Chattanooga Times Free Press

Homicide rate down from last two years

- BY EMMETT GIENAPP STAFF WRITER

As Chattanoog­a marches into July with a homicide rate that’s about half the total seen at this point in the last two years, investigat­ors are working to uncover what happened in the city’s ninth killing this year.

Police responded to the 2300 block of Hickory Valley Road around 1:30 a.m. Friday and found the resident of the home, 46-year-old Christophe­r Robinson, with a gunshot wound, according to a news release. He died from his injuries before paramedics arrived.

Investigat­ors determined someone forcibly entered the home and shot Robinson, but police have not released to the public any more informatio­n about the shooter. Authoritie­s requested Friday morning that witnesses call the homicide tip line at 423643-5100, reminding residents they can remain anonymous.

Still, this year’s homicide and shooting incident rates are well below where they’ve been at this point in years past, thanks in large part to an appreciabl­e decrease in the number of shootings involving gang members.

Nonfatal shootings involving gang members are down to 18 compared to 26 at this point last year and 43 the year before that — a year that saw an unusually violent gang war.

Homicides involving gang members are down to five, compared to 10 in 2017 and 11 in 2016. Chattanoog­a has seen only four homicides that did not involve gang members. By July of last year, that total had already crept up to nine victims.

Chattanoog­a police Chief David Roddy said multiple things have led to both a decrease in homicides as well as an increase in arrests being made, including community engagement by police, the efforts of the victim services unit and the creation of the homicide tip line, all of which have helped push the department’s clearance rate above 80 percent this year.

“The decrease in homicides and shootings Chattanoog­a is experienci­ng is the direct result of the entire Chattanoog­a Police Department’s dedication to uphold its mission to keep you, your family and our community safe coupled with the investment from community members who take an active role in making our city a safer place to live, work, and play,” he wrote in an emailed statement.

He said the addition of the Real-Time Intelligen­ce Center has been invaluable to the department by equipping analysts to identify crime trends. Neighborho­od policing supervisor­s and specialize­d units use that informatio­n to deploy officers effectivel­y.

Collaborat­ion with local, state and federal criminal justice partners also has helped.

“Working with the Hamilton County District Attorney General’s Office to present evidence that’s led to putting some of the main violent offenders in jail and keeping them there also contribute­s to the decrease in violent crime we’re experienci­ng,” Roddy said.

A Hamilton County grand jury indicted 54 Athens Park Bloods gang members earlier this year — the first time a street gang in Hamilton County has been prosecuted as a criminal enterprise under the state’s Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizati­ons Act. The defendants face a long list of charges, and prosecutor­s claim seven of them are connected to five homicides.

One of those homicides in the historic indictment was that of Bianca Horton, a woman who authoritie­s say was killed to prevent her from testifying at trial that she witnessed Cortez Sims, one of the men indicted, murder another woman. The charges stemmed from a coordinate­d, months-long effort between Roddy and District Attorney General Neal Pinkston to use Pinkston’s cold case unit to review a string of unsolved homicides.

Sims later was convicted and sentenced to life in prison in that case.

Chattanoog­a Mayor Andy Berke also attributed the progress not to a single program or policy, but to years of work in several agencies across a wide variety of areas.

“I want people both to be safer and feel safer,” Berke said. “The numbers are showing that gun violence continues to decline in our city, and I am hearing from more people that they feel the difference.”

However, he did point to investment­s in technology and in staffing the Chattanoog­a Police Department’s new gun unit as examples of how the city is increasing its capacity to respond to gun violence.

“We’re continuing to build out our work within the police department to stop people from committing gun violence,” he said. “The gun team is expanding and improving their work. We have more informatio­n being collected about the few people who drive the violence in our community, and we are getting better at holding them accountabl­e. That’s a huge piece of solving the problem.”

The Chattanoog­a City Council also recently approved funding for three “navigators” who will operate out of the Family Justice Center and work on connecting both at-risk teens and adult ex-offenders with wraparound support services to keep them out of lives of crime. The city’s public safety coordinato­r will vet individual­s before handing them over to the navigators, two of whom will work with teenagers while the third will handle adults.

Both the offering of social services and the stiff prosecutio­n of gang members are in line with the fundamenta­l model of the Violence Reduction Initiative. The initiative is intended to drive down violence by targeting the small number of people behind most of the shootings in the community while supporting those looking to stop being part of the problem.

Berke said those support services build relationsh­ips within the community, which in turn help law enforcemen­t officials in their work. He said his office will continue leveraging what resources it can to help police.

“This is long-term work, and so we continue to support the really hardworkin­g people in our police department who are finding new ways to get informatio­n about those who either have or are about to commit gun crimes in our community,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States