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Murders Drop 12% for Steepest Dip in 35 Years

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

Murders in the United States dropped 12% in the first half of 1995--the sharpest decline since the FBI began keeping tabs on six-month crime totals in 1960, the bureau said Sunday.

In cities of more than 1 million people, murders reported to police fell 19% from the first six months of 1994, according to the FBI.

The sharp declines came against the backdrop of decreases in all violent crime and a smaller drop in overall serious crime.

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In Los Angeles, murders dropped 4%, as the city mirrored the national trend of falling crime rates. Statistics for the city show that violent crime--murder, rape, robbery and assault--dropped 6% in the first six months of 1995.

National Institute of Justice Director Jeremy Travis attributed the drop to law enforcement adjusting to criminal trends, ranging from the advent of crack cocaine in cities to the rise of juvenile, handgun and street violence.

“We’re seeing the impact of successful policing strategies,” Travis said.

Across the nation, “gangs are being broken up, people are being put away for a long time, and there’s an important partnership between state and federal authorities to cut down on interstate gun trafficking,” said Travis, whose institute is the Justice Department’s research arm.

He said attention on domestic violence may also be paying off. The decline in murder included a drop in spousal homicide.

FBI Director Louis J. Freeh warned, however, that the statistics also show great cause for alarm. Violent crime still remains at an “intolerable level,” Freeh said. “Even more disturbing, violent crime involving young people, both as perpetrators and victims, is on the rise--an alarming indicator of future trends.” The number of juveniles arrested for weapons offenses has more than doubled over the past decade.

Freeh and other authorities took note of the fact that the crime-prone 16-to-24-year-old group in the population will grow dramatically over the next decade. Steering this age group away from crime is “our great task,” he said.

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Violent crime reported to the nation’s law enforcement agencies during the first half of this year dropped 5% from the first half of 1994, while property crime showed no change. This added up to a 1% decrease in overall serious crime.

While murder showed the sharpest drop, forcible rape was down 7%, robbery, 10%, and aggravated assault, 2%. Among property crimes, larceny-theft was the only offense to increase; it was up 3%. The declines included burglary, down 4%; motor vehicle theft, 5%, and arson, 7%.

On a regional basis, serious crime increased in the first half of 1995 only in the West, where it was up 2%. The Northeast and South each experienced 2% declines and the Midwest a 1% drop.

In Los Angeles, the number of murders decreased from 374 in the first half of 1994 to 358 for the same period this year. Reported incidents of robbery fell more than 9%, from 15,362 to 14,034. Rape dropped almost 12%, from 822 to 735, and reported assaults fell 3%, from 19,078 to 18,513.

Other so-called Part 1 serious crimes fell a total of about 3%, with 134,099 total crimes reported to police between January and June. Burglary fell about 4% and vehicle theft almost 8%. The only serious crime to show an increase was theft, with a 1% rise.

A Los Angeles police spokesman, Lt. Anthony Alba, said official policies should be given some credit for the trend that has seen crime rates dropping since the early 1990s.

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Some of the decrease, Alba said, can be attributed to the stricter sentencing laws for crimes against people.

The tough “three strikes and you’re out” statute, which imposes lengthy sentences on repeat offenders, has dissuaded some criminals from committing crime, as have the increased penalties for using a gun, Alba said.

Strict sentencing also has contributed to the nearly 12% drop in reported rapes during the first six months of the year, Alba said.

A sentence of more than 100 years was recently handed down to a serial rapist in California’s San Fernando Valley--a term that has sent criminals the message that their crimes will not be tolerated, Alba said.

“People should feel a little safer out there. Next, hopefully, the perception of crime in our community will drop just as the number of crimes have.”

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