Murder rates in most cities drop for 2004, report says
Friday, December 31, 2004 - NEW YORK Big cities were less deadly places to live in
2004 as murder rates declined in several urban areas, including
New York, Chicago and Washington, D.C., according to an
Associated Press survey.
Officials in New York and Chicago credit the drop to
crime-fighting strategies that included putting more officers
on the street and beefing up patrols in dangerous
neighborhoods.
"We really targeted gangs, drugs and guns," Chicago police
spokesman Pat Camden said. "Technology enabled us to take our
gang tactical units and put them in places where we anticipated
violence, areas where narcotics trafficking was bold and
blatant."
There were 445 homicides in Chicago as of Thursday, compared
with 600 in all of 2003, police said. That is a decrease of
about 25 percent and would mark the first year since 1965 that
the city finished with less than 500 murders. The high mark was
in 1992, when there were 940.
Exceptions to the trend were St. Louis, Detroit and
Baltimore, where killings were up following steady declines.
The overall results were consistent with official FBI
statistics for the first six months of 2004, which showed a
nearly 6 percent fall in murders for the nation.
In New York, the murder total was 565 as of Thursday, from
596 in 2003. The total appeared certain to remain below 600 for
the third year in a row levels comparable to the early 1960s.
New York saw a slight increase in murders in 2003.
Experts agree that police deserve credit for driving down
murders. But they add that other factors including a growing
adult population less prone to violence are in play.
"They're doing their part to bring down the murder rate if
only by getting older," said James Alan Fox, a criminal
justice professor at Northeastern University.
Elsewhere, Washington was on track to see one of its lowest
murder rates in recent years. Through Monday, homicides totaled
193, compared with 240 at the same point in 2003.
Other cities reporting decreases in homicides were Las
Vegas, Miami, Phoenix and Philadelphia. Numbers in Los Angeles
and San Diego were about even with last year.
The steepest increase was in St. Louis, where through
Thursday, murders were up 56 percent to 114 from 73. But
police say the total still is the third lowest in nearly 40
years and argue that a campaign to tame a dangerous drug trade
is working.
"It's still a pretty good number historically for this
city, but I think we can do better," Police Chief Joe Mokwa
said of this year's results.
Killings also were up slightly in Detroit as of Dec. 20, to
370 from 366 in 2003. But police view the total favorably
considering the year started with a rash of killings that drove
the murder rate up 50 percent through April.
Police spokesman James Tate said the department reversed the
trend in part by "putting the crunch on illegal narcotics,"
an effort that resulted in the confiscation of $74 million in
drugs.
A violent drug trade also has fueled an increase in slayings
in Baltimore amid continuing turmoil in police leadership,
officials said. The city had logged 278 murders through
Thursday, compared with 271 at the same time last year.
Acting Police Commissioner Leonard Hamm said the department
has emphasized cracking down on gun offenders.
"I think maybe we had lost focus on what the strategy
should be," Hamm said. "My opinion is the strategy of dealing
with homicides effectively has to do with targeting violent
individuals who use guns to ply their trade."
Since 2002, Baltimore has seen one police commissioner leave
under a cloud of suspicion that led to his guilty pleas on
federal corruption charges. His successor was fired last month
about allegations of domestic violence before Hamm took over.
Fox, the criminal justice professor, warned that fixating on
overall homicide rates can conceal troubling trends, such as
increases in youth killings.
"There's a tendency with rosy statistics in recent years to
think this problem has been solved," he said. "Crime can't be
solved; it can only be controlled."
Associated Press writers Brian Witte in Baltimore, Nathaniel
Hernandez in Chicago, Sarah Karush in Detroit and Jim Salter in
St. Louis contributed this report.
News Topics |
Home | Research |
History | Blood Gangs | Crip Gangs | People|
Life in a Gang |
Gallery | Iraqi Cards
|
Memorial |
Migration |
Graffiti | Resume| Injunctions
Homicides |
Maps |
California Prisons | Contact
Original Homies
Download Gang Articles
Copyright © Streetgangs.com, All RIGHTS RESERVED. Disclaimer
All trademarks mentioned herein belong to their respective owners.