Real Life "Kick ***"


Blood Red Arachnid

 

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On Patrol With Phoenix Jones: Guardian of Seattle
By Jonah Spangenthal-Lee


“I’m Phoenix Jones. I’m from the Seattle area. And I fight crime.”
That’s how local masked man Phoenix Jones introduced himself to a group of boisterous college students sitting outside of the Chipotle restaurant in the University District Friday night, as I accompanied him on his nightly patrol.
Jones—not his real name—is the latest masked avenger to gain notoriety as part of a growing Real Life Super Hero movement: people who dress up in costumes and do good deeds, or at least say they do.
Last week, the Seattle Police Department’s Robbery unit sent out an internal memo to officers, warning them that they may soon encounter Jones or his fellow costumed do-gooders—"Thorn," Buster Doe," "Green Reaper," "Gemini," "No Name," "Catastrophe," "Thunder 88," and "Penelope,” according to the memo—who have popped up on Seattle’s increasingly weird streets over the last year.
SPD had a run in with Jones earlier this month when a concerned citizen called police and reported a potential robbery after they spotted two masked men pull their Kia Forte in to a Capitol Hill gas station with its headlights off in the middle of the night.
The masked men were gone by the time officers arrived, but robbery detectives tracked Jones to his secret lair outside of Seattle and spoke with Jones’ Godmother, who told police he "dresses up like a superhero and goes out with his friends at night and does good deeds," according to an internal police document.
Police later contacted the masked avenger, who told police "there are some nuts out there engaged in this same type of behavior” and “wanted to make it clear that they were not part of his group." Jones then agreed to come down to police headquarters and be photographed in-costume.
After learning Jones’ secret identity early Friday (a proud moment for a reporter, if there ever was one), I contacted him for an interview.
Jones agreed to meet in front of a University District comic store after dark. I expected he’d show up in civilian clothes, and I’d buy him a beer at a nearby bar while we talked superheroics and comic books.

An earlier version of Jones' costume
Instead, Jones arrived decked out in mask, cape, and black and gold rubbery suit—which he claims is “bulletproof from the neck down to the kneecaps,” including a ballistic vest, arm and leg trauma plates, a ballistic cup, and sculpted plastic abs—and we headed off down University Way for his nightly patrol.
As we walk down the Ave, Jones—who’s in his early 20s—tells me how he got into the crimefighting game.
About a year ago, he read a quote from one of the Guardian Angels in a comic book which, along with a lifetime of reading comics—especially those of his favorite heroes, Nightwing and Green Lantern—apparently inspired him to take up a life of crimefighting.
“People don’t take care of people,” he says, as we walk past a crowded bus stop on the Ave.
Jones’ get-up looks quite a bit like Batman’s costume and, just like the Dark Knight, he’s a trained, title-winning amateur martial artist, and carries a utility belt stocked with a hefty-looking cattle prod-like stun gun and pepper spray, but never a gun.
He’s still working on his elaborate costume, and is developing an iconic logo for himself—possibly the silhouette of him standing atop the Space Needle, he says.
Some people on the Ave walk up to shake his hand. Someone jokingly asks Jones if “lost a bet.” One woman tells Jones he’s “creepy looking.”
Jones is an amazingly affable guy. There’s earnestness in his interactions with people on the street, and while he seems to enjoy the attention, and you get a sense he genuinely believes he can make a difference, as he gives out handshakes like they were going out of style.
But it’s clear some of the harsh words and disbelief from people on the street get to him. As we walk down the Ave, a group of young men crack wise about his costume and ask if he really thinks he’s going to do any good.
Jones’ hackles go up after one of the college-age men asks him “how well he knows his body” and tells Phoenix he’s “going to need more than luck” to fight crime.
As we walk away, Jones mumbles that people who say things like that to him ‘typically aren’t in very good shape.”
Jones says he’s been on the receiving end from wisecracks and jeers from the late-night crowd since he went out on his first patrol about a year ago.
“I walked around downtown and didn’t see any crime,” he says. “It was pretty embarrassing actually.”
Several weeks later, Jones had his first big break of sorts when he stopped a late-night knife fight under a bridge, and had his first run-in with police.
“They told me to take my mask off,” he says. “I told them I’m a superhero and I don’t take my mask off. I’ve been fighting real crimes ever since.”
Now, Jones says he goes out on patrol every night, always in a different location.
Jones certainly talks a big game, and claims in the last year he’s been involved in about 30 different incidents, including four violent confrontations.
He says he’s made several citizen’s arrests—including a takedown of a “Peckerwood gang” member on Capitol Hill, and a suspect who was threatening someone with a golf club near the International District.
While Jones proudly talks about his good deeds, he wasn’t able to provide many details —like names of suspects or dates of incidents—to corroborate his stories.
Jones also claims he’s been stabbed—a picture of the supposed wound is posted on his Facebook page—and says he was shot in Tacoma last year. But again, he declined to provide further details about the incidents.
When asked where he receives medical treatment—as hospital staff typically report gunshot wounds and other serious assaults to police—Jones simply said he knows a doctor who fixes him up when he’s injured in the line of duty.
Jones doesn’t seem to be worried about being killed or maimed while playing superhero, but the cops sure think that's how he'll end up.
Several SPD officers chuckled or groaned when we asked them about Jones. None were specifically familiar with him, but all questioned the saneness of his vigilantism. One officer jokingly (sort of) asked how long Jones would last at the corner of Rainier and Henderson. Another called him “crazy.”
Again, this is nothing new for Jones.
“I’m not crazy. Eccentric maybe. But I really am here to help,” Jones says, adding that he also isn’t trying to get attention for himself.
“If I wanted attention, I’d take the mask off,” he says.
While Jones seems like a genuine enough guy, it’s still a bit tough to buy into his costumed altruism.
Aside from being unable to provide hard evidence of any of his good deeds, he’s clearly not equipped to do more than react to crime, rather than deal with the root causes.
While he may be able to chase down a purse snatcher or break up a bar fight, it seems highly unlikely that he has the ability to, say, get a 14-year-old girl out of a life of prostitution and into therapy and a stable home life.
Jones’ costumed heroics are ultimately rooted in comic book morality where crime is all about black and white/good and evil, with no gray areas or contributing socioeconomic factors.
When asked whether he’d try to arrest someone he caught smoking marijuana, he said he follows police guidelines and considers it a low priority. Then he says he doesn’t have a problem with people using drugs, but wants drug dealers to “sell somewhere else.”
That’s the kind of circular logic that makes Jones’ alleged costumed do-goodery great on paper, but impractical in real life.
Jones has the right idea—as he says, people don’t take care of people—but putting on a costume doesn’t make one a hero. Hopefully he and Seattle’s new crew of costumed crimefighters can do some good without getting killed.


Bonnie and her bunny
Arc ID: 59406

The Trash Came Back
Arc ID: 350303

 

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he’s clearly not equipped to do more than react to crime, rather than deal with the root causes.
While he may be able to chase down a purse snatcher or break up a bar fight, it seems highly unlikely that he has the ability to, say, get a 14-year-old girl out of a life of prostitution and into therapy and a stable home life.
Jones’ costumed heroics are ultimately rooted in comic book morality where crime is all about black and white/good and evil, with no gray areas or contributing socioeconomic factors.
Without commenting on the guy at all, I don't think someone having their purse snatched or someone about to be stabbed really cares about morality or "socioeconomic factors."
You heard it here first guys, if you see someone getting mugged, just let it happen, since you won't actually be getting to the true root of the problem or anything.


 

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^Reminds me of a story someone once told me:

A man buys a house on the beach, and while staying in this house he notices that every day a boy walks out onto the beach and starts throwing starfish back into the ocean. After a few days of seeing this boy do this, the man walks out and confronts the boy over his actions.

"What are you doing?" the man asks. The boy replies "I'm saving the starfish". The man smirks and then says "Your kidding yourself if you think your going to save all of the starfish. There are too many of them. Throwing starfish back won't change anything. It's meaningless!"

The boy then reaches down on the beach and picks up a starfish. The boy turns to the man and says "Well, it certainly means a lot to this one", and throws the starfish back into the ocean.



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Originally Posted by Blood Red Arachnid View Post
^Reminds me of a story someone once told me:

A man buys a house on the beach, and while staying in this house he notices that every day a boy walks out onto the beach and starts throwing starfish back into the ocean. After a few days of seeing this boy do this, the man walks out and confronts the boy over his actions.

"What are you doing?" the man asks. The boy replies "I'm saving the starfish". The man smirks and then says "Your kidding yourself if you think your going to save all of the starfish. There are too many of them. Throwing starfish back won't change anything. It's meaningless!"

The boy then reaches down on the beach and picks up a starfish. The boy turns to the man and says "Well, it certainly means a lot to this one", and throws the starfish back into the ocean.
Exactly right.
The people who blither on about 'not solving the true root of the problem'...a set of people called the Government should be doing that, dontcha think? It shoudln't have to get to the point of average joes trying to crush crime rings and save children from lives like that. But the stuff they do do? I say that's admirable.

While I'm not sure I'd have the guts (I sure don't have the physique or training) to do that sorta thing, I applaud those who do.


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Originally Posted by Zwillinger View Post
GG, I would tell you that "I am killing you with my mind", but I couldn't find an emoticon to properly express my sentiment.
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Originally Posted by Captain_Photon View Post
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Originally Posted by Zikar View Post
Without commenting on the guy at all, I don't think someone having their purse snatched or someone about to be stabbed really cares about morality or "socioeconomic factors."
You heard it here first guys, if you see someone getting mugged, just let it happen, since you won't actually be getting to the true root of the problem or anything.
That's the thing that frustrates me with these various interviews with Jones. It's like they take pot-shots at what he's trying to do outside of the interview, talking about these underlying problems that he leaves unsolved. Honestly, it's not about getting out there to stop crime. It's having the moral integrity to not want to stand for crime being present in your society. Any upstanding citizen shouldn't want to stand for this but many have become so lax, so compliant with such activity, they just turn a shoulder to it all and let someone else fix it.

Like some years back, there were a string of robberies in homes near my house. A small group of citizens went knocking on each house in the daytime, warning people and asking to keep porch lights on at night and just keep an ear out. I kept my lights on but looking to the other houses, some obviously couldn't be bothered. That some people even went warning people is a leap in progressed, if enough actually cared, we might have been able to form a decent Neighborhood watch to stop it from happening anymore.

That Jones has to go out and put on that costume at all kind of illustrates what's wrong with us. There should just be more normal people keeping an eye out, taking care of people. You don't really need a costume for it, but then you won't get on the news to make the point either.