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Editorial: A sigh of relief

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“Let the justice system handle Mister Toledo.”
That was the very wise advice from Capt. Frank Bachmayer, commander of the 15th Police District, following the arrest of an Aldine Street man who allegedly slashed tires on vehicles belonging to his neighbors in Mayfair and Holmesburg.
While residents may be sleeping a tad bit more soundly these days now that David Toledo has been apprehended and awaits his day in court, folks ought not get too lackadaisical.
They should remain vigilant, aware that quality-of-life crime and the type of low-level urban terrorism Mr. Toledo allegedly put them through can happen anytime. They should continue to join and support their local Town Watch groups — heck, the more the merrier; remember, in unity there is strength — and frequently peer out their windows for signs of trouble.
But residents must never allow their justifiable anger to move beyond the thought process, even if the wheels of justice move at a snail’s pace. A temptation to harass the suspect, his family or his property may be a natural instinct for folks who have lost time, wages and lots of dollars to get their cars repaired following the vandalism, but, as Capt. Bachmayer suggested last week, such action is off-limits. Crime victims must refrain from becoming criminals themselves in the name of retaliation.

• • •

Just as the rule of law is what makes America great, so too are our war veterans. Northeast Philadelphia lost a great one last week, when World War II veteran Ed Comly passed away at age 87.
A perfect way to salute this modest war hero is to rename the American Legion’s Bustleton Memorial Post 810 on Old Newtown Road, which Mr. Comly co-founded, the Comly Post.
Send letters to: pronews@bsmphilly.com

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Nicolas 06/26/2012 5:05 am
Thanks for calling anetttion to this problem. I've been thinking a lot about the abuse of street trees, since the local power company has chainsawed through our neighborhood these past couple of weeks, protecting its power lines at the expense of mature hardwoods. The workers clearly have little knowledge of or respect for trees. It makes me ill to see a mature white oak limbed up almost all the way to the crown, then one large branch left 30 or 40 feet below under the power line. The worst offense was to two huge Southern magnolias that were growing next to (but barely touching) the powerline. I would estimate the age of these magnolias at well over 100 years they are the same size as magnolias that I know were planted immediately after the Civil War. The power company cut the entire top half of both magnolias off (probably the top 15 feet). It is not only sickening to see, but totally unnecessary. Magnolias have very hard wood. I have never seen a Southern magnolia tree downed, or even a limb broken in a storm. Sorry for the length of this comment, but you clearly hit a nerve!
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