The Killing of Lisa Steinberg
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The City That Couldn't Save A Little Girl
New York City’s municipal government is larger than that of many nations. It is a sprawling, diverse, incomprehensible network of bureaucracy. Probably nowhere in the world is there a city that has as many commissions, departments, social service agencies, family courts, programs, committees all dedicated to the welfare of its citizens. Critics have said that the city is drowning under its own weight, so large is its governmental infrastructure. There are child protective groups of every shape and size, all focused on protecting children from abuse and exploitation. When Lisa died, all of it, the vast empire of social programs, the billions of dollars it spent every year and the thousands of people it employed, became the target of fierce public scrutiny and a torrent of angry criticism.

New York’s West Village (Mark Gado)

Street (Mark Gado)
“What should the neighbors do?” The Times asked in a November 6 editorial. “What police saw on Monday suggests that more neighbors should have called and called again, thus motivating more police response.” But there was no simple or quick explanation for the bureaucratic bungling of the entire Steinberg-Nussbaum affair. A defenseless woman was beaten, apparently for years with little or no intervention, and despite in-home visits from social workers and police, two kids were grossly mistreated. Now one of the children had suffered a grisly death.
One neighbor, who could have been speaking for an entire city, said to reporters: “I ask myself what else I should have done. I don’t know what else I could have done, short of dragging the kid out the door with a gun!”

































