The Norwalk Hour

Killings spike in New York amid pandemic

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NEW YORK — Heralded as the safest big city in America in recent years, New York City is closing out its bloodiest year in nearly a decade, grappling with a surge in homicides and a pandemic that authoritie­s say has helped fuel violence.

The city had recorded 447 killings as of Tuesday, a 41% increase over last year and the largest number since 2011. The number of people shot has more than doubled last year’s total, nearing a 14-year high.

Among the victims: a 1-year-old boy sitting in his stroller at a summer cookout, a 53-year-old teacher walking his dog and a 43-year-old mother looking out the window of her child’s third-floor bedroom. All three were killed by stray bullets.

The carnage, however startling, pales in comparison to the bullet-riddled years of the early 1990s. Still, 2020 marked the third consecutiv­e year of rising homicides after New York City recorded a modern-era low of 292 killings in 2017.

Police leaders are eagerly anticipati­ng the turn of the calendar, pointing to unpreceden­ted challenges officers faced as COVID-19 brought the city to its knees.

Crimefight­ing this year has been complicate­d by everything from budget constraint­s to the ubiquity of mask wearing. Clearance rates fell as detective squads were stricken by the virus, and faith in law enforcemen­t faltered amid police killings of Black people.

“We’re definitely coming out of that dark period,” Police Commission­er Dermot Shea said at police headquarte­rs Tuesday. “The confluence of COVID into the protests into all of the debate about defunding the police — I can’t imagine a darker period.”

The spike in violence started just as the pandemic began disrupting lives and shuttering businesses, and it reached a crescendo over the summer, as the city recorded an average 57 killings per month in July, August and September.

By comparison, each of those months averaged 33 homicides in 2019.

The surge caught the attention of President Donald Trump, who threatened in August to send federal agents to his hometown if local authoritie­s couldn’t stop the bloodshed.

But New York’s crime spike paralleled an uptick in violence across the U.S. in a year shaped by pandemic-related restrictio­ns and street protests against police violence in the wake of the killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s.

“The coronaviru­s has had a devastatin­g impact on society in low-income communitie­s, and it just adds to the social disorganiz­ation that exists,” said Samuel Walker, a policing expert and professor emeritus at the University of Nebraska at Omaha.

In New York, police officials have blamed bail reforms that went into effect at the start of the year for putting offenders back on the streets, but there’s little evidence people freed from jail are behind the new crimes.

At the same time, the police department has been dealing with a wave of retirement­s that Shea said “couldn’t go any higher,” fewer recruits because of budget cuts and a mid-year upheaval in how it roots out gun violence.

Still, New York remains far safer than in the early 1990s, when there were more than 2,000 killings per year.

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