The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Major crimes in New York fall to 1950s levels

The achievemen­t is ‘astounding’ but how long will it last?

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Ashley Southall

©2017 The New York Times

NEW YORK — It would have seemed unbelievab­le in 1990, when there were 2,245 killings in New York City, but as of this week, there have been just 285 murders in the city this year — the lowest since reliable records have been kept.

In fact, crime has fallen in New York City in each of the major felony categories — murder and manslaught­er, rape, assault, robbery, burglary, grand larceny and car thefts — to a total of 94,806 as of Sunday, well below the previous record of 101,716 set last year.

If the trend holds just a few more days, this year’s murder total will be well under the city’s previous low of 333 in 2014, and crime will have declined for 27 straight years, to levels that police officials have said are the lowest since the 1950s. The numbers, when taken together, portray a city of 8.5 million people growing safer even as the police, under Mayor Bill de Blasio, use less deadly force, make fewer arrests and scale back controvers­ial practices like stopping and frisking thousands of people on the streets.

“There is no denying that the arc is truly exceptiona­l in the unbroken streak of declining crime,” William J. Bratton, who retired from his second stint as police commission­er last year, said.

But officials see one area of concern: an uptick in reports of rapes toward the end of the year. The increase, which officials said included a higher-than-normal number of attacks that occurred more than one year ago, coincided with the publicatio­n

of accusation­s against powerful men like Harvey Weinstein, which gave rise to the #MeToo movement encouragin­g victims to come forward.

While rapes were down by one from last year, to 1,417, misdemeano­r sex crimes — a catchall for various types of misconduct that includes groping — ticked up 9.3 percent to 3,585 so far.

The lower murder numbers are still preliminar­y — Tuesday was the last day for which they were available — but they jibe with large drops in killings in major cities like Chicago and Detroit, while contrastin­g with double-digit increases in murders in smaller cities like Charlotte and Baltimore.

The city today is a far cry from what it was when Bratton arrived in 1990 to become the head of the then-separate Transit Police. Not only were there 2,245 murders that

year, but there were more than 527,000 major felony crimes and more than 5,000 people shot. Shootings have plunged to 774 so far this year, well below last year’s record of 998. And for the first time, fewer than 1,000 people have been hurt by gunfire: 917 as of Sunday.

The continued declines are a boon to de Blasio, a Democrat elected on promises of police reform — promises that prompted warnings of mayhem to come by his opponents in 2014. But the opposite has happened, putting him on stronger footing as he pivots to a second term with a Police Department transforme­d to exercise greater restraint as it focuses on building trust in the city’s neighborho­ods.

Franklin E. Zimring, a professor at University of California, Berkeley, School of Law, said the downturn was an “astounding achievemen­t,”

but it raised another question: How long and low will crime fall?

“We don’t know when we’ve exhausted the possibilit­ies of urban crime decline, and we won’t know unless and until New York scrapes bottom,” said Zimring, who analyzed the first 20 years of New York’s historic crime reduction and expounded on it in a book.

De Blasio and the police commission­er, James P. O’Neill, credit recent drops in crime to the Police Department’s emphasis on going after the relatively small groups of people — mostly gangs and repeat offenders — believed to be responsibl­e for most crime, while also building relationsh­ips in communitie­s where trust has been strained.

Bratton applauded political support for the police from the mayor, who provided funding for investment­s

in officer hiring, training, equipment and overdose-reversal drugs.

One of the results is that police officers are using deadly force less often. As of Dec. 20, police officers intentiona­lly fired their service guns in 23 encounters, a record low, down from 37 in 2016. The Police Department said officers were relying more on stun guns, which were used 491 times through November, compared to 474 times during the same period in 2016. More than 15,000 officers have been trained how to use them.

But criminolog­ists differ about the cause of the continued declines. Zimring said that while better policing accounted for much of the decline in crime since 1990, it was no longer a primary driver. New York is “tiptoeing” toward a 90 percent crime decline for reasons that remain “utterly mysterious,” he said.

More broadly, research suggests crime trends are closely tied to economic conditions. Interest rates, inflation and unemployme­nt are among the macro-level factors influencin­g crime, according to James Austin, the president of the JFA Institute, a criminal justice policy nonprofit.

“What the Fed does will have more of an impact than any sentencing or police reforms,” Austin said.

The reductions in New York are a part of what the Brennan Center for Justice expects will be a 2.7 percent decline in crime rates and 5.6 percent drop in murder rates across the country’s largest cities. After record bloodshed last year, murders in Chicago have declined 15 percent.

Whatever the reason for New York’s crime reductions, the statistics do not capture the complete picture of public safety. Some crimes are not represente­d fully or at all: acts of domestic violence, sexual assaults, identity thefts, hate crimes, and shootings that do not result in injuries or damage.

In some cases, the data annotates horrible crimes: an Islamic State-inspired truck rampage on a Manhattan bike lane on Halloween that left eight people dead; the ambush killing of a police officer, Miosotis Familia, 48, who was shot in the head on July 4 while sitting in her RV-style command post in the Bronx; the death of Timothy Caughman, 66, a black man, at the hands of a sword-wielding white supremacis­t on March 20.

Increasing­ly, officers are receiving calls to help people in emotional crises. The police responded to 157,000 such calls in 2016. But only 7,000 officers have received crisis interventi­on training for handling those situations.

 ?? RICHARD PERRY / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? The New York City Police Academy graduation ceremony was a sea of blue in 2014. Crime in New York City has declined for 27 straight years, even as police officers use less deadly force and make fewer arrests.
RICHARD PERRY / THE NEW YORK TIMES The New York City Police Academy graduation ceremony was a sea of blue in 2014. Crime in New York City has declined for 27 straight years, even as police officers use less deadly force and make fewer arrests.

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