Boston Herald

Steps Senate can take to reduce violent crime

- By Kevin Ring Kevin Ring is the vice president of criminal justice advocacy at Arnold Ventures/InsideSour­ces

If members of the Senate are serious about reducing violent crime, they will have two chances in the coming months to prove it. Seizing both opportunit­ies would produce a “winwin” outcome for all Americans, especially those most at risk of senseless violence.

First, the Senate should pass the Violent Incident and Technologi­cal Investigat­ive Methods (VICTIM) Act. This bipartisan bill, introduced this month by senators John Kennedy, R-La., and Cory Booker, D-N.J., would invest $360 million over five years on police investigat­ors to solve homicides and non-fatal shootings. Funding could also be used for technology that aids in investigat­ions and for efforts to expand access to victim services.

This investment is desperatel­y needed because the rate of unsolved violent and property crimes has risen to its highest level since the FBI started collecting data in the 1960s, according to Jeff Asher, a crime data expert. The FBI’s 2022 report revealed that just under half of all murders and 63% of all violent crimes went unsolved.

As shocking as those numbers might be, the rate of violent crimes that go unsolved is actually much higher. That’s because the FBI data cover reported crimes. Most crimes are not reported to the police. A Bureau of Justice Statistics survey found that only 42% of violent crimes were reported to the police in 2022.

The VICTIM Act can help by dedicating more resources to solving violent crimes and increasing the likelihood that perpetrato­rs will be brought to justice.

The bill was endorsed by the Fraternal Order of Police, Major Cities Chiefs Associatio­n, Major County Sheriffs of America and the Associatio­n of State Criminal Investigat­ive Agencies.

The bill offers significan­t resources to boost investigat­ions, and it also aims to ensure that the millions in new investment­s are well-spent. It requires agencies that receive funding to report how they used it and how it helped to solve violent crimes. In addition, the bill would require the National Institute of Justice to conduct periodic evaluation­s of funding recipients’ activities to identify best practices and look for programs that could be scaled nationally.

Solving more violent crimes would benefit all communitie­s, and it would benefit some more than others. A recent study revealed that Black Americans of all ages suffer homicides at a rate that is 12 times higher per capita than for Whites. Hispanics are twice as likely to be killed by firearms than Whites. A truly just system would ensure that every victim’s life mattered by finding and holding the perpetrato­r accountabl­e and supporting the victim’s family.

Given the extraordin­arily high social and economic costs that violent crime imposes on individual­s and communitie­s, supporting the VICTIM Act should be an easy decision.

The Senate can and should take another step to demonstrat­e its commitment to reducing violent crime. It should amend the CARES Act to clarify that the 3,000 people who were sent to home confinemen­t during the pandemic and who have been living productive, law-abiding lives should not be forced to return to federal prison.

Reincarcer­ating these nonviolent, low-risk offenders now would waste millions of dollars that could be better spent, among other things, by funding the VICTIM Act, hiring more homicide detectives, and solving violent crimes.

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