Overall violent crime statistics are climbing
Mark Sherman
WASHINGTON — Murders, robberies and aggravated assaults in
the United States increased last year, spurring an overall rise
in violent crime for the first time since 2001, according to FBI
data.
Murders rose 4.8 percent, meaning there were more than 16,900 victims
in 2005. That would be the most since 1998 and the largest percentage
increase in 15 years.
Murders soared from 59 to 104 in Birmingham, Ala., up 76 percent;
from 59 to 85 in Charlotte-Mecklenburg County, N.C., a 44 percent
increase; from 89 to 126 in Kansas City, Mo., a 42 percent rise;
from 87 to 122 in Milwaukee, a 40 percent jump; and from 79 to 109
in Cleveland, a 38 percent increase.
Cities with 50,000 to 500,000 people recorded the largest increases
in murder, on average.
Despite the national numbers, Atlanta, Dallas, Denver, Detroit,
Los Angeles and New York were among several large cities that saw
the number of murders drop.
The overall increase in violent crime was modest, 2.5 percent, which
equates to more than 1.4 million crimes. Nevertheless, that was
the largest percentage increase since 1991.
The FBI data, compiled from reports by more than 12,000 law enforcement
agencies, does not contain overall crime numbers in any category,
nor does it offer any explanation for the changes. The FBI’s
final annual crime report comes out in the fall.
Criminal justice experts said the statistics reflect the nation’s
complacency in fighting crime, a product of dramatic declines in
the 1990s and the abandonment of effective programs that emphasized
prevention, putting more police officers on the street and controlling
the spread of guns.
“We see that budgets for policing are being slashed and the
federal government has gotten out of that business,” said
James Alan Fox, a criminal justice professor at Northeastern University
in Boston. ”Funding for prevention at the federal level and
many localities are down and the [National Rifle Association] has
renewed strength.”
Still, Fox said, “We’re still far better off than we
were during the double-digit crime inflation we saw in the 1970s.”
Robberies were up 4.5 percent and aggravated assaults 1.9 percent,
according to preliminary data. Alone among violent crime categories,
the number of rapes fell 1.9 percent.
Violent crimes peaked at 1.9 million in 1992 and fell steadily through
the end of that decade. The number has been relatively stable for
the past six years.
Crime last year increased in all regions, although the 5.7 percent
rise in the Midwest was at least three times any other region’s.
These states make up the Midwest: Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas,
Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South
Dakota and Wisconsin.
Fox cautioned against reading too much into year-to-year changes
in individual cities, saying some differences result from random
variation and marked swings the previous year. Also, some large
statistical increases result from some small numerical changes.
In Hartford, Conn. for example, murders jumped more than 50 percent,
from 16 to 25.
(Associated Press)
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