Monterey Herald

As COVID-19 ravages US, shootings, killings are also up

- By Corey Williams

DETROIT >> When Andre Avery drives his commercial truck through Detroit, he keeps his pistol close.

Avery, 57, grew up in the Motor City and is aware that homicides and shootings are surging, even though before the pandemic they were dropping in Detroit and elsewhere. His gun is legal, and he carries it with him for protection.

“I remain extremely alert,” said Avery, who now lives in nearby Belleville. “I’m not in crowds. If something looks a little suspicious, I’m out of there.”

In Detroit, Chicago, New York, Philadelph­ia and even smaller Grand Rapids, Michigan, and Milwaukee, 2020 has been deadly not only because of the pandemic, but because gun violence is spiking.

Authoritie­s and some experts say there is no one clear- cut reason for the spike. They instead point to social and economic upheaval caused by the COVID-19 virus, public sentiment toward police following George Floyd’s death in Minneapoli­s police custody and a historic shortage of jobs and resources in poorer communitie­s as contributi­ng factors. It’s happening in cities large and small, Democrat and Republican-led.

Two years ago, Detroit had 261 homicides — the fewest in decades. That year there were about 750 nonfatal shootings in the city of more than 672,000.

But with only a few days left in 2020, homicides already have topped 300, while non-fatal shootings are up more than 50% at more than 1,124 through the middle of December.

“I think the pandemic — COVID — has had a significan­t emotional impact on people across the country,” Detroit Police Chief James Craig said. “Individual­s are not processing how they manage disputes. Whether domestics, arguments, disputes over drugs, there’s this quickness to use an illegally carried firearm.”

About 7,000 guns had

been seized through mid-December in Detroit, with more than 5,500 arrests for illegal guns. There were 2,797 similar arrests last year.

“I’ve not seen a spike like this. But when it’s happening in other cities — some smaller — what do we all have in common?” Craig said of the slayings and shootings. “That’s when you start thinking about COVID.”

Washington, D.C., a city of about 700,000, has seen more than 187 homicides this year, eclipsing last year’s total by more than 20. Among the most horrible: A 15-month-old baby boy was shot to death during a driveby shooting.

“We’re all sick of the heinous crimes in our city,” said

Mayor Muriel Bowser.

Crime in parts of the U.S. dropped during the early weeks of the pandemic when stay-at-home orders closed businesses and forced many people to remain indoors.

University of Pennsylvan­ia economics professor David Abrams said crime began to spike in May and June when initial orders in some states were lifted.

Some people “may have been a little stir crazy,” Abrams said. “At the end of May, George Floyd’s killing led to protests and looting. That led to police reform movements. Any of that could have potentiall­y affected individual behavior and also the police response to that.”

Calls for some cities to reduce funding for police department­s may have led some officers to take a less aggressive approach to policing, he added.

What the COVID-19 virus did was exacerbate all of the frustratio­n and anger that some in Black and brown communitie­s already were dealing with, according to retired Michigan State University sociology professor Carl Taylor. The virus has killed more than 300,000 people across the country, with minority communitie­s hardest hit.

“The COVID has been absolutely the trigger of an everlastin­g bomb that’s exploding in many parts of our community,” he added.

Nowhere is that more true than inside people’s homes. “The COVID crisis and the economic shutdown is forcing people into their homes, creating conditions where people are more volatile,” said Kim Foxx, the top prosecutor in Cook County, which includes Chicago. And the most jarring statistic that illustrate­s that volatility is this: The number of domestic-related homicides in the nation’s third-largest city are up more than 60% compared with last year.

President Donald Trump claimed spiking crime was somehow related to massive protests over police brutal

ity that swept the nation this year, but the majority of those protests were peaceful. Trump also claimed the crime was concentrat­ed in Democratic-run cities, but there have been spikes in Republican-run cities as well. Federal agents and resources were poured into Detroit and a number of other cit

ies this summer to help local authoritie­s collar the rising crime rates.

By early October, more homicides — 363 — were recorded in Philadelph­ia than the 356 committed in 2019. There were 354 killings in New York through Oct. 11 — 90 more than at the same time last year.

 ?? ARMANDO L. SANCHEZ — CHICAGO TRIBUNE FILE ?? A woman kneels on the ground outside the University of Chicago Medicine’s Comer Children’s Hospital where a 8-year-old girl was taken after being killed in a shooting that wounded three others in Chicago.
ARMANDO L. SANCHEZ — CHICAGO TRIBUNE FILE A woman kneels on the ground outside the University of Chicago Medicine’s Comer Children’s Hospital where a 8-year-old girl was taken after being killed in a shooting that wounded three others in Chicago.
 ?? SHAWN THEW — POOL FILE ?? District of Columbia Mayor Muriel Bowser speaks during a news conference in Washington. “We’re all sick of the heinous crimes in our city,” said Bowser.
SHAWN THEW — POOL FILE District of Columbia Mayor Muriel Bowser speaks during a news conference in Washington. “We’re all sick of the heinous crimes in our city,” said Bowser.
 ?? JOHN T. GREILICK — DETROIT NEWS FILE ?? Detroit Police Chief James Craig shows a photograph of the handgun used by a man who shot at police officers at close range while they were arresting his friend.
JOHN T. GREILICK — DETROIT NEWS FILE Detroit Police Chief James Craig shows a photograph of the handgun used by a man who shot at police officers at close range while they were arresting his friend.

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