Cam'ron went on to say, "Where I come from, once word gets out that you've cooperated with the police, that only makes you a bigger target of criminal violence." So, Cam, let's get this straight: Instead of having the guts to use your influence and your riches to effect change that might help poor people coping with violence in their neighborhoods, you would rather pledge your allegiance to the prison code of "No Snitching." You're a class act, Cam.
"No Snitching" is not just a T-shirt slogan. It has a very real effect in the real world. In some inner city neighborhoods in this country, the closure rate for homicides is less than 10 percent. Some activists in these neighborhoods blame police for failure to solve these crimes, saying that you are lazy because you can only solve crimes when somebody snitches. People who make this argument obviously believe that "C.S.I." is a documentary. How in the world are you supposed to solve a crime without witnesses?
As a society, we need to do something to protect crime witnesses. Certainly, there are already laws against witness intimidation, but they need to be strengthened. Perhaps any kind of intimidation of a witness should be two strikes—that includes making verbal threats. As for killing a witness, anyone who gets convicted of that one needs to fry, because murdering a witness is actually killing the entire criminal justice system.
There are those who say that law enforcement needs to do a better job of protecting informants and witnesses. They are absolutely right. But more importantly, society itself needs to send the message that intimidating witnesses on any level will not be tolerated.