Murders, shootings at record lows in Boston, officials say
City officials took a quick bow today in announcing the news that the 24 murders recorded in Boston so far this year are the lowest homicide numbers in the city dating to 1957 and that shootings and other gun crimes are also far lower than even just a few years ago.
Last year at this point, Boston had had 36 murders. The city so far has seen 129 people shot this year, compared to 139 last year - and a five year average of 189.
"The city has never been safer, period," Police Commissioner Michael Cox said at a press conference at BPD headquarters today.
But Cox, Mayor Wu, Isaac Yablo, a senior city advisor for public safety, emphasized they're not declaring a victory lap, that far more work remains to push those numbers even lower.
"One murder is too many," Cox said. "Any crime is too much."
Still, Cox said the overall decline in violent-crime stats, coupled with an increase in the number of recruits coming out of the BPD academy - although the department is still short roughly 200 officers - has let BPD begin to focus on other "quality of life" crimes, through a new series of "community intervention" strike teams aimed at hitting problem areas, most recently on Boston Common and at the South Bay Mall.
Cox added BPD is now working with small businesses across the city on what he said is an exploding problem of "organized crime syndicates" running large-scale shoplifting runs - made possible as violent crime goes down, freeing up BPD time for tackling other problems.
Cox said that violent crime overall in Boston is down 2% this year over last year. He acknowledged that the dramatic decline in murder has been accompanied by increases in aggravated assault, both in cases of domestic violence and other attacks.
Cox, Wu and Yablo pointed to several steps the city has taken to try to reduce violent crime, including increases in youth jobs and programming at city community centers aged at teens who might be headed towards violence. Wu said the city provided summer jobs for some 10,000 Boston teens this past summer.
Yablo praised three programs at the Boston Public Health Commission that work with specific teens and young men to try to steer them from gun violence. He also praised work by numerous private organizations, including the Louis D. Brown Peace Institute, Mothers for Justice and Equality and local hospitals with their own violence-intervention programs for working intensely with at-risk young people to steer them away from violence.
Like Cox, though, he said the work is far from over.
"We cannot rest well until we are at zero," he said. "That is our goal. We won't stop until we get to zero."
Wu added that there is one problem Boston alone will have trouble solving: The ease with which guns get into Boston, both from states where gun purchases are easy and from 3D-printed "ghost guns."
Major crimes in Boston for 2023 and 2024, broken down by type and by police district.
Note: BPD says the city has actually seen 23 murders to date this year; the 24 number includes a case in which somebody who was attacked in a previous year died this year.
Watch the press conference:
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Comments
Priced Out
We've successfully priced out gun violence woohoo! I don't think the commish can really take credit for something that is a national phenomenon. It's not like the officers are actually preventing anything.
A side problem with gentrification is that rich people's demands for UberEats and Doordash has presented a new problem: these unregulated scooters that are driving recklessly. Would be nice if we did anything about that.
Nice suburban comment
WTF?
Gentrification tends to reduce murders
Take Mattapan for example
https://www.wbur.org/news/2023/01/27/mattapan-development-community-plan...
https://baystatebanner.com/2023/11/08/is-starbucks-in-mattapan-sq-a-harb...
Home prices in Mattapan, Massachusetts have increased over the past five years, with the average home value increasing 5.9% in the past year:
10-year growth
Mattapan's median home price increased by 129% over the past decade, which was the third-largest price increase among Boston's neighborhoods.
Violent Crime in Boston is still concentrated in a few areas - https://safemap.io/boston/map
Squares and streets should finish the gentrification project - http://www.bostonplans.org/planning-zoning/planning-initiatives/squares-...
And hopefully gentrification will help to fix BPS since they aren't fixing themselves.
I can't complain about gentrification though since we bought our house in the city 13 years ago for the bargain price of $280k but it sucks to be middle class and trying to buy here now...
And I bet murders in Brockton are increasing as folks are priced out of Boston and move to places like Brockton and Randolph, but I couldn't find those numbers.
Where does the violence go?
Are less expensive areas seeing increases in violence?
You mention Brockton and Randolph - Here's a data source:
Brockton Murders:
2022: 8
2021: 8
2020:4
2010: 9
Randolph Murders:
2022: 2
2021: 0
2020: 0
2010: 1
Not seeing what you expect here. (The Pioneer Institute sucks massively, but this is a direct data dump from reliable sources made convenient so I linked it). You can explore other crime categories as you choose.
Note that these numbers are small and extremely volatile - were they health stats, Randolph's would be suppressed and reported as "<5" and both would be labeled "statistically unstable". Murder numbers in MA mostly track with population numbers - larger cities have higher numbers.
MA is a low crime state in general, so trends in rare crimes like murders are really only reliably trackable in larger cities.
It is possible that people have moved out of state, but violence is a bit more complicated than that - it doesn't necessarily move when people prone to violence change their venue.
Look at the recent violence at Brockton highschool
Brockton High School in Massachusetts has experienced a recent increase in violence, including:
A female student was stabbed in the leg and hospitalized
Another student was stabbed in the neck and hospitalized
A student brought a gun into the school
Teachers and staff have described scenes of violence and chaos
Students have destroyed school property and harmed teachers
Students have had physical fights in the hallways
Students have come and gone from school buildings without permission or supervision
In response to the violence, the school has taken a number of measures, including: Daily rounds, Security training, Yondr pouches, Cell phone policy, and Safety audit.
In February 2024, the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education (DESE) commissioned a full safety and security audit at no cost to the district. The audit was prompted by teachers and staff describing the violence and chaos in the school. Four school committee members even called for the U.S. National Guard to be deployed to the school, but the National Guard was never deployed.
That is still anecdotal
Brockton High was also being bankrupted by a corrupt police force charging half-days for no-show crossing guard duty and systematically ignored issues like locking doors on empty rooms.
We don't know if this was an uptick or not unless we know what was happening before and if it was reported.
You need to provide more sourcing information - a lot of this is anecdata otherwise, considering the other issues involved with attempts by police to bankrupt the school budget.
https://ground.news/article/as-budget-deficit-ballooned-brockton-schools...
Also, why are you calling out Brockton in particular? Personal reasons? Most schools saw a rise in disciplinary issues during and after the pandemic.
Actually it's increasing in Worcester and Springfield
Worcester recorded a record 16 homicides this year.
Springfield Recorded a record 32 last year.
Sounds like you’re saying….
….. push all the poor people and the working class out of Boston, just get ‘em out and then everything will be hunky dory.