From xxxxxx <[email protected]>
Subject How Bad is the Rise in US Homicides? Factchecking the ‘Crime Wave’ Narrative Police are Pushing
Date July 1, 2021 5:00 AM
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[ Homicides were up across the US in 2020 and appeared to be
primarily driven by rising gun violence, but other crimes fell]
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HOW BAD IS THE RISE IN US HOMICIDES? FACTCHECKING THE ‘CRIME
WAVE’ NARRATIVE POLICE ARE PUSHING  
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Lois Beckett and Abené Clayton
June 30, 2021
The Guardian
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_ Homicides were up across the US in 2020 and appeared to be
primarily driven by rising gun violence, but other crimes fell _

A vigil for the victims of a shooting in San Jose, California, on 27
May 2021., Photograph: Amy Osborne/AFP/Getty Images

 

There’s been a wave of media coverage this summer about an increase
in homicides across the United States, with attention often focused on
the same political question: will Americans still want to defund or
even reform the police if “violent crime” is on the rise?

Anxiety about violent crime is often used to win elections. Police and
politicians routinely share misleading, out-of-context crime
statistics to advance their agendas. Fearmongering about rising crime
has also been used for decades to undermine Black Americans’
protests for civil rights. So it’s important to ask: is this
homicide increase actually significant? And how much evidence is there
for any of the explanations about why killings are going up?

The numbers

After decades of a primarily downward trend in the overall number of
people killed, crime experts say they expect 2020 will mark the
biggest single-year national jump in homicides since national crime
statistics began to be released in the 1960s.

A preliminary government estimate shows a 25% single-year increase
in 
[[link removed]]killings
in 2020. In some larger cities
[[link removed]],
the number of homicides has remained higher than usual 
[[link removed]]through
the early months of 2021.

While official national crime data will not be released for months,
some trends are clear. The 2020 homicide increase happened across
cities and towns of all sizes, from those with fewer than 10,000
residents to those with more than a million, according to preliminary
FBI data.

The rise in homicides likely translated into an additional 4,000 to
5,000 people killed
[[link removed]] across
the country compared with the year before, according to early
estimates.

It was an especially hard year for cities that have never seen
decreases in gun violence to match the overall national trend.
Philadelphia and St Louis returned close to their historic highs for
the number of people killed in a single year, according to
the Philadelphia Inquirer
[[link removed]] and
the St Louis Post-Dispatch
[[link removed]].
Chicago, which had seen homicides fall below 500 in the early 2010s,
saw them jump to 770 in 2020, though not to its historic 1974 high of
970 homicides, according to the Chicago Tribune
[[link removed]].

It does not take a huge numerical increase in killings to translate
into big percentage increases in a city’s homicide rate. Chicago, a
city of 2.7 million people, saw 300 more people killed in 2020 than in
2019, and more than 1,000 additional nonfatal shootings, according to
data from AmericanViolence.org.

New York, a city of 8 million people, saw an increase of about 150
homicides and 700 nonfatal shootings.

Smaller cities saw smaller total increases: Oakland and Minneapolis,
which both have populations of about 400,000 people, each saw
homicides increase by about 30 additional people killed last year, and
between 100 and 270 additional nonfatal shootings.

And yet, even after an estimated 25% single-year increase
[[link removed]] in
homicides, Americans overall are much less likely to be killed today
than they were in the 1990s, and the homicide rate across big cities
is still close to half what it was
[[link removed]] a
quarter century ago.

New York City saw more than 2,200 killings in a single year in 1990,
compared with 468 last year, according to city data
[[link removed]].
In the bigger picture, that’s a nearly 80% decrease
[[link removed]].

Los Angeles saw more than 1,000 homicides a year in the early 1990s,
compared with fewer than 350 last year.

What we know and don’t know

The homicide increase appears to be primarily driven by rising gun
violence, with the nonprofit Gun Violence Archive reporting nearly
4,000 additional gun killings nationwide in 2020 compared with the
year before.

But what’s happening with homicides is not part of some broader
“crime wave.” In fact, many crimes, from larcenies to robberies to
rape, dropped during the pandemic, and continued to fall during the
first few months of 2021. “Crime” is not surging. Even the broader
category of “violent crime” only increased about 3% last year,
according to the preliminary FBI data from a large subset of cities.
It’s homicide in particular that has increased, even as other crimes
fell.

Early data also suggests the homicide increase isn’t happening at
random, but that much of the additional violence is clustered in
disadvantaged neighborhoods of color that were already struggling with
higher rates of gun violence before the pandemic, according to Richard
Rosenfeld, a criminologist who has authored multiple national reports
on crime and violence trends.

“Everything we know suggests that the increases in homicide are
occurring in the very neighborhoods where homicide has been
traditionally concentrated,” he said. “What we’re not seeing is
a spreading-out of homicide.”

National demographic data for the people killed in 2020 is not yet
available. But it’s likely that a substantial proportion of the
homicide victims were Black Americans, at the same time that Black
Americans were suffering disproportionate rates of Covid-19 infection
and death, as well as witnessing the aftermath of a global uprising
against police killings of unarmed Black people.

_Lois Beckett is a senior reporter covering gun policy, criminal
justice and the far right in the United States. Twitter @loisbeckett
[[link removed]]. Click here
[[link removed]] for
Lois Beckett's public key.  Abené Clayton is a reporter on the
Guardian's Guns and Lies in America project. _ 

Reasons for the increase

No single narrative can ever explain the dynamics of violence in a
single city, much less across an entire country. Fatal violence is
relatively rare and often intensely personal: according to FBI data,
many American homicide victims know their killers
[[link removed]].
National crime data is usually just the sum of a range of
contradictory, extremely local crime trends.

But there is some evidence that national factors, including the many
stresses and disruptions of the pandemic, may have played a role in
the 2020 homicide increase. The uptick was “widespread,” Rosenfeld
said. In an analysis of big city crime trends
[[link removed]] for
the nonprofit Council on Criminal Justice, “We found very few cities
that did not experience pretty significant rises in homicide during
2020,” he said.

Homicide rates were higher during every month of 2020 – even before
pandemic-related shutdowns
[[link removed]] started
in March, the analysis found. But there was also a “structural
break” in the data in June, indicating “a large, statistically
significant increase” in the homicide rate, around the same time as
the mass protests that followed the murder of George Floyd.

So far, there’s a lot of political rhetoric, and relatively little
data or hard evidence, about how substantially different factors may
have contributed to the 2020 increase.

Alongside a global pandemic, and a major protest movement against
police violence and systemic racism, the US saw a historic rise in gun
sales during 2020.

A preprint study
[[link removed]] from
researchers at the University of California, Davis, which has not yet
been peer-reviewed, suggested that a spike in gun purchases during the
early months of the pandemic was associated with a nearly 8% increase
in gun violence
[[link removed]] from
March through May, or 776 additional fatal and nonfatal shooting
injuries nationwide. The researchers found that states that had lower
levels of violent crime pre-Covid saw a stronger connection between
additional gun purchases and more gun violence.

[People wait in line to enter a gun store in Culver City, California,
15 March 2020.]

People wait in line to enter a gun store in Culver City, California,
15 March 2020. Photograph: Ringo HW Chiu/AP

Community groups say that the pandemic forced them to shutter
prevention programs
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and created huge challenges for the work of violence interrupters
[[link removed]],
who rely on close relationships and in-person interventions with
people at risk of shooting or being shot.

Many of the political claims about the homicide increase focus on pro-
and anti-police sentiment, and about the future of the controversial
effort to shift public dollars away from police departments and
towards community violence prevention programs.

Some police officials and their allies have asserted that last
summer’s big, volatile protests against police violence diverted
police resources and attention
[[link removed]] away
from their normal patrols, and have suggested that demoralized, angry
police officers might be less proactive or effective in dealing with
violent crime.

But Jeff Asher, a crime analyst who writes extensively about homicide
trends, examined 60 cities and found no correlation 
[[link removed]]between
the number of Black Lives Matter protests, and the size of a city’s
homicide increase.

Rosenfeld cautioned that any policing-focused explanation for the
homicide increase needed to explain why the change would have only
affected serious and deadly violence.

“Most crime is down, including most felony, serious crime,” he
said. “If the de-policing argument is correct, why did it only
affect an uptick in violence and not other street crime?”

Attempting to link changes in how police operated to the political
protests after George Floyd’s murder also made less sense than
looking at the sweeping disruptions in operations due to Covid-19, he
argued.

“If there has been substantial de-policing, suspect number one is
the pandemic,” he said.

While elevated homicide rates had continued into early 2021 in some
cities, Rosenfeld added, the increase already appeared to be slowing.

“I do not expect homicide rates to reach the levels this coming
summer that they were at last summer,” he said.

‘People do not _want_ to understand’

For Americans who have spent years working to reduce gun violence at
the community level, the media response to the rise in killings is
deeply frustrating.

“There may have been an increase in 2020, but that’s not what the
media portrayed: they portrayed it as ‘Shit’s off the hook,’”
said DeVone Boggan, the founder of Advance Peace, a community
violence intervention strategy
[[link removed]] first
developed in Richmond, California.

The Bay Area city saw gun homicide rates drop by nearly 70%
[[link removed]] over
the past decade. In 2020 the city saw a modest increase in homicides
with 22 people killed
[[link removed]] that
year compared to 17 the year before.

“Those increases that the city had are unfortunate, but they’re
not as high as they were before strategies like ours.”

“People do not want to understand the level of distress, grief,
trauma and destabilization, both economically and socially, that Black
communities have had to endure in this once-in-a generation global
pandemic,” said Pastor Michael McBride, the executive director of
Live Free USA, a national advocacy organization. McBride has worked
for nearly a decade at the intersection of criminal justice reform and
gun violence prevention.

“The way we cover death in America is always different when the
victims are Black, and right now, we ought to be talking about the
victimization of Black victims and community and not the ‘crime
rate.’”

_Lois Beckett is a senior reporter covering gun policy, criminal
justice and the far right in the United States. Twitter @loisbeckett
[[link removed]]. Click here
[[link removed]] for
Lois Beckett's public key.  Abené Clayton is a reporter on the
Guardian's Guns and Lies in America project_

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