proposed laws

PA Bill Number: HB829

Title: In preliminary provisions, further providing for definitions;

Description: An Act amending the act of April 12, 1951 (P.L.90, No.21), known as the Liquor Code, in preliminary provisions, further providing for definitions;

Last Action: Signed in House

Last Action Date: Jul 3, 2024

more >>

decrease font size   increase font size

Violent crime dips in Pittsburgh in 2019 amid decline in homicides, but trouble spots remain :: 01/30/2020

Crime overall dropped last year in Pittsburgh, with total shootings in the city continuing their steady downward trend, but the number of non-fatal shootings, outbreaks of violence Downtown and cases of ethnic intimidation rose.

Violent crime in the city inched lower in 2019 from a year earlier amid a sharp decline in homicides, according to statistics released Thursday by city police.

As the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette previously reported, there were 37 homicides last year, down from 58 in 2018, a 36% plunge.

Non-fatal shootings in the city, however, rose nearly 4% to 109 in 2019 from 105 the year before. And violent crime remained essentially steady, ticking downward by 0.8%.

Zone 5, which covers neighborhoods on the east side of the city, remained the most dangerous of the city’s six precincts in terms of homicides, continuing a years-long trend. More than one-third of the killings in Pittsburgh in 2019 occurred in Zone 5.

A combination of factors, including “excellent police work,” community outreach and the city’s medical infrastructure, drew credit from police Chief Scott Schubert for the drop in homicides and declines in other crime categories.

“But while these numbers are encouraging, at the end of the day even one homicide is too many, one person being shot is too many,” Chief Schubert said in a statement, sounding a familiar refrain. “So we’ll keep working. We won’t be happy until the numbers are even lower.”

Pittsburgh’s overall crime rate, police said, fell 5.3% in 2019 compared with statistics from a year earlier.

Public Safety Director Wendell Hissrich praised technology for giving Pittsburgh’s crime fighters a leg up. The city’s ShotSpotter gunfire detection system covers 18 square miles of Pittsburgh — around one-third of the city — and uses powerful microphones to detect and locate gunshots. City streets are monitored by a robust network of cameras.

“As a result of the ShotSpotter system and city-installed security cameras, police are responding immediately to gunfire and locating victims,” Mr. Hissrich said. “By responding faster than ever before, officers are able to render aid to victims who otherwise might die.”

Police noted that some encouraging data in crime statistics were tempered last year by a jump in violent crime Downtown — even as overall Downtown crime rates dropped — as well as a rise in cases involving ethnic intimidation.

Last year there were 136 cases of violent crime Downtown, up 14% from the 119 reported in 2018.

Violent crime Downtown became a flashpoint last year, with Mayor Bill Peduto clashing with the Pittsburgh Cultural Trust over ways to address concerns about what the trust called “a declining level of public safety” in the Cultural District.

There were four Downtown stabbings in August and complaints by the trust and neighborhood business owners about what they perceived as an increase in homeless people, aggressive panhandling, disorderly youth and a variety of other nuisances.

The city responded by sending more police officers.

"We are concerned that violence went up [in Downtown]. I mean, you all remember we had a police officer who was checking on somebody at the bus shelter when a person came up and attacked that female. So we're there," Chief Schubert said Thursday afternoon during a news conference.

"Obviously we want to make sure we're visible," the chief continued. "We want to make sure that not just the officers working down there but that our motorcycles, our horses, our canines [are] more visible."

Mr. Peduto noted in the city’s press release that he has steered the police bureau to its largest complement of officers in a generation. There are close to 1,000 city police officers, including those in the academy, according to Chief Schubert.

In an annual budget address in November, the mayor detailed plans to spend millions of dollars on public safety, including expenditures on body cameras, Tasers, hybrid vehicles and facility upgrades. Part of the mayor’s proposed budget included a plan to add new substations in Homewood and the South Side. And the city said Thursday it intends to staff the Downtown substation around the clock. Chief Schubert said those plans include having a full-time sergeant there.

Citywide, there were 22 ethnic intimidation incidents last year, of which 11 involved violence, up 29% from 17 cases in 2018, of which six were violent. Those numbers reflect national trends, police said.

The city reported that so-called Part I crimes fell nearly 12% in 2019 from the year before.

Part I crimes are broken down into two main categories — violent and property crimes. The former includes murder, rape, robbery and aggravated assault.

Property crimes — burglary, theft, vehicle theft and arson — dropped nearly 14%, the city reported.

And while violent crime showed only an incremental decrease, police said that the number of violent crimes in 2019 — 1,569 — represented almost a 19% drop when compared with a five-year average of 1,932 violent crimes per year.

The city did not break out the number of violent crimes per year for the past five years.

Police officials claimed success in their efforts to deter violence by focusing on small groups of the most violent people in the city. The strategy is termed Group Violence Intervention, or GVI.

“Through GVI, investigators and citizen outreach workers identify individuals who are most likely to commit a violent crime or become a victim of a violent crime and hold custom notifications aimed at helping them escape a dangerous lifestyle,” according to police.

Police also credited the public with the drop in crime, lauding people for coming forward with tip. Also aiding crime-fighting efforts: outreach by police officers to kids, creating relationships and positive influences.

Part II crimes — including simple assault, fraud, vandalism and certain sex offenses — dropped by 0.8% in 2019 compared with 2018.

Police did not break out statistics for the individual categories of Part I and Part II crimes. A more detailed look at Pittsburgh crime statistics is expected later in the year when the police bureau produces its annual report.

Jonathan D. Silver: jsilver@post-gazette.com, 412-263-1962 or on Twitter @jsilverpg.

https://www.post-gazette.com/news/crime-courts/2020/01/30/pittsburgh-crime-statistics-2019-homicide-violent-property-theft-rates/stories/202001300130