Homicides surge in US’ 50 most prominent cities
WASHINGTON, D.C.: Homicides have surged 24 percent this year in the 50 largest cities across the United States, against the backdrop of a coronavirus pandemic, an economic slash and a national unrest over racial injustice and police violence, according to the latest data compiled by the WallStreetJournal(WSJ).
There were a total of 3,612 homicides so far this year in the 50 largest US cities, an analysis of crime statistics of the newspaper showed.
In all, 36 of the 50 cities studied saw homicide rise at double-digit rates, representing all regions of the country, said a WSJ report on Sunday (Monday in Manila). Shootings and gun violence also rose, while many other violent crimes such as robbery fell, said the report, adding that the murder rate was still low compared with previous decades.
Many police departments across the country pointed to a rising tide of gang violence, in which rival groups of mainly young offenders battled over control of neighborhoods, catching rivals and innocents in the process, said the report.
Though many of the US’ biggest cities were run by Democrats, the rise in killings was a bipartisan problem, the report noted.
Homicides are rising at a double-digit rate in most of the big cities run by Republicans, including Miami, San Diego, Tulsa and Jacksonville, as well as in cities run by Democrats and in the two major cities run by Independents — San Antonio and Las Vegas, according to the report.
Police said homicide spikes were hitting low-income, mostly Black and Latino communities especially hard, said the report, adding that some researchers said the upward trend in murder might be evidence of a fraying of the social order.
“Everything that society does that might shape public safety was turned upside-down during the pandemic,” Jens Ludwig, a University of Chicago professor and director of its Crime Lab, was quoted as saying.