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But if Turner expects to get the attention of Dallas leaders, law enforcement, and area neighborhood associations with Crime and Politics, he's already done that. The fledgling freebie is a grassroots effort by Turner and partner Doug Nord to spotlight crime, convicted sex offenders, city code violators, and sexually oriented businesses in Turner's neighborhood -- a mix of homes, topless bars, apartment complexes, and shopping centers bounded by LBJ on the north, Marsh Lane on the west, Northwest Highway on the south, and the Dallas North Tollway on the east. Turner prints 5,000 copies of the 6-month-old anti-crime crusade and distributes them every three weeks.
Turner's front-page photo of a controversial "Condom Sense" billboard promoting an adult novelty store on Walnut Hill Lane is typical of the paper's mission. "That was a heated issue for the Walnut Hill-area merchants," he says. "It was a good story, and we hope it encouraged people to take individual responsibility and get involved." Turner wrote the folksy-toned, typo-ridden saga himself, and says he got a lot of media mileage out of it.
Dallas City Council member Donna Blumer found Crime and Politics on her doorstep, she says, when the publication first came out, and noticed from the "Crime at a Glance" map how Bachman Lake-area crime affected people in her district. "There was a lot of crime in the area which borders District 13 to the east," she says. "I'd been involved with several neighborhood associations who were working to fight crime, so I was already interested." She met Turner when he introduced himself at City Hall, and Blumer says, "He's not one of those people who sits around and grouses about problems. He does something about it." Her constituents, she says, are supportive of the paper.
Turner's editorial policy includes focusing on the good with the bad, highlighting achievements by local police, neighborhood watch groups, and community-service organizations that mentor trouble-prone local kids. He and Nord report what local politicians are doing -- or not doing -- about what he says is a growing and frustrating crime problem in Dallas. "For a lot of our readers and constituents," he says, "their big concern is to try to clean up the area, increase property values, and make it more of a family environment."
The fifth and most recent issue came out October 1, with a cover story about community activist Linda Neel, who was recognized by the city council for her work as the neighborhood crime-watch chairwoman for the Bachman Northwest Highway Community Association.
Based on the feedback he has had from readers who see Crime and Politics through a combination of door-to-door distribution, subscription sales, and a growing number of racks at neighborhood businesses, Turner believes he's making a difference, although not a profit. "I didn't say I was making a living doing this," the 35-year-old, fourth-generation Dallasite says. "I said the paper is paying for itself, and it did from the very first issue."
The Northwest division of the Dallas police cooperates with Crime and Politics, furnishing crime statistics to Turner. "They do this for me as a favor," Turner says. "They were apprehensive at first as to what the publication was going to be about. I can understand that, because they're always beat up on." The paper ran a flattering profile of Deputy Chief John C. Martinez when he was named head of the Northwest division. Martinez says he has come to think of Turner's paper as a kind of report card on how the division is doing. "It gives people an understanding of what's going on in their community," Martinez says. "If crime is down, they need to know that. If crime is up, they need to know that too. They have to work just as hard as we do to improve their neighborhoods."
Martinez says Crime and Politics' reporting of statistics alleviates the perception that the area's entertainment district attracts more than its share of criminal activity. "Actually, right now, crime is low," he says. "Where we could improve is in nonviolent crime. We encourage people to lock their cars, take their cell phones with them, that sort of thing. We encourage people to do something to help themselves."