The city of St. Petersburg has one of the worst homicide rate problems in the nation, according to a recent study from WalletHub.
The study, which evaluated 40 of the largest cities in the U.S. based on per capita homicides in the second quarter of 2021, 2022 and 2023, ranked St. Pete seventh worst in the nation of the cities evaluated. It was ranked the worst city in Florida and came in behind Memphis, Tennessee, St. Louis, Missouri, Kansas City, Missouri, Washington, D.C., Detroit and Richmond, Virginia.
St. Pete's homicide rate change from the second quarter of 2022 to the second quarter of 2023 was 1.16, the second worst of cities evaluated. From the second quarter of 2021 to the second quarter of 2023 though, homicides actually went down, with a -0.39 change. That ranked St. Pete at No. 22 on the list (the higher the ranking, the better the homicide rate outcome).
That shows that while the city's data shows a problem, good news is on the horizon. Its homicide rate in Q2 2023 was 4.65, putting the Sunshine City at No. 15 on the list.
With the 2024 Presidential Election approaching, much of the spotlight is on the GOP Presidential Primary, where candidates are spotlighting their tough-on-crime approaches and its superiority over what they describe as Democrats' soft touch that is causing crime to spike in blue cities.
The WalletHub analysis shows that blue cities have a higher increase, on average, in homicide rates than red cities. St. Pete, run by a Democratic Mayor for more than nine years, is among a top ten populated almost exclusively by Democratic Mayors. Only Oklahoma City Mayor David Holt, whose city ranks No. 10 on the list, is a Republican.
Of the 40 cities ranked, 32 are currently run by Democrats (though some cities, such as Colorado Springs and Jacksonville, had Republican Mayors during the times evaluated).
Of the eight Mayors who are not Democrats, two are independents.
But those familiar with these types of data sets will understand that it's not uncommon to find such correlation to Democratic Mayors.
WalletHub analyzed cities with high populations, which tend to be Democratic strongholds, even in red states. For example, Tennessee ranks at the top of the list, meaning it has the worst crime rate of the cities evaluated. While its Mayor is a Democrat, the state itself is solidly red. Similarly, St. Louis and Kansas City, both in Missouri, have Democratic Mayors in an otherwise ruby red state.
Further, the 2021 National Crime Victimization Survey found that violent crime in urban areas was 121% higher than in rural areas. That begs the question: Does population drive violent crime, or do politics?
Chicago, oft the subject of GOP ire when it comes to law and order conversations, ranked one spot behind St. Pete, at No. 8. But it showed improvements in its homicide rate both from 2022-2023 and 2021-2023.
It wasn't the only city to show improving rates. St. Louis, ranked No. 2, showed a decline in homicide rates both from 2022 and from 2021. So too did Detroit; Atlanta; Phoenix; Los Angeles; Minneapolis; San Francisco; Nashville, Tennessee; Denver; New York; Tucson, Arizona; Lincoln, Nebraska; Colorado Springs, Colorado; Fort Worth, Texas; Jacksonville; Sacramento, California; Philadelphia; Raleigh, North Carolina; Boston; and Austin, Texas.
Other cities — St. Pete; New Orleans; Albuquerque, New Mexico; Las Vegas; Norfolk, Virginia; Dallas; Columbus, Ohio; and Omaha, Nebraska — improved in at least one metric.
That means that of the 40 cities, only 11 saw no improvement at all. Of those, three at least didn't get any worse. In fact, the study found that homicide rates have fallen by about 5% in the 40 evaluated cities from Q2 of 2021 to Q2 of 2023.
Asked how to further reduce violent crime, experts involved in the WalletHub study had mixed responses. Dennis Mares, a professor of criminal justice and director of the Center for Crime Science and Violence Prevention at Southern Illinois University, said smarter gun legislation — not banning specific guns "because that is a political non-starter" — could help.
"At present, there is almost zero accountability for people who purchased a gun legally and resell it to criminals," he said. "That really is unconscionable and undercuts what the ATF (Bureau of Alcohol, Firearms, Tobacco and Explosives) can do to prosecute unscrupulous individuals."
Gary D. LaFree, a distinguished university professor in the department of criminology and criminal justice and founding director of the START Center at the University of Maryland, said increasing confidence in police and the legal system is key, but the criminal justice system must also "improve arrest clearance rates for violent crimes."
And Lisa Taylor, an associate professor of instruction and law enforcement technology at Ohio University Lancaster, said law enforcement should be allowed to do its job, but "let's surgically remove the 'bad' cops" because "no 'good' cop wants to work with a bad cop."
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