Los Angeles Times

Progress seen in crime fight

LAPD says the pace of slayings across the city is slowing as staff are redeployed to high-crime areas.

- By Kate Mather

After struggling for months to quell violent crime in some of Los Angeles’ hardest-hit neighborho­ods, LAPD Chief Charlie Beck said Tuesday that the rise of killings had slowed in the city, indicating that “a turn of the tide” had begun.

In his weekly crime report to the Police Commission, Beck said the city had seen 101 homicides this year — “almost even” with the 97 killings recorded at this time in 2015.

The 4.1% increase, he noted, was much lower than it had been earlier this year. In early March, LAPD figures showed homicides were up more than 25% compared with the same period last year.

Calling the progress “very important,” Beck said the city was “firmly on track” to see fewer than 300 homicides this year. Last year, 283 people were killed in the city.

The chief noted that other major cities have seen significan­t upticks in violence this year, particular­ly Chicago, where nearly 1,400 people have been shot. By comparison, 427 people have been shot this year in Los Angeles, Beck said, noting that the pace of shootings has also slowed in recent months.

“That’s 427 too many, but it is a significan­t reduction from where we were just several months ago,” he said.

The LAPD’s focus on neighborho­ods most affect-

ed by homicides and other violent crime appeared to be paying off, Beck said. The department has shifted extra resources to four divisions — all in South L.A. — where violent crime increased the most.

“We took some extreme steps to address the four most violent divisions earlier in the year, and those steps are starting to have some effect,” the chief told the police commission­ers. “Although it’s not over till it’s over, obviously.”

The department had been struggling to contain a surge in crime, particular­ly killings, after more than a decade of steep declines. Last year, all categories of crime rose citywide, with violent offenses jumping by 20.2% and property crime by more than 10% compared with 2014.

It marked the second year in a row that violent crime rose, but the first time since 2003 that both violent and property crime rose.

The number of homicides in L.A. has risen slightly in recent years, after plummeting to 251 in 2013, the lowest in decades. The city saw 260 homicides in 2014 and 283 last year.

Addressing reporters Tuesday, Beck noted that the LAPD deployed more officers from the recently expanded Metropolit­an Division — an elite unit now focused on suppressin­g crime in hot spots across the city — to help the four divisions hardest hit by the violence. The department has also set up a command post to allow LAPD brass to better coordinate their crime-fighting efforts.

Those efforts, Beck said, have helped police “dispatch resources more quickly and try to stay ahead of problems.”

“The key to reducing homicides in Los Angeles is not only prevention of the first homicide,” Beck said, “but it’s more importantl­y the prevention of retaliatio­n homicides, the second and third homicides that can occur.”

Deputy Chief Bill Scott, who heads the LAPD’s South Bureau, said the operations center has played a key role in reducing slayings since it was establishe­d in mid-March.

Based in the LAPD’s

‘We took some extreme steps to address the four most violent divisions earlier in the year.’ — Charlie Beck, LAPD chief

downtown headquarte­rs, the center is staffed around-the-clock by LAPD commanders who analyze realtime crime numbers and create strategies for how to respond to problem spots.

“They’re getting informatio­n in real time. In a normal process, there’s a series of phone calls, lag time,” Scott said.

“Now the decisions are quicker, and sometimes that means saving lives.”

The operations center has also helped the LAPD focus on specific offenders, Scott said, rather than “blanket the community with cops on every corner.” Instead, he said, police can look for known criminals with outstandin­g warrants or illegal guns in an effort to prevent violent crime.

Scott pointed to the LAPD’s Southwest Division, which saw a rash of killings early in the year that drew concern from both residents and LAPD brass.

The division — which includes neighborho­ods such as Baldwin Hills, Leimert Park and Exposition Park — had seen nine homicides by the time the operations center was set up, Scott said.

Since then, he said, five people have been killed.

But, he cautioned, although police have made progress in reducing the number of killings and shootings, other crimes, such as robberies, are still on the rise.

“It’s still not where we want to be,” he said. “The shootings — we feel good about where we’re at. But there’s work to be done.”

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? CHIEF Charlie Beck sees the latest statistics as a sign that “a turn of the tide” has begun.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times CHIEF Charlie Beck sees the latest statistics as a sign that “a turn of the tide” has begun.
 ?? Fan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? POLICE investigat­e the fatal stabbing of a 2-year-old in Exposition Park on May 3. The LAPD moved resources to four divisions where violent crime rose the most.
Fan Khan Los Angeles Times POLICE investigat­e the fatal stabbing of a 2-year-old in Exposition Park on May 3. The LAPD moved resources to four divisions where violent crime rose the most.

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