From APM Reports <[email protected]>
Subject NEW INVESTIGATION: St. Louis' murder total has fallen, but some killings went uncounted
Date March 31, 2022 7:38 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
APM Reports



[link removed]

[link removed]
St. Louis' murder total has fallen, but some killings went uncounted

[link removed]



When the final numbers showed that St. Louis had reduced its murders last year while other big cities were hitting records, city officials said their success was due to smart use of crime data and effective anti-violence programs.



But over the past two years, St. Louis has quietly lowered its murder count in another way: classifying more than three dozen killings as what are termed justifiable homicides, sometimes in apparent violation of FBI guidelines for reporting crimes, a ProPublica/APM Reports investigation found.



And for a handful of slayings, the department has simply omitted the cases from its annual totals.



&#9659;
[link removed]
Read the story

APM Reports is nonprofit, independent journalism. We count on donations from you to do this important work.

[link removed]

Give Now

[link removed]
Catch up on the Sent Away podcast



Our investigative podcast about the teen treatment industry has published five of its seven episodes. Download now from
[link removed]
Apple ,
[link removed]
Google ,
[link removed]
Spotify or your app of choice. And in the meantime, read some our companion reporting:

[link removed]
Shutting down a teen treatment facility is no easy task, even after serious allegations

[link removed]



Opening a youth treatment center is relatively simple in Utah. But state regulators often can't — or won't — shut a place down after abuse is alleged.
[link removed]
Read .

[link removed]
Here's why Utah will soon make it easier to search a teen treatment program's violation history

[link removed]



Six years ago, a cruel disciplinary act against a young girl was kept secret — she had been forced to sit in a horse trough filled with cold water for 30 minutes. The incident only became public after the Sent Away team released a database of records that included every violation report documented at youth treatment facilities statewide. Today the state is planning to release violation and disciplinary information online.
[link removed]
Read .

[link removed]
Preference Center &#x2758;

[link removed]
Unsubscribe

This email was sent by:
American Public Media

480 Cedar Street Saint Paul, MN, 55101
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis