Even though New Yorkers were terrified by news that a woman pushed a
man in front of a train in Queens on Thursday night (a suspect was in custody Saturday)
in what was the second subway fatality of its kind in a month, the
truth is that it was quite a safe year to be a resident of the Big
Apple. Murders in New York dropped to their lowest level in more than 40
years with 414 recorded homicides as of Friday, compared with 515 for
the same period last year, and lower than the previous record low of 471
set in 2009, reports the New York Times.
That is quite the contrast from the early 1990s, when the number of
homicides in a year easily reached the low 2,000s. While murders
decreased, thefts increased, based almost entirely in a soaring number
of robberies of Apple devices, including iPhones.
While New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg celebrated the latest plunge,
officials in the country’s third-largest city have been grappling with
how to make sure 2013 doesn’t see a repeat of what was a very bloody
year. The murder count in Chicago reached 500 last Friday, the first
time it reached that number in four years, when 513 were killed in 2008,
reports the Chicago Tribune.
It marked a 17 percent increase in homicides from last year, in large
part because of gang violence that seems to be increasingly audacious,
points out the Associated Press.
Still, the number of homicides this year pales in comparison to what
the city saw in the early 1990s when around 900 people were killed every
year.
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