Let that sink in, Boston a city of 650,000 people has had four murders so far this year
When city leaders in Boston set out last spring to renew their focus on violence prevention, they set a modest goal: reduce homicides by 20 percent in three years.
No one imagined what the city of 650,000 has seen so far
this year: four homicides, a 78 percent reduction from the 18 that took place
over the same period in 2023, reported The New York Times.
Luck has played a part, the normal ebb and flow of violent
crime. Yet the longer the quiet has persisted, the more pressure the city has
felt to sustain it. As summer set in with a blistering heat wave, anxiety rose.
Will a seasonal uptick in violence shatter the preternatural calm?
“We’re not even halfway through the year, and I get
superstitious,” Michael Cox, the Boston police commissioner, said in a recent
interview, acknowledging his reluctance to talk too much about the phenomenon.
“But we are doing so many things, and hopefully it is having an impact.”
City and police leadership are quick to acknowledge that the
remarkably low number of homicides is not all their doing, and that bigger
forces are at work. Large cities across the country saw violent crime decline in the first quarter of this year,
part of a continuing downward trend after an alarming spike during the pandemic.
Boston’s smaller population, relative to other major cities,
helps narrow the scope of violence prevention efforts. There is also a strong
local foundation for such work, dating to the 1990s, when academic researchers,
clergy and community leaders worked together to drive change so transformative, the “Boston Miracle” captured
national attention.
The city set its new goal last year as Mayor Michelle Wu
encouraged law enforcement and public health workers to revive that
collaborative approach. Her administration has mined historical crime data to
pinpoint 150 “micro-locations” across the city — as specific as a single
intersection — where violence has flared in the past, and where custom-designed
interventions can have outsize impacts.
Mayor Michelle Wu, center, encouraged law enforcement and
public health workers to collaborate more closely and consulted outside
experts. Credit...Sophie Park for The New York Times
A similarly granular approach involves reaching out to past
violent offenders, and survivors of violence — seen as largely overlapping
groups — to find out what they need to stay out of trouble. Some ask for
transfers to other public housing, away from conflicts that spur violence.
Others need food, clothing or health care, or help acquiring G.E.D.s or skills
training to prepare them for employment.
“Boston is a place where 40 percent of violent crime happens
on 4 percent of city streets, and where a very small number of people drive a
significant part of the violence,” said Isaac Yablo, the mayor’s 29-year-old
senior adviser for community safety. “So when you go and get to know the
people, eventually you’re going to know the people involved.”
The goal, pursued through outreach to neighborhoods and
weekly meetings where 15 community organizations and city departments trade
ideas and updates about some of the several hundred people on their radar, is
to “engage 100 percent of the individuals most likely to shoot or be shot,” Mr.
Yablo said.
Previous efforts to identify those most likely to be
involved in crime have stirred concern about racial profiling and a lack of
transparency. Ms. Wu, in her former role as a city councilor, raised such
questions about a gang database maintained by the Boston Regional Intelligence
Center and used by the city’s police. Some changes were made to the database as
a result, including the removal of more than 2,000 names, but criticism of its use has continued.
Some intelligence and analysis from the center are used in
the city’s latest push to curtail violence, but leaders of the effort said
their approach goes far beyond policing, prioritizing public health and basic
needs above the sorting and surveilling of gangs.
Thomas Abt, the founding director of the Violence Reduction
Center at the University of Maryland — who has worked with Boston in the past
year on its techniques — acknowledged valid national concerns about
overpolicing but described the Boston strategy as practical.
“They’re carefully identifying people they should spend more
time on, based on past behavior,” he said. “That’s just smart policy.”
Boston’s murder tally was already low. The city had 70
homicides in 2010 and 56 in 2020; last year, there were 37. Chuck Wexler,
executive director of the Police Executive Research Forum and a former Boston
police operations assistant, said the city’s police department has become
unusually adept at heading off potential retaliation after violent incidents, a
tactic he said is “in their DNA at this point.”
Other experts stressed that multiple factors other than
policing help to suppress violence in the city: the strict gun laws in
Massachusetts; the significant number of new immigrants, linked by researchers to lower crime rates; and the
top-rated hospitals that excel at saving gunshot victims.
“It’s not one thing, but a whole confluence,” said Jacob
Stowell, a criminology professor at Northeastern University who studies
patterns of violence. “The whys are elusive but fascinating, and worth trying
to capture and perpetuate.”
Sandra Susan Smith, a professor of criminal justice at
Harvard’s Kennedy School who has documented racial disparities in policing in Boston,
credited the city for investing in community organizations — a step
increasingly linked to lower crime rates — and said that micro-targeting of
locations and people “is by definition not racial profiling, if practiced in
the way that police describe.”
Yet she cautioned that attention should still be paid to
other ongoing police practices to ensure that racial disparities elsewhere are
not overlooked.
Earlier in her tenure, Ms. Wu, 39, faced some criticism of
her handling of crime. After the city saw seven homicides in the first two months of 2023, some found
fault with what they saw as a muted response.
Last summer, a city grant allowed residents of a public
housing complex in the Charlestown neighborhood to run a dance program near a
basketball court where residents had felt less safe in recent years.Credit...Sophie
Park for The New York Times
Since then, the mayor has cultivated deeper relationships
with police leadership, helping to negotiate a new five-year police contract with annual raises of
4 percent and new limits on the use of arbitration to overturn officer
discipline. She has also pushed back against the City Council’s recently
proposed cuts to public safety funding.
In an interview last month, Ms. Wu described violence
prevention as “something you have to work on with the same intensity every
single day of the year, not just after an incident, when there’s pressure to
respond.”
Summer, though, has often been a season of increased
violence in Boston, with 30 percent of annual homicides, on average,
occurring in June, July and August. On May 21, Ms. Wu announced her summer
safety plan, including a revamped system for connecting young people with jobs,
mental health outreach to neighborhoods, and funding for block parties and
other social events, aimed at strengthening ties among neighbors and displacing
drug use or fighting in shared outdoor spaces.
Ten days later, the city was rattled by its fourth homicide
of the year, one that felt especially unsettling because the woman killed was
not an “intended target,” according to officials.
It was a reminder of how tenuous the peace could be. But
even in such moments, Mr. Abt said, “You work the plan, you stay the course.”
Some of the progress has followed long-term police work in
high-risk areas. In February, after a two-year investigation of gang activity
rooted in a public housing development, federal prosecutors charged more than 40 members of
Boston’s Heath Street Gang with racketeering conspiracy, drug trafficking and
other crimes.
After the sweep, police officers and city workers reached
out to younger residents who had been on the fringes of the gang activity to
help them find jobs, education, or other assistance with their own or their
families’ needs.
“We want to fill that void before another gang comes in to
fill it,” Commissioner Cox said.
City teams are also asking residents of high-risk
neighborhoods what they think could help squash crime. Some requests are
simple, like more lighting or speed bumps. More complex interventions, aimed at
helping residents take back neighborhood spaces, are funded by $100,000 in
small grants.
Last summer, a $5,000 city grant allowed residents of a
public housing complex in the Charlestown neighborhood to run a dance program
three nights a week near its basketball court, a popular spot where residents
had felt less safe in recent years. A 15-year-old boy was hurt in a brazen
midday shooting there in 2022.
Organizers with the Kennedy Center, a social service
organization with 60 years of history in the neighborhood, recruited a local
mother to teach a hip-hop class for girls, and found others to lead classes in
Haitian folk dance and salsa.
“You could see people coming out of the house, checking it
out, feeling like, ‘OK, I don’t have to worry for this hour,’” said Crystal
Galvin, the Kennedy Center’s director of community services, who plans to bring
back dance classes this summer.
Ms. Wu upped the ante last month, releasing the city’s first
“Plan to End Violence” — a quest that sounds less absurd
these days than it did a year ago.
“When the goal is to reduce violence, or respond to it
better, it subconsciously sends the message that there’s not much you can do,”
said Mr. Yablo. “This strategy is, prevent it.”
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