Sometimes these people “don’t want to know.” They think they should mind their own business, as long as personally they are not affected by the dirty deeds. They feel no obligation to get involved, or be their brother’s keeper. Some are truly afraid, and some think that fighting crime is the exclusive job of the police.
The police cannot be everywhere nor can they be affective at all without information provided by citizen witnesses and informants. But when the witnesses or informants are the source of what results in a criminal case, “a special relationship” is developed between them and the government, and they must be protected.
Over the years I have noticed a general degrading of the value and status of these citizen witnesses in the criminal justice system. The killing of a federal judge or prosecutor creates national media attention and the deployment of every resource in the search for the killers. When policemen are murdered, we see the same type of investigation on a slightly smaller scale. But when witnesses are murdered, unless it is as horrific as the Margo Compton case, we rarely hear about it.
There are specific federal and state laws to protect judges, prosecutors, cops, and witnesses, our wiser forefathers put them there. Today I don’t see the same kind of aggressiveness in charging and prosecuting gang members who threaten or assault citizen witnesses.
Good people are afraid to be witnesses, especially against gangs, for good reason. That is why programs like Secret Witness, We Tip, Unsolved Mysteries, and Americas Most Wanted are so popular. They provide an opportunity for the good citizens to safely help law enforcement against the bad guys.