Sunday, December 04, 2016

How many unsolved Homicides are Justified?

Image from HeyJackass.com

While the site HeyJackass.com is not an "official" tabulator of homicides in Chicago, they seem to do a fairly credible job.  They show that 9 out of about 700 homicides in Chicago this year have been listed as from self defense, and there are 11 listed as police related. That is close to the official ratio listed in the FBI Uniform Crime Reports (UCR) for the nation, which show police justified homicide a little bit greater than non-police justified homicides.  Both of those numbers are significantly under reported. Only about one out of five non-police justified homicides are caught by the UCR.  It appears that about half of justified police shootings are recorded in the UCR.

Nationally, the clearance rates for homicides is about 63 percent. We know that most homicides occur among criminals and their criminal associates. Most of them are not legally able to possess firearms. They have a significant incentive to avoid the authorities. In Indianapolis, police are wondering how many of the unsolved homicides were justified. From fox59.com:
During recent months, IMPD commanders were discussing whether some of the murders investigated by detectives should be reclassified as self-defense homicides.

On Sept. 14, the bodies of Mack Taylor and Alexander Brown were discovered in an alley near the 3000 block of North Gladstone Avenue where detectives determined two days earlier they had attempted to rob a drug dealer.

Detectives have considered whether or not that drug dealer fired back in self-defense of a home invasion robbery.

“You have the right to use deadly force to prevent the threat, imminent threat, you don’t have to wait to get hit,” said Hennessey. “It could be serious bodily injury or death so you can kill someone that is gonna beat you up.”

A few days later three people died of wounds as the result of a shootout in the 2000 block of West 76th Street. A fourth person survived, and, without any witnesses left alive to counter his story, claimed he was defending himself from a drug robbery.

“Just because you’re committing a crime doesn’t mean that you have to allow yourself to be robbed or killed or beaten up,” said Hennessey.
In some cities, such as Chicago, the clearance rate is much lower, about 20%. If the chance of being caught after justifiably killing someone is one out of five, many criminals are accepting that risk. A feedback effect occurs. People do not trust the police, the police solve fewer cases, so fewer people trust the police. In Chicago the feedback loop has been accelerated with the Ferguson Effect, where the authorities do not back up the police, so the police take fewer risks, leading to higher homicide rates.  From chicagotribune.com: September 9th
Those figures — known as the clearance rate — include homicides marked as solved in the current year but committed in different years. But when old cases are stripped out, Chicago's clearance rate for 2016 homicides drops to about 21 percent. In all, Chicago police had solved just 92 of 432 homicides committed in 2016 through Aug. 16, according to police statistics.

Experts point to several reasons for the exceptionally low clearance rate in Chicago. Most killings in Chicago take place amid a street gang culture that intimidates anyone from coming forward with information.

"It's reflective of witnesses that don't want to come forward; they're afraid gang members will retaliate," said Thomas Alexander, a University of Maryland professor who researches clearance rates. "Another reason for low clearance in gang killings are people just don't trust the police."
As cities become less law abiding, revenues plunge. In Chicago the number of officers has dropped significantly in the last seven years. The number of Chicago detectives has dropped from 1,151 in 2009 to 863 in 2016. Crime scene technicians have dropped from 113 to 84.

Crime increases poverty at least as much as poverty increases crime.

It is certain that some percentage of unsolved homicides were justified. We will never know how many were.

©2016 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.

Link to Gun Watch

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

I have been saying this for years and years. What is the incentive to keep them unsolved? Well, it is two fold. First, the antis get to use the killings as criminal stats (guns = crime) for the purpose of gun control AND second they get to avoid admitting that guns are actually used the way this blog so nicely collects - defensive tools used for GOOD.

For anti's, it is better to have them as 'unsolved' because then they can just add them in to inflate the numbers, just like they do suicides. Ahem.

I was just reading about the 73 third record murder in Tulsa. Why is Tulsa so different? The fact that OK has a very different gun culture and gun grabber culture maybe? Whodathunkit. Glad to see ya write about this man, because it is TRUE just as I have been saying for a long time. The fact is, street justice is responsible for a large number of killings called "unsolved murders". Absent a proper and functioning justice system in the court jurisdiction, we will see more and more street justice, both defensive killings AND punishments doled out for actual crimes committed.

The question is - how long can the corrupt tyrants in Chicago get away with hiding away which of the incidents are which? I suspect that with more folks doing the kind of thing this blog does and the kind of thing hey jacka ss does, well, the closer to that answer we get to daily.

Anonymous said...

It certainly make the point I have been pressing. Makes no difference who you are. self defense is self defense. there has never been a life saved because of permits. registrations or safety classes. having the weapon is what can save your life. permits are made of paper so are practice targets. targets are far more useful than permits.

Anonymous said...

Second City Cop blog is what you need to read if you really want to know what's going on with the crime rate in Chicago.