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Queens, Bronx Drive Up City Murder Rate

Queens, Bronx Drive Up City Murder Rate

With the year’s first quarter nearly in the books, the murder rate in the city has increased by 20.7% compared with the same period last year, a spike chiefly due to an increase in killings in Southern Queens and the Bronx.

The number of murders has increased to 17 from eight within Patrol Borough Queens South, a command that patrols neighborhoods such as Jamaica, Ozone Park, and Far Rockaway, a 112.5% jump compared to the same time last year, according to the most recent police statistics. In the Bronx, murders have spiked by 42.8%: There have been 30 homicides recorded this year, compared with 21 during the same period last year.

While elected officials that represent the two areas offered differing theories as to why there has been an increase in homicides, most share similar fears regarding the size of the police department.

“New York is the safest it’s been in 40 years,” the president of the Bronx, Adolfo Carrion Jr., said. “These efforts will become increasingly more difficult if we continue to lose veteran police officers to areas outside of New York that offer higher salaries and if our recruiting numbers continue to decrease due to low starting salaries.”

As part of citywide budget cuts, the police department has proposed to shrink its head count by 1,000 officers, a move that would result in the smallest force in 16 years.

The police department’s chief spokesman, Deputy Commissioner Paul Browne, said the increases in killings in Queens South and the Bronx are precisely why the precincts there have been targeted by Operation Impact, a program that saturates high crime areas with officers on foot patrol.

“That’s why Commissioner Kelly directed that all graduates of the last Police Academy class be assigned with experienced supervisors to impact zones there and where other spikes were experienced, and why he directed that the previous cadre of impact officers remain in place — effectively doubling the size of impact,” he said.

The trouble spots in Queens appear to be the 103rd Precinct in Jamaica, where murders have jumped to five this year compared with two last year, and the 101st precinct in Far Rockaway, where four murders have occurred this year compared with one last year. The City Council member who represents Jamaica, Leroy Comrie, a Democrat, said Operation Impact has been very effective, but that a majority of the murders recorded this year have been perpetrated outside of the impact zone, which is in the downtown area of the neighborhood.

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NYPD ‘Beating’ Crime on The Streets for 2007

NYPD ‘Beating’ Crime on The Streets for 2007 

NYPD ‘Beating’ Crime on The Streets for 2007

Astonishingly, the nation’s largest city is among the safest. Homicides in New York are expected to fall below 500 this year, fewer than in any year since reliable record-keeping began 44 years ago. Mayor Michael Bloomberg and his police commissioner, Ray Kelly, could easily pat each other on the back and call it a day. Laudably, they have instead pledged to bring crime under control in neighborhoods that have so far eluded success.

The mayor and Mr. Kelly plan to send all 914 officers from the new class of graduated recruits to join other officers assigned to these tough areas. This will essentially double the Operation Impact force, which matches new recruits with seasoned officers and is credited with helping to reduce crime in nearly all categories, including rapes and robberies.

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