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JFortune
10-18-2005, 04:19 PM
Did K C Lose the Memo??

Nation's Murder Rate Hits 40-Year Low

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By MICHAEL J. SNIFFEN Associated Press Writer

October 18,2005 | WASHINGTON -- The nation's murder rate declined last year for the first time in four years, dropping to the lowest level in 40 years. Experts said local rather than national trends were mostly responsible.

The rates for all seven major crimes were down and the overall violent crime rate reached a 30-year low, according to the FBI's annual compilation of crimes reported to the police.

There were 391 fewer murders nationwide in 2004 than the year before. The total of 16,137 worked out to 5.5 murders for every 100,000 people.

That's a decline of 3.3 percent from 2003 and the lowest murder rate since 1965, when it was 5.1.

Blumstein said Chicago with a decline of 150 murders and Washington, D.C., with a decline of 50 accounted for 51 percent of the net nationwide drop. St. Louis, on the other hand, saw an increase of 39 murders.

Of 19 large cities with more than 100 murders apiece in 2003, 13 had declines in 2004 while six recorded increases, Blumstein said.

"Most of these changes result from local conditions or random variation," said Professor James Alan Fox of Northeastern University in Boston. The fastest growing population segment is still people over age 50, who commit few violent crimes, so that should produce some decline in murder, but "it's not a rosy picture all around the country."

"The best news is that there's no national increase despite reasons -- like economic conditions -- why it could rise," Fox added. Other reasons he cited were growing gang violence in some cities, local law enforcement budget cuts and a shift of federal law enforcement aid from local police hiring to homeland security.

"It would be easy to look at these numbers and get too complacent about crime," Fox said. "That would be a mistake."

The four major violent crimes -- murder, rape, robbery and aggravated assaults -- declined from 1.38 million in 2003 to 1.37 million in 2004. That produced a 2.2 percent drop in the violent crime rate to 465.5 crimes per 100,000 people -- the lowest since 1974, when it was 461.1.

The three major property crimes -- burglary, auto theft and larceny-theft -- declined from 10.42 million to 10.33 million in 2004. That pulled the property crime rate down 2.1 percent to 3,517.1 crimes per 100,000 people. These crimes produced an estimated loss of $16.1 billion, down 5 percent from 2003.

Chicago officials and academics have credited that city's murder decline to police targeting of gangs, drugs and guns. Blumstein said a program that recruited "ex-offenders to go out into the community to gain intelligence" had helped police flood neighborhoods where trouble might be brewing. By contrast, he said, St. Louis' increase might have been a return to normal trends after a better-than-average year.

The South -- with 36 percent of the nation's population but 43 percent of its murders -- saw larger murder declines than any other region. The Southern regional murder rate declined 5 percent to 6.6 per 100,000.

Blumstein said that might have been driven by declines in Atlanta; Memphis, Tenn., and New Orleans, each with over 100 murders in 2003, or "it might mean the South is becoming more like the rest of the country."

Rape was the only one of the seven crimes to show a numerical increase, up 0.8 percent to 94,635 offenses, but the rate of rape declined 0.2 percent to 32.2 per 100,000 people. Lynn Parish of the Rape, Abuse & Incest Network, a national anti-sexual assault group, said Justice Department studies show the incidence of rape, whether reported to police or not, has been declining over 30 years while reporting of rape to police has climbed for a decade.

The FBI data were compiled from reports to more than 17,000 law enforcement agencies, representing 94.2 percent of the nation's population. The Justice Department has found that barely half of all violent crimes and less than 40 percent of property crimes are reported to the police, but its surveys of crime victims, which also track unreported crimes, show trends similar to those among the reported crimes tracked by the FBI.

--__salon.com

Bhumble
10-18-2005, 04:25 PM
murder is bad mmmmkay

Randy J.
10-18-2005, 04:47 PM
But somehow our murder is climbing, such a great city we live in.

DjNyx
10-18-2005, 05:33 PM
the national murder may be at a 40 year low, but we still lead the world in it by a long shot!

JFortune
10-18-2005, 05:56 PM
Isn't it funny how the article mentions St Louis? What's up with MO? It has gone from a Blue to a Red State over the last few years.....does this have anything to do with it? Does MO's push to the conservative, and morally righteous right, pushing our youths to a violent decay?!


Prolly not. But it sure is fun to think about!

MacGyver
10-18-2005, 06:09 PM
I read an article in Discover magazine that was discussing the recent drop in the murder rate and they attributed the decline to be directly related the the leaps and bounds in medical technology (in particular, the treatment of trauma), not to a decline in violent crime. The associated press is jerkin' us off with their statistics.

MacGyver
10-18-2005, 06:10 PM
^^ I mean seriously, you can cut your penis off and the hospital can reattach it and make it work again. That is not only impressive, but that fact causes me to be a little less cautious around power tools.

snap
10-18-2005, 06:12 PM
Its all the fuckin meth in this city. Meth makes people crazy.

JFortune
10-18-2005, 06:17 PM
I read an article in Discover magazine that was discussing the recent drop in the murder rate and they attributed the decline to be directly related the the leaps and bounds in medical technology (in particular, the treatment of trama), not to a decline in violent crime. The associated press is jerkin' us off with their statistics.


That's interesting. Nice post.

alanalda
10-18-2005, 08:07 PM
I read an article in Discover magazine that was discussing the recent drop in the murder rate and they attributed the decline to be directly related the the leaps and bounds in medical technology (in particular, the treatment of trama), not to a decline in violent crime. The associated press is jerkin' us off with their statistics.




check out this new book called FREAKONOMICS, by economist steven levitt.

Levitt would argue that the decline in all crime rates is due to the decision of Roe vs. Wade; stating that all the children that would have been raised by poor single impoverished mothers (the perpetrators of serious crime) were simply aborted and that is why there is less crime right now.

now isn't that interesting?

JFortune
10-18-2005, 11:14 PM
check out this new book called FREAKONOMICS, by economist steven levitt.

Levitt would argue that the decline in all crime rates is due to the decision of Roe vs. Wade; stating that all the children that would have been raised by poor single impoverished mothers (the perpetrators of serious crime) were simply aborted and that is why there is less crime right now.

now isn't that interesting?

~~ACTUALLY, I'm not exactly sure how i feel about that, to be honest. I'm going to have ta let that marinate a little bit...but it DOES seem like an interesting idea to explore.

Cyrus Ramsey
10-19-2005, 01:54 AM
check out this new book called FREAKONOMICS, by economist steven levitt.

Levitt would argue that the decline in all crime rates is due to the decision of Roe vs. Wade; stating that all the children that would have been raised by poor single impoverished mothers (the perpetrators of serious crime) were simply aborted and that is why there is less crime right now.

now isn't that interesting?

i just started reading that book after hearing aobut it on sirius talk left.

so far im not sure what to think of it, but i have a long way to go.

DjNyx
10-19-2005, 08:55 AM
Its all the fuckin meth in this city. Meth makes people crazy.


THAT would be Independence.

PrincessGirl
10-19-2005, 12:12 PM
Kansas City is always a little behind the times...I don't think I lost we lost the memo, it's just that the right people haven't seen it yet...

Randy J.
10-19-2005, 01:42 PM
^^^It will get here in 5 years when we catch up in time.

snap
10-19-2005, 02:08 PM
THAT would be Independence.

Its not like all the meth users JUST live in Independence... Kansas City has one of the highest percentage of meth addicts in the country.

Of KC's murders 80% are drug related and 50% are unsolved.

JFortune
10-19-2005, 02:09 PM
^^so i guess it doesn't matter then ~>we'll all be dead of bird flu H5N1 by that time!