
Murders rose at their fastest pace in a quarter-century last year
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It’s official: Murder rose across the U.S. last year at the fastest pace since 1990, according to data released by the FBI on Monday. There were an estimated 15,696 murders1 in 2015, 1,532
more than in 2014 and the most recorded in a calendar year since 2008. The increase isn’t a surprise; other reports, based on partial data, have shown the same trend. But Monday’s report
provides the first reliable, nationwide figures on an issue that has emerged as a major topic in this year’s presidential campaign. Donald Trump has cited rising murder rates in major U.S.
cities as evidence that criminal-justice reform efforts, such as the pullback of “stop and frisk” policing in New York and other cities, are failing. “Decades of progress made in bringing
down crime are now being reversed by this administration’s rollback of criminal enforcement,” Trump said in his speech at the Republican Convention in July. But while Monday’s report
confirms the increase in murder, it doesn’t support Trump’s larger claim. The rate of other forms of crime, including violent crime, remained near the historic lows achieved in 2013. The
overall violent crime rate — which includes assault, robbery and rape in addition to murder — rose 3 percent. The rate of nonviolent property crimes fell 3.4 percent. The new data, part of
the FBI’s Uniform Crime Report program, is based on voluntary reports from nearly 18,000 police departments and other law-enforcement agencies nationwide. In addition to crime rates for
certain major crime types, the annual “Crime in the U.S.” report provides data on arrests, clearance rates (the share of crimes that are solved) and police staffing. The report showed that
police departments in cities shrank slightly in 2015 despite efforts by departments to rebuild their ranks after enduring large losses during the recession. Here are a few more observations
from Monday’s report: BROAD-BASED RISE IN MURDER The increase in murder was remarkably widespread. Of the 82 cities with populations over 250,000 in 2014 or 2015,2 52 experienced a rise in
murder last year; murder fell in only 26. (Four cities stayed the same.) Murder rose by double digits in 29 big cities last year while dropping by double digits in just four of them. Three
cities (Indianapolis; Louisville, Kentucky, and Omaha, Nebraska) had more murders in 2015 than in any of the last 40 years. Preliminary evidence suggests the murder rate is continuing to
rise in 2016, at least in the largest cities. Murder rose in cities run by both political parties. Murder rose in 63 percent of the big cities with a Democratic mayor (33 of 52) and 85
percent of those led by a Republican (17 of 20); the two sets of cities saw murders rise at roughly the same pace.3 The increase pushed the murder rate — the number of killings per 100,000
people — up to 4.9, from 4.4 in 2014. The increase comes on the heels of nearly two decades of continuous decline in the national murder rate; 2014’s murder rate was the lowest recorded
national murder rate since the FBI began keeping the statistic in 1960. Indeed, 2015’s rate in the U.S. is roughly the same as it was in 2010 and less than half what it was when the murder
rate peaked nationally in 1980. It isn’t clear what caused the rise of murder in 2015. Some cities, most notably Baltimore, St. Louis and Chicago, experienced large jumps in murder that
began after police-related deaths. That has led some experts, including FBI Director James Comey, to suggest the rise in murder could be linked to police in some cities becoming less
proactive out of fear of a viral video sparking protests. The rise in murder in most cities, however, defies easy explanation, and it is likely that there is no one cause for why murder rose
nationally in 2015. OTHER CRIMES In contrast to murder, other major crimes measured by the FBI behaved relatively normally in 2015. UCR measures crimes in two overarching categories: person
(or violent) crimes made up of murder, assault, robbery and rape; and property crimes made up of burglary, theft, motor vehicle theft and arson.4 Both categories of crime have fallen a long
way since peaking in the early 1990s. Violent crime rose slightly in 2015, driven by the increase in murder as well as an increase in assault. The assault rate rose by 9 assaults per
100,000 people, the largest one-year jump in that rate since 1992 after reaching a 40-year low in 2014. Assaults still occurred at a slightly lower rate in 2015 than they did in 2012 despite
the increase last year. Property crimes dropped in 2015 driven by sizable declines in burglaries and thefts. The table below shows how violent crime rates for each type of crime in 2015
compared to the rates of those crimes in 1990 and 2014. CRIME 1990 2014 2015 CHANGE FROM 1990-2015 CHANGE FROM 2014-15 Murder 9.4 4.4 4.9 -4.5 +0.5 Robbery 256.3 101.3 101.9 -154.4 +0.6
Assault 422.9 229.2 237.8 -185.1 +8.6 All violent crime 729.6 361.6 372.6 -357.0 +11.0 Violent crime rates per 100,000 people since 1990 Source: FBI DRUG CRIMES The number of
narcotics-related arrests5 recorded by the FBI has risen considerably since the 1960s, increasing 3,000 percent from 1966 to 2006. In the past decade, however, that trend has reversed,
though narcotics arrests remain high by historical standards. Drug arrests in 2015 fell to their lowest level since 1995 as the decadelong steady decline in drug arrests picked up a bit of
steam. Overall drug arrests have fallen 21.2 percent from 2006 to 2015. The share of narcotics arrests for marijuana has fallen steadily from 45.8 percent in 2010 to 38.6 percent in 2015.
The total number of marijuana arrests is also falling due in part to the legalization and decriminalization of marijuana in various states over the last few years. But the decline has made
only a modest dent in the big increase in marijuana arrests during the 1990s and 2000s. POLICE DEPARTMENT SIZE In the aftermath of the recent recession, cities across the country reduced
police staffing, partly reversing two decades of growth in the number of sworn officers nationwide. Police departments began hiring again in 2014, when the number of sworn police officers
rose 3.6 percent, but the number dipped 0.2 percent in 2015. Big cities have had a particularly hard time rebuilding their departments. Seven of the biggest departments — those with over 750
officers — still have at least 15 percent fewer officers than in 2009. Atlanta is the only large police department with over 15 percent growth from 2009 to 2015. FURTHER READING: Gun Deaths
in America Were There 6 Percent More Murders Last Year, Or 16 Percent? How To Make Sense Of Conflicting, Confusing And Misleading Crime Statistics Murder Rates Don’t Tell Us Everything
About Gun Violence Scare Headlines Exaggerated The U.S. Crime Wave