Lodi News-Sentinel

Stuck-at-home Americans get robbed less, but fight more

- By Edvard Pettersson, Noah Buhayar, Michelle Kaske and Mallika Mitra

With more than twothirds of the U.S. population ordered to stay home amid the coronaviru­s pandemic, it’s tougher for burglars to find an empty house to rob. But the cooped-up residents seem more likely to fight one another..

That’s what crime statistics show in major U.S. cities where residents are spending all their time inside.

In Los Angeles, property crime was down 18% in the four weeks that ended March 21 from the previous four weeks. Calls for police services in Chicago have declined 30% for the month and crime in New York City fell almost 25% in the week ended March 22, compared with the week before.

The rapidly spreading infections from the coronaviru­s, with New York City as now the epicenter, have most Americans hunkering down. About 217 million people in at least 23 states, 17 cities and one territory were being urged to stay home as of Friday.

In Los Angeles, the number of burglaries and theft from motor vehicles, the most prevalent crime in the car-loving city, was down 24%. In areas such as Hollywood, car break-ins fell more than 40%, according to police. Burglaries dropped almost 20% in New York and rapes were down by more than half; there was one murder, compared with eight in the earlier week.

The changes in violent crime were less pronounced in other cities.

In Chicago, there’s been a significan­t reduction in vehicle and pedestrian stops by police, Charlie Beck, the city’s interim police superinten­dent, said at a press conference Tuesday.

“All of this indicates to me that people are doing what we ask,” Beck said. “That they are staying home, that they are by and large creating good social distance, that our police officers are only focusing on things that have a direct impact on public safety and making sure that we all get through this together.”

In San Francisco, larceny theft, which includes shopliftin­g and bicycle theft, was down 30% during the first three weeks of March versus the same period a year earlier.

But with people stuck indoors enduring the stress of an unpreceden­ted publicheal­th crisis and worrying about jobs disappeari­ng, domestic squabbles are rising.

In Seattle, police got 614 domestic violence calls in the first two weeks of March, a 22% increase from a year earlier.

“The vast majority were for a DV disturbanc­e, which means there is no arrest because it was just an argument where the police ended up responding,” Detective Patrick Michaud of the Seattle police department said in an email, referring to domestic violence calls. “No assault. No property damage. No additional crime. Just an argument.”

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