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These Are America’s 10 Most Dangerous Small Cities
http://www.movoto.com ^ | March 26, 2014 | Randy Nelson

Posted on 03/31/2014 6:27:23 AM PDT by Red Badger

If you’re hoping to escape from big city crime, look elsewhere. These places actually defy the stereotype of smaller cities being safer.

When you see small towns on TV and in movies, they’re almost always idyllic places where the American dream is thriving and neighbors all know each other. That, and unless you’re watching a whodunnit, no one’s ever the victim of a crime.

In reality, small cities are surprisingly similar to all the others, meaning that there are good ones and bad. While the Movoto Real Estate Blog has been writing lately about America’s safest places, we thought we’d switch gears today and look the small cities where crime is a real concern.

After studying more than 200 small cities, we’ve concluded that Wilmington, DE is the most dangerous in terms of crime. It’s joined in this dubious honor by nine other places to comprise our 10 most dangerous small cities in America:

1. Wilmington, DE

2. Canton, OH

3. Jackson, TN

4. Rocky Mount, NC

5. North Little Rock, AR

6. Pensacola, FL

7. Daytona Beach, FL

8. Homestead, FL

9. Lauderhill, FL

10. Warner Robins, GA

Florida accounted for the single largest share of cities in the top 10, with four. It’s interesting to note that all 10 are either in the Midwestern, Mid-Atlantic, or Southern regions of the country.

You can read more about the top 10 most dangerous below, and see a ranking of the 50 most dangerous at the end of this post. Next, we’ll go over our methodology for building this ranking. How We Created This Report

To produce this ranking, we first decided on a list of small cities between 50,000 and 75,000 residents in size. After eliminating those without available crime data, we were left with a list of 234 places to study.

Using data from the FBI’s 2012 uniform crime report, the latest available, we measured seven distinct crimes using the total reported incidents of each:

Burglary

Theft

Motor vehicle theft

Murder

Rape

Robbery

Assault

We separated these crimes into four groups: murders, violent crimes (murder, rape, robbery, and assault), property crimes (burglary, theft, and motor vehicle theft), and total crimes. The cities were then ranked on the incidents of each group per 100,000 residents per year, from 1 to 234, with a higher score being more dangerous. We calculated the number of crimes per 100,000 residents for 2012 in order to have a level playing field on which to compare cities with varying population sizes.

The individual rankings (murders, violent crimes, property crimes and total crimes) were then weighted to create a final overall score. Murders, violent crimes, and property crimes each comprised 30 percent of the total, while total crimes made up 10 percent. The higher this combined score, the more dangerous the city.

Below, you’ll find a breakdown of how each of the 10 most dangerous small cities fared when judged on these criteria.

1. Wilmington, DE

The most dangerous small city we studied, Wilmington is on the larger end of our range with a population of just over 72,000. Despite the efforts of local authorities, which have included placing the city’s entire downtown area under CCTV surveillance and other aggressive tactics, crime continues to be a serious problem in Wilmington. It topped the list in terms of violent crime, outranking 233 other cities for this dubious honor, with 1,703 violent crimes per 100,000 residents.

Wilmington didn’t fare much better in other areas, ranking as the third-most dangerous small city in terms of murder (it saw 26 in 2012) and total crime (5,052 were reported there the same year). The only instance in which it did even slightly better—and then only relatively—was property crimes, where it placed ninth overall for its 5,305 crimes per 100,000.

With a reported 150 shootings by the end of 2013, it would seem that Wilmington has a long way to go before it can be considered a safer place to live.

2. Canton, OH

Ohio is known for lots of things, and thankfully being crime-ridden isn’t one of them. Like most states, though, it has its rough spots, and Canton is one of them. A little more than 50 miles outside of Cleveland, this city made No. 2 on our list with a couple of second-place crime rankings: property crimes and total crimes.

In terms of the former, there were 6,550 property crimes per 100,000 residents there in 2012, and for the latter Canton had 7,562 total crimes per 100,000. Thefts led the list of property crimes, with 2,671 reported that year. Elsewhere in our rankings, Canton placed eighth for murder with 10 in all and eighth for violent crime in general with 1,011 per 100,000 people.

3. Jackson, TN

Named for native Tennessean and America’s seventh President, Andrew Jackson, this city of nearly 66,000 in Madison County has the dubious distinction of placing fourth overall in terms of both murders and violent crimes per 100,000. It earned that first ranking for the 11 murders reported there in 2012; one more than Canton, in fact.

Jackson’s second fourth-place rank came from its 1,348 violent crimes per 100,000 residents that year. It fared substantially better in both property crimes and total crimes per 100,000, where it ranked 16th and 11th, respectively.

4. Rocky Mount, NC

Remember how we said every state has its rough spots? Well, North Carolina is home to places like Cary, NC, which are exceedingly safe, but also those like Rocky Mount, which certainly aren’t. In fact, this city of about 58,000 was the sixth most dangerous we looked at in terms of violent crimes, with 1,039 per 100,000 residents in 2012.

Rocky Mount performed ever-so-slightly better when it came to homicides, where it placed seventh overall with 14 per 100,000. Its rankings for property crimes and total crimes per 100,000 were slightly better. It placed 13th for the former with 4,693 and 12th for the latter with 5,732.

5. North Little Rock, AR

Situated across the Arkansas River from Little Rock, AR proper, North Little Rock is only about 30 percent as large as its namesake but actually has more per capita crime. This city’s 5,920 crimes in 2012 were enough to earn it first place in terms of total crimes, while it also took first in property crimes (there were 5,471 of those).

Fortunately, the city’s violent crime ranking was considerably lower at 26th overall, with 623 crimes per 100,000 residents reported in 2012. Its 13 murders per 100,000 were enough to earn it 12th place for that criterion.

With crime stats like this, it’s no wonder the North Little Rock Police Department has been experimenting with drones for the past few years and has plans to use them over high-crime neighborhoods in the not-too-distant future.

6. Pensacola, FL

Pensacola is the first of four cities in Florida that made our top 10 most dangerous places, which also means it’s the most dangerous of the bunch. It also happens to be the smallest by about 10,000 residents. Despite this, it ranks six places higher than the next-most dangerous small Florida city in terms of murder; Pensacola placed 10th overall in that category with 13 homicides per 100,000 residents in 2012.

As for violent crimes in general, Pensacola placed 19th with 656 per 100,000. For property crime, North Little Rock ranked 23rd, which is actually the second-safest in our top 10, while for total crime it placed 21st; the safest in our top 10 when judged that way.

7. Daytona Beach, FL

Probably best known outside Florida for NASCAR’s annual Daytona 500 race, Daytona Beach is fittingly on the higher end of the scale when it comes to motor vehicle thefts (it had 346 in 2012). In fact, the city ranked eighth overall when it came to property crime, with 5,367 per 100,000 residents. This was just slightly better than its rank for violent crime, where it placed ninth overall.

Daytona Beach placed sixth when it came to total crimes, with 6,359 per 100,000 people. Fortunately, it fared much better in terms of the most serious crime we looked at—Murder—where it ranked 44th overall with six per 100,000 during 2012.

8. Lauderhill, FL

Located just west of Fort Lauderdale, FL, the small city of Lauderhill is the safest place in our top 10 as far as property crimes go. It placed 32nd overall in that criterion, with 4,070 property crimes per 100,000 residents in 2012. For total crimes, it ranked 20th.

Things look worse for the city when violent crimes are considered. Lauderhill saw 814 violent crimes per 100,000 residents in 2012, a number large enough for it to rank 12th overall. In terms of murders, things weren’t much better; Lauderhill had 12 per 100,000, a 16th-place finish.

9. Homestead, FL

Despite having the second-highest violent crime rate in our top 10, Homestead—a city of almost 63,000 located south of Miami, FL—was fortunately much safer in terms of murder. It was third most dangerous overall for violent crimes, at a rate of 1,450 per 100,000 residents in 2012. For murder, it placed 45th, at six per 100,000 that year.

Homestead was 18th overall for property crime, with 4,461 per 100,000—an overwhelming majority of which were thefts. As for total crimes, the city placed eighth, with a combined crime rate of 5,911 per 100,000 annually.

10. Warner Robins, GA

Home to Robins Air Force Base, Warner Robins has the lowest overall violent crime rank of any city in our top 10, placing 45th most dangerous in that respect, but makes up for this fact when it comes to property crime. The city is sixth overall for burglaries, thefts, and vehicle thefts, with 5,520 property crimes per 100,000 residents in 2012.

The overall crime rate of 6,027 per 100,000 recorded that year was high enough for Warner Robins to be ranked the seventh-most dangerous place in that criterion. As for murder, the city ranked 23rd—not the absolute worst, but with 234 cities in our ranking, certainly nowhere near good. Safety In Numbers

As we pointed out earlier, the majority of the most dangerous small cities we found are situated in the Mid-Atlantic, Southern, and Midwestern regions of the country. On the flip side, we noted that the safest tended to be divided into two groups: either out West in places like California and Utah or in Minnesota (where there seem to be lots of small cities, for yet-to-be-analyzed reasons).

Lakeville, MN was the safest small city (at 56,805 residents) out of all the ones we looked at, with a diminutive 14 violent crimes per 100,000 residents during the period studied (no murders or rapes were among them). The rest of the top five safest were, in descending order: Lehi, UT, Minnetonka, MN, Laguna Nigel, CA, and Yorba Linda, CA.

So, if you happen to reside in any of the unsafe spots we just covered, your ticket to low-crime living (without changing city size) just might be in the Land of 10,000 Lakes.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; US: Florida
KEYWORDS: ar; bluezones; crimerate; ga; nc; poverty; tn; top10; urban
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To: Darren McCarty

Saginaw, Michigan - Lefty Frizzell

I was born in Saginaw, Michigan.
I grew up in a house on Saginaw Bay.
My dad was a poor hard working Saginaw fisherman:
Too many times he came home with too little pay.

I loved a girl in Saginaw, Michigan.
The daughter of a wealthy, wealthy man.
But he called me: “That son of a Saginaw fisherman.”
And not good enough to claim his daughter’s hand.

Now I’m up here in Alaska looking around for gold.
Like a crazy fool I’m a digging in this frozen ground, so cold.
But with each new day I pray I’ll strike it rich and then,
I’ll go back home and claim my love in Saginaw, Michigan.

I wrote my love in Saginaw, Michigan.
I said: “Honey, I’m a coming home, please wait for me.
“And you can tell your dad, I’m coming back a richer man
“I’ve hit the biggest strike in Klondyke history.”

Her dad met me in Saginaw, Michigan.
He gave me a great big party with champagne.
Then he said: “Son, you’re wise, young ambitious man.
“Will you sell your father-in-law your Klondyke claim?”

Now he’s up there in Alaska digging in the cold, cold ground.
The greedy fool is a looking for the gold I never found.
It serves him right and no-one here is missing him.
Least of all the newly-weds of Saginaw, Michigan.

We’re the happiest man and wife in Saginaw, Michigan.
He’s ashamed to show his face in Saginaw, Michigan.


61 posted on 03/31/2014 7:42:34 AM PDT by Red Badger (LIberal is an oxymoron......................)
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To: Jim Noble
every time I visit FL, I can't believe how crazy dangerous it is

Even back in the early 1990s, it was dangerous. My parents lived in the Cocoa Beach area, then moved one town north, always walking distance to the beach. People would get assaulted and robbed walking to the beach alone even back then. There was already a very heavy concentration of non-productive, drug/alcohol addicted and third-worlders living homeless or nearly so. Driving is insane. Then, it got even worse with extensive building of high-rise condos on the beachfront. Add to that how easy it was to get ripped off in any transaction and how much the medical care was geared toward maxing what Medicare would pay.

I'd love to live somewhere with a nice safe beach, both for weather and physical safety, where at some point a car isn't necessary. I don't know if that exists in FL anymore.

62 posted on 03/31/2014 7:44:43 AM PDT by grania
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To: All
I a surprised to see Greenville, SC on this list.

I lived there a short time and really never heard anything about crime being an issue. Maybe the downtown area has problems?

63 posted on 03/31/2014 7:46:00 AM PDT by warsaw44
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To: Mr. K; HiTech RedNeck; kearnyirish2; SoothingDave; fieldmarshaldj; Navy Patriot
Let’s stop using RED and BLUE

Below are a few explanations of how it came to be.
Some of it might be true.

When Republicans Were Blue and Democrats Were Red

The Story Behind Red States and Blue States

Red States and Blue States


64 posted on 03/31/2014 7:48:32 AM PDT by Iron Munro (The future ain't what it use to be -- Yogi Berra)
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To: Red Badger

obama’s sons and his beloved immigrants are turning the country into a hell hole.


65 posted on 03/31/2014 7:50:30 AM PDT by jersey117
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To: Darren McCarty

They’re almost all RED.


66 posted on 03/31/2014 7:50:51 AM PDT by fieldmarshaldj (Resist We Much)
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To: Red Badger

Demographics. Guess what this % refers to.

1. Wilmington, DE - 58.0%
2. Canton, OH - 21.04%
3. Jackson, TN - 45.07%
4. Rocky Mount, NC - 61.3%
5. North Little Rock, AR - 33.98%
6. Pensacola, FL - 28.0%
7. Daytona Beach, FL - 35.4%
8. Homestead, FL - 20.4%
8. Lauderhill, FL - 75.9%
10. Warner Robins, GA - 36.60%


67 posted on 03/31/2014 7:51:07 AM PDT by yefragetuwrabrumuy (WoT News: Rantburg.com)
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To: Chickensoup
I am not sure there are any red cities.

Try Oklahoma, the Texas High Plains, and cities in the central and northern Plains states. Also Utah, Idaho, and Wyoming. The smaller cities in the Missouri and Arkansas Ozarks are conservative as well. Ditto for North Florida, upstate South Carolina, and the Virginia Piedmont and Shenandoah Valley.

68 posted on 03/31/2014 7:53:13 AM PDT by Wallace T.
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To: Iron Munro

Thanks Munro!


69 posted on 03/31/2014 7:55:51 AM PDT by Navy Patriot (Join the Democrats, it's not Fascism when WE do it, and the Constitution and law mean what WE say.)
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To: Jim Noble
But, every time I visit Florida, I can't believe how crazy dangerous it seems.

Not so long ago most of Florida was a typical law & order southern state.

But it has gradually become infested with transplanted liberals who are determined to recreate the liberal cess pits they just escaped from "back home".

Now most of Florida has become a place where you can clearly view the benefits of diversity in action.....


70 posted on 03/31/2014 7:56:54 AM PDT by Iron Munro (The future ain't what it use to be -- Yogi Berra)
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To: Red Badger

Huff! Here out West we have not had a murder in my small city since the 1950s and violent crimes are unheard of. My only brush with crime was petty vandalism.


71 posted on 03/31/2014 7:59:29 AM PDT by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives In My Heart Forever)
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To: Red Badger

Thanks for the list.

I’ll be driving to Florida this summer and was going to make Rocky Mount, NC a midway stopping point. Looking at your list, I see that Rocky Mount is far worse than New Britain, CT. Yikes.

I’ve stayed in nearby Wilson, NC before and it was a really nice town...I think I’ll stay in Wilson instead.


72 posted on 03/31/2014 8:00:14 AM PDT by kidd
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To: DJ Taylor

If they listed towns of 75K or more N.J. would be well represented. Without even thinking too hard I come up with Camden, Newark, East Orange, Orange, Irvington, etc etc etc.
The list is endless.


73 posted on 03/31/2014 8:05:00 AM PDT by certrtwngnut (')
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To: Red Badger

The statistics might reflect a tendency for citizens in those small cities to report all crimes and enough law enforcement to investigate them.

In larger cities perhaps suspicious deaths are listed as suicides, undetermined or accidents etc., and not murders.


74 posted on 03/31/2014 8:15:33 AM PDT by sodpoodle (Life is prickly - carry tweezers.)
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To: Red Badger

What’s missing from that chart is if it is run by democRats, Rinos, or Conservatives.

I’d like to see THAT statistic.


75 posted on 03/31/2014 8:19:42 AM PDT by unixfox (Abolish Slavery, Repeal the 16th Amendment)
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To: kearnyirish2

Blue bloods are too sheltered. They need to get red necks.


76 posted on 03/31/2014 8:22:51 AM PDT by HiTech RedNeck (Embrace the Lion of Judah and He will roar for you and teach you to roar too. See my page.)
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To: Red Badger

Hmmmm, what do all of these cities have in common?


77 posted on 03/31/2014 8:23:51 AM PDT by dfwgator
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To: Jim Noble

In the 80’s, the Great White Flight took place in Pensacola. They moved out of the “city.” They moved across the Escambia Bay to Gulf Breeze, to the south, east, to the Pace/Milton area, or west, to Perdido Key. These areas, today, are still predominately white areas with excellent schools and few crimes.

Their vacated homes are now inhabited by minorities and the neighborhoods are rundown and high crime areas.

I know. We took a ride down our old street awhile back and turned around after two blocks because it looked so bad! (The elementary school where I taught had 6 black students, in 1977 when I left. Today it is predominately black.)

Mobile, Alabama is much larger than Pensacola, and the white flight is very visible in their Eastern Shore population. I expect this has happened all over the US.


78 posted on 03/31/2014 8:29:13 AM PDT by jch10 (Election Day, 2014. May be the most important day since Bunker Hill.)
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To: Jim Noble
Thing I noticed with Florida, especially South Florida, was how close the "good" neighborhoods were to the "ghetto".

For the most part in my state, there's at least a "buffer zone" between the areas.

79 posted on 03/31/2014 8:34:56 AM PDT by Darren McCarty (Abortion - legalized murder for convenience)
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To: HiTech RedNeck

My small city, Charlevoix,Mi.has to rate as one of the
nicest /safest cities in the whole U.S.A.


80 posted on 03/31/2014 9:03:48 AM PDT by gigster (Cogito, Ergo, Ronaldus Magnus Conservatus)
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