.
'Our supervisors gave that guy a ride back to his house,' Sergeant Greg McManus told reporters. 'His family was outraged. Not only did they not know he had been discharged but the fact he had been brought to Skid Row instead of back home was a further outrage.'
The videos have given police sufficient grounds to open an investigation into the Skid Row dumping. In March, they reported seeing someone wandering around Skid Row in a confused state wearing a colostomy bag. Television news also featured the case of a homeless woman named Carol Ann Reyes who was filmed being dropped on Skid Row by a taxi shortly after being discharged from a local hospital. She was still wearing a hospital gown and slippers.
'Skid Row is akin to Dante's Inferno - not the place you want to be discharging patients, especially elderly patients or patients who are disoriented, suffering from a medical disability or disorder,' Jeff Isaacs, the head of the Los Angeles city attorney's criminal branch, told Reuters.
The LAPD chief, William Bratton, attacked the practice at a news conference. 'There is an expression in the medical community of, 'First, do no harm',' he said. 'When a hospital or ambulance service drops someone in Skid Row and leaves them there against their will, they are exposing them to danger.'
Mr Bratton and the LAPD are playing the hard cop-soft cop routine familiar from so many Hollywood B movies. While the police chastise hospitals and others for dumping people on Skid Row, Mr Bratton is pursuing a zero-tolerance policy on downtown's streets, rigidly enforcing a recent ordinance that makes it an offence to sleep on Skid Row during the daytime.
The practice has its opponents. 'LA remains the only city in the US whose answer to homelessness is to criminalise being poor,' Mark Rosenbaum, a lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union, told the Associated Press. 'A programme that relies on criminalisation isn't going to solve any of the social problems.'
Mr Bratton claims the policy is already a great success, as every day his officers move on the mix of addicts and homeless and mentally ill people from the shadow of the splendours of downtown, from Frank Gehrys' Disney Concert Hall to the less architecturally challenging Staples Centre.
The LAPD claims that 600 people were arrested for selling drugs in the first week of the new policy, which bears the Orwellian title of the Safer Cities Initiative. Crime in the area, it claims, dropped 24% in the four weeks since the policy began, with violent crime falling 37%.
Meanwhile, police hope to contribute to a rise in the crime statistics by bringing charges against the hospitals and taxi services involved in the alleged dumping of patients. City prosecutors say they are looking at bringing charges of false imprisonment or violation of laws regarding the treatment of patients.