Abdul-Hakim Shabazz: Something needs to be done about city’s murder rate

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Abdul-Hakim ShabazzIndianapolis is on track for another year of record murders.

I will let that sink in.

As I write this column, we have had close to 130 murders in the city, or a murder every 1.44 days. This puts us on track for 254 criminal homicides in 2021, far exceeding the 214 murders we saw in 2020. And even if you exclude the three mass shootings we had this year, Indianapolis is still on track to break last year’s record.

And to add insult to injury, the murder stats haven’t really changed all that much. Eighty-nine percent of the victims had criminal histories and accounted for 272 adult felony arrests. Seventy-seven percent of the suspects had criminal records and accounted for 156 adult felony arrests. Sixty-three percent of the murders involved a Black victim, even though Blacks are less than 30% of the population.

What makes this annoying is that this city has spent millions over the years on crime prevention, and it seems all we get for our results is more crime. Since 2017, Indianapolis has spent nearly $17 million in crime-prevention grant dollars.

And the city is getting ready to spend another $3 million on summer crime prevention. But that money won’t be distributed for a few more months, so there’s plenty of time for the body count to rise.

You have to ask, where has all the money gone? What are these community groups doing with the cash—make that taxpayer dollars—they’ve received? I realize this could be asking to prove a negative; after all, how do you demonstrate someone didn’t get shot because of your efforts? But something has to be done, and there needs to be some form of accountability.

Don’t get me started on the “Violence Interrupters,” the city’s answer to the Ten Point Coalition. What violence have they interrupted? I know they took a trip to Oakland to study that city’s anti-crime efforts, which, by the way, pretty much boiled down to gentrification. But the body count in Indianapolis continues to grow. And did I mention that one of the violence interrupters was recently charged with the Level 6 felony of intimidation?

So what is the city to do to get its murder rate under control?

The Indianapolis Fraternal Order of Police has put out a short list of four things the city could do today.

1. Purchase and deploy a gunshot-detection system.

2. Purchase and deploy mobile and static license plate readers.

3. Staff the arrestee-processing center 24 hours a day, particularly during the summer months.

4. Cease automatic low bonds for repeat convicted felons for all new Level 6 felonies charged.

I am a big fan of point number four, ceasing low bonds. The fact that most of the crime victims and suspects have adult felonies is a pretty good indicator that someone isn’t spending enough time behind bars. If they were, someone would probably still be alive today.

Speaking of which, I didn’t get a chance to mention our non-fatal shootings, which are also through the roof. And note, had someone had better aim, or had Indianapolis not had a really good medical infrastructure, our murder numbers would be a lot higher.

I get the fact that crime is up nationwide, and that addressing the issue will take long-term solutions. But with that said, something needs to be done and done now. Another year of record criminal homicides is not another record I want to see Indianapolis break.•


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