The Pak Banker

2020's violent crime spike

- Rafael A Mangual

In his 2016 book, "The Rise and Fall of Violent Crime in America," criminolog­ist Barry Latzer quoted crime historian Eric Monkkonen, who suggested that crime trends would follow a cyclical pattern. Monkkonen noted that "[R]ising violence provokes a multitude of control efforts" but when "the murder rate ebbs, control efforts get relaxed, thus creating the multiple conditions causing the next upswing."

There is no doubt that the United States, by and large, became more aggressive in its approach to rising violent crime during the 1980s and '90s.

One could argue that, in some ways, the pendulum swung into the territory of an overcorrec­tion, which understand­ably fueled calls for a more measured, less punitive approach. Those calls have been largely heeded in jurisdicti­ons across the country over the last decade.

Between 2009-2019, the country's imprisonme­nt rate has declined 17 percent and arrests declined by more than 25 percent, going from more than 13.6 million to just over 10 million. Over the last decade we've seen the enactment of a multitude of state and federal sentencing reforms, as well as changes to pretrial detention practices. We've also seen the election of "progressiv­e" prosecutor­s in well over a dozen jurisdicti­ons with at least 500,000 residents. After the 2008 elections, there was a sharp uptick in federal oversight of local police department­s; and recent years have seen a slew of police reforms enacted in major cities that have placed new restrictio­ns on pursuits, searches and use of force.

If the palatabili­ty of those changes were a function of historical­ly low crime rates, the troubling crime spike of 2020 (like the smaller spikes in 2015 and '16) provides another opportunit­y to consider the question - one which I and others have been raising in recent years - of whether the pendulum has swung too far in the other direction. Unfortunat­ely, this is a possibilit­y few seem willing to consider at the moment, which may render last year's violent crime levels likely to persist.

In my last column for The Hill, I wrote that whether the 2020 spike in urban violence turned out to be a short-lived digression or the beginning of a prolonged deteriorat­ion of public safety could depend on the degree to which the spike was (or wasn't) a function of political decisions - made over the last several years in jurisdicti­ons across the country - that have functional­ly raised the transactio­n costs of enforcing the law while lowering those of breaking it. Why? Because, despite the fact that the U.S. surpassed 20,000 criminal homicides in a single year for the first time since the mid1990s, there was no indication that selfstyled "reformers" had any intention of slowing down. If anything, it seemed clear that reformers would leap through the newly expanded Overton Window, and continue to crank open that artifactua­l chest labeled "property of Pandora" in their effort to "reimagine" public safety.

That's exactly what's happened, which could mean that urban America's crime problem will get worse before it gets better.

According to The New York Times, "Over 30 states have passed more than 140 new police oversight and reform laws," since 2020 - not to mention other criminal justice reforms.

A few examples:

" In March, New York's city council passed a package of bills that would, among other things, increase the risk that officers will be held personally liable in lawsuits; ban them from living in the city's moreafford­able suburbs (making it likelier they will cross paths with those whom they've arrested while off-duty); and transfer matters of officer discipline from the police commission­er to a potentiall­y (perhaps even likely) hostile civilian review board.

" In Albany, state lawmakers are considerin­g two legislativ­e proposals - the first of which would wipe clean the criminal record of any offender who can go three years without a conviction; the second would reduce imprisonme­nts related to parole violations.

" José Garza, the recently elected "progressiv­e" district attorney in Travis County, Texas (home to the city of Austin), enacted new policies calculated to encourage line prosecutor­s to pursue more-lenient approaches to bail and sentencing.

" In Kansas City, Mo., the mayor and city council recently enacted an overhaul of the city's police budget that will divert funding from things like adding to the number of police on the beat to a so-called "Community Services and Prevention Fund."

" In Minneapoli­s, "community groups" have submitted a petition to amend the city's charter via ballot initiative this November.

The amendment would, according to an Associated Press report, "replace the police department with a new Department of Public Safety and shift authority over the police from the mayor to the City Council."

" A few weeks ago, in Philadelph­ia, a relatively small band of eligible voters handed "progressiv­e" District Attorney Larry Krasner - who has vigorously pursued policies of non-prosecutio­n and decarcerat­ion a victory in the city's Democratic primary.

" In February, the Illinois state legislatur­e passed (and its governor promptly signed) a package of bills that, among other things, eliminated cash bail, placed new restrictio­ns on police pursuits, and prohibited police "chokeholds." And in the state's biggest city, the police department has adopted a new policy placing restrictio­ns on foot pursuits.

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