Daily Times (Primos, PA)

In ‘law and order’ debate, data can be molded to suit moment

- By Lindsay Whitehurst

SALT LAKE CITY » President Donald Trump points to spiking crime and delivers stark statistics on murders and shootings as part of his “law and order” campaign emphasis that suggests cities are overrun with violence that only he can stop.

Several cities have seen a sobering surge in murders this summer, but those numbers are only a small snapshot of crime in the United States, and his strategy is highlighti­ng how data can be easily molded to suit the moment.

At a televised town hall event Tuesday for undecided voters in Pennsylvan­ia, Trump spoke about how he believed crime was soaring in cities after nationwide protests against police brutality. He has tried to link the violence to the protests, and is trying to leverage the violence to scare white, suburban voters and encourage them to back his reelection campaign.

“Look at New York,” Trump said. “The city was safe, and then all of a sudden we have a mayor who starts cutting the police force and crime is up 100%, 150%. I saw one form of crime up 300%”

Trump may have been talking about shootings. They are up in New York by about 86% so far this year, but overall, crime is down about 2%, and there are about

34,000 uniformed officers, about the same as in recent years. Murders are up 35%, but there were

305 killings compared with 226, still low compared with years past.

Other major cities have also seen a recent spike in violence, but the vast majority is neither linked directly to the protests nor is it moving to typically lowercrime areas, said Rick Rosenfeld, a University of Missouri criminolog­ist.

And violence often rises in the summer and drops in colder months.

“It is correct for people to not only draw attention but to be quite concerned about the uptick in violence, but at this point there is no evidence to claim the protests have somehow generated that uptick,” Rosenfeld said.

Overall, the nation’s crime rate has been falling for decades. It’s not yet clear whether the recent increase is a troubling trend or a tragic but brief part of the nearly unpreceden­ted times.

A preliminar­y FBI report released Tuesday on national crime found that while the number of murders was up over the past six months, decreases in rapes and robberies meant violent crime was down overall, especially in smaller towns. The data is from informatio­n voluntaril­y given by law enforcemen­t agencies around the country. Final crime report data hasn’t been released by the FBI since 2018, and the bureau always cautions against geographic comparison­s.

Still, the general sense of anxiety pervading the country can make people feel less safe even if the data indicates they’re not in any more danger.

“Because that level of unpredicta­bility has entered our daily lives, it has ratcheted up fear across the board,” said research scholar Meghan Hollis with the

Ronin Institute, an independen­t scholarly research group. She has studied how much people believe they’re at risk from crime. “Unfortunat­ely, I think people are seizing on an environmen­t of fear right now that’s pervading in all aspects of our lives to discuss potential risk that may or may not be there.”

She cautions against drawing any kind of conclusion­s about crime this year.

“There’s just a lot of challenges we’re facing right now in comparing around the country, comparing trend lines over time. You have to be so careful right now, because it might not be accurate,” she said. Meanwhile, full census data is nearly a decade old, making it harder to tell if crime is increasing in frequency or simply happening more because there are more people in certain cities.

Broad statements about crime in the U.S. are also tricky because there are 18,000 police department­s across the country and no single central records-management system, said University of Miami criminolog­y professor Alex Piquero.

Some department­s track crime weekly. Others quarterly. Some annually. Some report their data to the FBI, others don’t.

“We don’t have anything standard in terms of record-keeping,” he said.

Police are also dealing with the coronaviru­s themselves. Many officers have caught the virus, and hundreds have died. Others have quarantine­d, leaving fewer police out to patrol the streets, said Rosenfeld.

His analysis of 27 cities found that homicides and aggravated assaults grew by about 35% between late May and June. Most of those happened in neighborho­ods long roiled by violence and hit hard by the pandemic and recession, he said.

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