The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

U.S. needs better crime statistics

- The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts. By Liberty Vittert

President Donald Trump has long focused on Chicago as a hotbed for American crime. This came up yet again on Oct. 8, when he said that he had directed the Justice Department to work with local officials in Chicago to stem violence in a city overwhelme­d by its high rate of violent crime.

With 24.1 homicides per 100,000 people — more than four times the overall U.S. rate — Chicago certainly suffers from serious problems. But, as of a Sept. 25, St. Louis tops the FBI’s most dangerous city in America with over 6,461 violent crimes reported in the city limits in 2017. That’s an increase of more than 7 percent from the previous year.

St. Louis only ranks third for homicides in the U.S. by rate, but it’s the No. 1 most dangerous city. So by what metric does the government measuring “most dangerous” — and why is Trump’s focus concentrat­ed on Chicago and not St. Louis? As a statistici­an studying how people can manipulate numbers, particular­ly crime data, it is clear to me that the way crimes are counted in the U.S. can easily confuse and mislead.

Crime statistics

Since 1929, the FBI has managed the Uniform Crime Reports (UCR), a project that compiles official data on crime across the U.S., provided by smaller law enforcemen­t agencies. For example, in Missouri, data is provided directly to the state by both the county police department­s and the smaller municipali­ties. This informatio­n is then sent to the FBI.

With 18,000 different law enforcemen­t agencies providing crime data to the FBI, there must be a standard metric of reporting. So all crimes are classified into only two categories: Part 1 and Part 2.

Part 1 crimes include murder, rape, robbery, larceny-theft and arson — the serious crimes. Part 2 crimes include simple assault, loitering, embezzleme­nt, DUI’s and prostituti­on — the less serious crimes.

Makes sense. But here’s the catch: None of these crimes are weighted. When a “beautiful, innocent 9-year-old child who was laying on the bed doing her homework” is murdered in Ferguson as a retaliatio­n killing, it counts just the same as when an individual is arrested for shopliftin­g $50 or more from the Dollar Store. This flawed metric allows for confusion.

Take this example. You live in a neighborho­od with a Kmart. “Serious” crime includes all the shopliftin­g from the Kmart; let’s say 150 incidents in a year. It also includes all the murders and rapes; call it 20 incidents in a year. The Kmart closes. Your crime rate has gone from 170 to 20: an 88 percent decrease in crime.

Chicago mayoral spokesman Matt McGrath criticized Trump’s comments to The Washington Post, saying, “Just last week, [the Chicago Police Department] reported there have been 100 fewer murders and 500 fewer shooting victims in Chicago this year, the second straight year of declines.” And really, I crunched the numbers; all serious crimes are only up 6.88 percent since 2014.

But it isn’t the serious crimes that make me look under my bed before I go to sleep at night. It’s the violent crimes. Those are up 24.27 percent in Chicago between 2014 and 2017. Murder is up 59.53 percent.

This metric can be misleading. Former St. Louis Mayor Francis Slay touts “small gains” as overall crime numbers drop. Sure, the number of Part 1 crimes has dropped by 0.4 percent since 2014. But violent crimes in the city of St. Louis have increased 24.04 percent.

People can also get confused by the way crimes are sliced geographic­ally. For example, in 2016, the city of St. Louis had a homicide rate of 59.8 per 100,000 people, St. Louis County, which is separated from the city by a street, had a homicide rate of about 3.2 per 100,000. What combinatio­n of the two making up greater St. Louis gets reported in the news? Depends on the day.

New measures

The U.S. needs a better metric. How we measure crime has been contentiou­s since the original FBI crime reporting document was released in 1929.

There are even issues with the counting itself. The FBI website removed data from Chicago’s crime statistics in 2013, because the FBI deemed it to be underrepor­ted.

Hopefully, a more accurate metric comes in with the FBI’s National Incident-Based Reporting System, scheduled to roll out in 2020. For example, if a criminal assaults someone in their home and steals jewelry as well, that’s only counted as an assault under the UCR system. Under NIBRS, both the assault and theft would be counted.

But this system doesn’t seem to address the key issue: weights. Murdering a child cannot possible count the same as stealing from the Dollar Store. It is inconceiva­ble that raping someone can count the same as illegal gambling. You serve different amounts of jail time based on the severity of the crime — why wouldn’t crimes also be weighted?

Cities like Chicago and St. Louis most certainly have issues with crime. But how the U.S. measures “dangerous” must be made clearer. It does a disservice to our police and our communitie­s by allowing this misreprese­ntation of the facts. Until then, politician­s will be able to use this confusion to confuse the public, intentiona­lly or unintentio­nally.

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