Posted on 08/09/2015 4:50:54 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
Baltimore has become the second most violent city in America, a Baltimore Brew survey finds, with a homicide rate exceeded only by St. Louis.
Baltimore has become the second deadliest city in America (after St. Louis) with homicides surpassing those of Detroit, the longtime poster child for urban violence.
During the first seven months of 2015, Detroit police reported 163 slayings. That compares to 189 killings recorded through July in Baltimore.
With 10% fewer residents than Detroit, Baltimores current homicide rate (deaths per 100,000 people) is running about 26% above that of the Motor City.
Thats quite a reversal from the recent past.
In 2012, Detroit had 411 homicides compared to Baltimores 219. The following year, Detroit had the highest murder rate among larger U.S. cities, according to the 2013 Uniform Crime Report published by the FBI, while Baltimore came in fifth (behind Detroit, New Orleans, Newark and St. Louis).
But the surge in violence that followed Freddie Grays death and the April 27 riots capped by 45 mostly gun-related homicides last month has placed Baltimore at the forefront of deadly cities in America.
A Baltimore Brew review of online police records at other large cities indicates that Baltimore has become the second most violent city in America, following St. Louis.
While other cities have experienced an increase in killings this year including Chicago, New York City and Washington none has spiked to the level of Baltimore (with the exception of St. Louis and Milwaukee).
On the other hand, several cities with traditionally high murder rates such as Oakland and Newark have reported no significant increase in slayings so far this year, while one notable crime hot spot Camden, N.J., reported a 20% drop in homicides compared to the same period last year.
Homicides in 20 Cities
Here is a breakdown of 2015 homicides in U.S. cities gleaned by The Brew from online police records. Additional information came from the Major Cities Chiefs Police Association.
The list below is arranged by level of violence going from the city with the highest homicide rate to the lowest.
It does not include all major U.S. cities, but instead is a sampling of 20 cities, including those with a historically high number of slayings.
PLEASE NOTE that the figures below are half-year totals, which means that if fatalities continue at their current pace, the full-year homicide rate for these cities would be roughly double the rates listed below.
St. Louis 116 homicides as of August 4, up over 50% from the same period in 2014. Based on its population, St. Louis half-year homicide rate is 36 per 100,000 residents.
Baltimore 189 homicides through July 31, almost 60% more than the same period last year. The citys rate is now at a historic high based on its population 30 slayings per 100,000 residents. (During the 1970s, there were higher homicide numbers in some years, but the city had between 200,000 and 250,000 more residents then.)
New Orleans 103 homicides through mid-July, or 27 per 100,000 residents.
Detroit 163 homicides through July 31, or 24 per 100,000 residents.
Newark, NJ 52 homicides through July 26, or 19 per 100,000 residents.
Camden, NJ 16 homicides through through July, or 19 per 100,000 residents.
Milwaukee 95 homicides through August 1, or 16 per 100,000 residents.
Cincinnati 45 homicides through August 1, or 15 per 100,000 residents.
Memphis 91 homicides through July, or 14 per 100,000 residents.
Washington, D.C. 87 homicides through July, or 13 per 100,000 residents. (Homicides have increased by 26% over the same period of 2014.)
Oakland, CA 49 homicides through July, or 12 per 100,000 residents.
Kansas City 49 homicides through August 6, or 11 per 100,000 residents.
Atlanta 45 homicides as of June 30, or 10 per 100,000 residents
Philadelphia 154 homicides as of August 5, or 10 per 100,000 residents.
Chicago 252 homicides as of July 31, or 9 per 100,000 residents.
Dallas 74 homicides through July 14, or 6 per 100,000 residents.
Los Angeles 150 homicides as of Augusts 1, or 4 per 100,000 residents.
Boston 18 homicides as of August 2, or 2.8 per 100,000 residents.
New York City 196 homicides as of July 31, or 2.3 per 100,000 residents.
San Diego 17 homicides through June 30, or 1.3 per 100,000 residents.
Al Capone Shootouts
Even as violent crime hangs heavy over many parts of Baltimore, its causes remain elusive and subject to multiple explanations.
Interim Baltimore Police Commissioner Kevin Davis his predecessor, Anthony W. Batts, was sacked by Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake on July 8 blames easy access to guns and gang-inspired retaliatory killings.
Earlier this week, Davis joined police chiefs from around the country who met in Washington to discuss the surge in violence.
After the private meeting, which was sponsored by the Major Cities Chiefs Police Association, several of them spoke to reporters.
We have not seen what were seeing right now in decades, said D.C. Police Chief Cathy L. Lanier.
No longer are homicides a solitary affair between a shooter and a victim, according to Lanier and other chiefs. Increasingly, urban murders involve gunplay between multiple persons armed with sophisticated weapons.
The rise of Al Capone-style shootouts are underscored by the higher number of victims being shot at a crime scene.
This happened most recently in Baltimore last Sunday (August 2) when seven people were shot at the same time on West Garrison Avenue in Park Heights.
There were no fatalities all the victims were shot in the leg, possibly as a warning.
Police in Baltimore and nationwide say they are finding more weapons with high-caliber magazines.
In Chicago, police have made 22% more gun arrests in 2015, but murders still have risen by 21%, according to the Major Cities Chiefs group.
Community Mistrust
In Baltimore where a deep mistrust of police is shared by many residents in poor neighborhoods and the city Board of Estimates routinely doles out millions of dollars a year to privately settle police brutality cases Freddie Grays death detonated a night of violence and looting on April 27.
With more than 30 pharmacies broken into by looters, roughly 300,000 doses of prescription drugs and opiates were stolen, Shawn Ellerman, an assistant special agent at the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA), told reporters.
Baltimore police said they have arrested an increased number of offenders who were under the influence of drugs, but that number appears to be decreasing as the cache of stolen drugs is exhausted.
What continues to dog city police is their inability to find and arrest suspects in the recent slayings.
The current homicide clearance rate is 36.6%. Thats below the departments mid-40s average and far worse than the national average of 65% of murder cases cleared by a suspect either held in custody or subject to an arrest warrant.
Staff Reorganizations
Earlier this week, Commissioner Davis announced that 10 federal agents will be embedded in the homicide unit to help city police with the backlog of unsolved homicides.
Already 20 agents from the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) are working with city detectives, and a full-time FBI analyst is assigned to BPDs analytical intelligence section.
Davis also disclosed a major reorganization of the departments command ranks, which included the reshuffling or retirement of several high-ranking officials.
This comes in the wake of several reorganizations implemented by Batts during his nearly three-year tenure as Baltimores top cop and the dismissal by Mayor Rawlings-Blake of the top leadership of her Office on Criminal Justice in May.
Turf Wars
Identifying the causes of Baltimores violent crime surge has also become fodder for the increasing tensions between City Hall and States Attorney Marilyn J. Mosby.
Mosby recently criticized the mayors office for authorizing a Homicide Review Commission which included $244,000 awarded to the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Center for Gun Policy and Research on June 10 when we know why homicides are taking place.
We know it has to do with drugs, Mosby said in a WBAL radio interview. We know it has to do with gangs. We know it has to do with turf wars.
Carly not ready for primetime
Too many of our candidates are ready
Black lives matter....crickets............
Anyone who's seen HBO's The Wire note that the crime problem in Baltimore was pretty accurately depicted in that series.
The biggest problem with Baltimore was after the 1968 riots right after the death of Martin Luther King, Jr., many non-blacks fled the city on a truly massive scale to parts of Maryland outside of Baltimore itself, which really hurt the tax base of the city. It didn't help that the city of Baltimore essentially is run almost separately from the rest of Maryland, which means the state government can't do much the help the city economically at times. As such, the city rapidly fell into economic malaise, and today Baltimore will soon replace Detroit as the most miserable city in the USA.
At least Detroit is finally starting slough off the terrible political and economic legacy left by Coleman Young and Kwame Kilpatrick--even Manuel "Matty" Moroun, who essentially bottlenecked goods trade between Detroit and Windsor, Ontario due to his ownership of the Ambassador Bridge, is being put in his place with the start of the construction of the long-overdue second bridge crossing, the Gordie Howe International Trade Crossing bridge, which just started construction work.
What could be keeping the crime rate down? I can only think of two things. One's initials are JMA the other's initials are CC
There are no people left in Detroit to murder.
“...with high-caliber magazines.”
For some reason, I can’t get them to work in my 9mm. I guess I’ll have to drive up to Balmer and talk to one of the local experts to find out how to do it.
“Give them room to kill” -Mayor of Baltimore
Baltimore: the first runner-up in murder.
Maryland “Freak State” PING!
I wonder if I should get me one of them high caliber magazines. Is that a really well made magazine or is it one that holds really big, assault type bullets?
nice job mayor.....I hope Karma comes and returns the favor....
Competing hellholes... I’ll put five on Baltimore...
Yay! B’more takes the Silver. Oh, wait....
Yeah, I do not plan on venturing into downtown Baltimore any time soon.
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