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brooklynite

(94,502 posts)
Fri Feb 25, 2022, 11:27 AM Feb 2022

3 in 10 District residents do not feel safe in their neighborhoods, Post poll finds

Washington Post

Three in 10 District residents do not feel safe from crime in their neighborhoods, according to a Washington Post poll, a fear that comes as the city experiences continued gun violence and a rise in carjackings.

The share of Washingtonians who say they are not safe from crime is up from 22 percent in November 2019 to 30 percent this year, the highest in more than two decades of Post polls.

A greater percentage of people living in wards 7 and 8 feel unsafe — more than 4 in 10 — in areas east of the Anacostia River with the highest concentrations of violent crime, compared with under 3 in 10 in other parts of the city.

Residents describe hearing gun shots, seeing police converge at crime scenes and learning about violent and property crimes on neighborhood email discussion groups or social media. About 1 in 6 residents say someone in their household has been a victim of violent crime in the past five years including 23 percent of Black residents, 8 percent of White residents and 21 percent of those who are Hispanic, Asian or another non-White background.

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3 in 10 District residents do not feel safe in their neighborhoods, Post poll finds (Original Post) brooklynite Feb 2022 OP
The gun hoarders I_UndergroundPanther Feb 2022 #1
It's not "gun hoarders" driving DC crime, but there are good efforts to stop it. sir pball Feb 2022 #2

sir pball

(4,741 posts)
2. It's not "gun hoarders" driving DC crime, but there are good efforts to stop it.
Fri Feb 25, 2022, 11:51 AM
Feb 2022
Every year, about 500 identifiable people in D.C. drive as much as 70% of the city’s gun violence, according to a new report commissioned by the city.
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“In Washington, D.C., most gun violence is very tightly concentrated on a small number of very high risk young Black male adults that have a shared set of common risk factors,” says David Muhammad, the executive director of the National Institute for Criminal Justice Reform. “This very small number of high risk individuals are identifiable. Their violence is predictable and therefore it is preventable.”
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According to the study, there is significant overlap between victims of homicides and the suspects who commit them, in terms of life circumstances and risk factors. Many are involved in groups, which the study defined as a neighborhood crew, clique, or gang with varying levels of organization. Many have history with the criminal justice system, and a significant number have previously been the victim of a shooting or connected in some way to a recent shooting.
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While many point to programs for youth as a solution to violence, Muhammad says the city also needs to be extremely focused on reaching older young adults.

“It’s extremely difficult engaging a 25-year-old who has seven previous adult arrests, who is an avowed member of his neighborhood clique, who’s not currently interested in services, but that is the individual we have to serve. That’s the individual we have to pour resources into,” he says.

And pouring resources into the highest-risk people will take more coordination among the District’s various violence prevention agencies and programs, says Muhammad, who was part of a team that at one point reduced homicides in Oakland by half. He says successful violence prevention involves regular meetings where leaders of various agencies and programs get specific about certain individuals they’re worried about — and then assign that person a life coach who can check in with them every single day and connect them with the resources and interventions they need.


https://dcist.com/story/22/02/18/majority-of-dc-homicides-driven-by-small-group/

https://cjcc.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/cjcc/release_content/attachments/DC%20Gun%20Violence%20Problem%20Analysis%20Summary%20Report.pdf
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