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Sunday, July 7, 2019
Police Data Shows Violent Crime Getting Deadlier in St. Louis
Violent crime in St. Louis has become deadlier in the past decade or so and the use of guns is on the rise, according to an analysis of police data.
From 2015 to 2016, 94% of homicides in St. Louis involved a gun, as opposed to 78% in 2004, according to a recent study released by researchers with the University of Missouri-St. Louis. Guns also were involved in over 60% of assaults and robberies from 2015 to 2016, compared with 43% in 2004.
"Whatever is driving the use of guns is likely to have more lethal consequences," Janet Lauritsen, criminology professor, said of the study she co-authored with criminology doctoral candidate Theodore Lentz.
The researchers examined years of St. Louis Police Department data that also indicated the number of homicides per robbery or assault has spiked in the past eight years, from 23 homicides per 1,000 incidents to 36, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported.
The scholars cited the increased use of guns in St. Louis as a likely influence. Shooters are firing more bullets, including those of a higher caliber, which have now made the shootings more lethal, Lauritsen said.
She added that the spike in homicides could also be attributed to shooters being more determined to kill.
The city has struggled with violent crime for years. FBI statistics released in September revealed St. Louis had a murder rate of 66.1 per 100,000 people in 2017, the worst rate in the United States.
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