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Violent crime falls, murders up in Northeast

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Prisoners place their hands on a wall as they are brought to jail by Orange County sheriff's deputies in Fullerton, California, June 23, 2009. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson

Prisoners place their hands on a wall as they are brought to jail by Orange County sheriff's deputies in Fullerton, California, June 23, 2009.

Credit: Reuters/Lucy Nicholson

WASHINGTON | Mon Sep 19, 2011 11:21am EDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Violent crime in the United States dropped sharply in 2010 for the fourth straight year, but the murder rate in the Northeast soared, led by more homicides in Boston and New York, the FBI said on Monday.

Bucking the trend where crime rose when the economy soured, violent crime such as murder, rape and aggravated assault dropped 6 percent last year while unemployment remained stubbornly high. Property crime fell 2.7 percent from 2009, according to final statistics collected by the FBI from law enforcement agencies nationwide.

At the same time, the number of murders jumped substantially in major cities in the Northeast, including Boston, New York and New Jersey's largest city Newark, which all experienced double-digit increases, the statistics showed.

Boston saw a 46 percent rise in its murder rate, with 73 homicides in 2010, followed by a 13.8 percent increase in New York City and a 12.5 percent jump in Newark.

The national murder rate fell 4.2 percent, the FBI said.

Major metropolitan areas that have had crime problems saw murder rates fall, including a 6.5 percent decline in Los Angeles and a 15 percent drop in Detroit, where there has been a big decline in population due to the economic downturn.

The number of motor vehicle thefts dropped 7.4 percent and burglaries fell 2 percent.

More details can be found at: here

(Reporting by Jeremy Pelofsky; editing by Philip Barbara)

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Comments (3)
djaymick wrote:
Is it a coincidence that Philadelphia isn’t listed, even though it is a major city in the Northeast? That’s because they have a law that allows citizens to carry firearms. Coincidentally, all of the states (the major cities cited) allow that provision. Is it time to look at the benefits of carrying a firearm, instead of listening to the same liberals complain that guns kill. Guns don’t kill (ever have the gun counter at a K-Mart rob you as you shop?), people kill with guns.

Sep 19, 2011 12:12pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
JamVee wrote:
Strange, according to the anti-gun lobby, with all the more lenient “gun laws” currently in effect, violent crimes were supposed to skyrocket! Even stranger still, New York City, with some of the most prohibitive gun laws in the country, is right up there near the top with more murders.

Sep 19, 2011 12:18pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
s123man wrote:
Aging boomers too tired to fight? Reality TV teaching fighting spouses to claim they “walked into a door” when the police arrive? Everybody is too poor to buy stolen goods? Everyone is too poor to make it worth the trouble to rob them? Jails are filling up because nobody wants to leave the three meals and a bed?

Sep 19, 2011 12:40pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
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