…and Fall
“LEFRAK CITY HOMICIDE ENDS CITY’S TEN-DAY STREAK”-Times Ledger, January 2013
“LIFE AND DEATH IN LEFRAK” -NYT, March 2013
“DA SAYS 46 ARRESTED IN LEFRAK DRUG STING”-Times Ledger, October 2011
Since its inception in the late 1960s, LeFrak City has been synonymous with the issues of public housing and is considered an infamous crime corner of Queens. Its location on Junction Boulevard was a significant factor in its infamous reputation. Junction Boulevard, at the beginning and height of the Civil Rights era, was considered the “Mason-Dixon line of Corona”; the commercial center of the boulevard divided the lower-middle class blacks on the eastern side of Corona and the upper-middle class whites on western Corona. In addition to the influx of middle to lower-income families into LeFrak in the early 1970s, the remaining racial tensions in the area led to a stifling atmosphere for the community members.
“LeFrak security is bad. These kids are ten going on forty […] When I moved to [LeFrak] there was no crime […] [The DA] doesn’t want to admit we need more policemen“
–Joe Sardegna, Chief of Security for Queens Public Library, ca. 1995 (from “Black Corona: Race and Politics of Place”, by Steven Gregory, 1998)
Crime in LeFrak City remains an issue for the community of South Corona. Due to the lack of affordable housing for middle to low income families in central Queens, the stagnant, crime-ridden life of the residents of LeFrak City may just be inescapable.