Mid-summer update on the relatively good homicide news from cities in first half of 2023
In this post from early April 2023 and this follow-up post in late May, I flagged the AH Datalytics collection of homicide data from police reports in nearly 100 big cities to note that, after significant increases in homicides throughout the US in 2020 and 2021, homicide declines in 2022 were continuing into the start of 2023. Of course, homicide declines for 2022 followed particularly high homicide rates in many locales in 2021, and we still have a way to go to get back to pre-pandemic homicide levels. Still, I continue to find the nationwide city homicide data to be encouraging, and now we almost this data for the entire first half of 2023.
As we head into the second half of 2023, according to this AH Datalytics webpage, there is now so far just under an 11% cumulative decline in murders across the nation’s cities for the first half of 2023. And, as I have done in some prior posts on homicide rates, I find it interesting (and still encouraging) to took a closer look at a updated police reports showing 2023 homicide trends in our very biggest US cities:
Chicago homicides down 14% in 2022, and down another 8% over the first half of 2023
Houston homicides down 9% in 2022, and down another 24% over the first five months of 2023
Los Angeles homicides down 5% in 2022, and down another 23% over the first half of 2023
New York City homicides down 11% in 2022, and down another 10% in first half of 2023
Philadelphia homicides down 9% in 2022, and down another 22% over first five months of 2023
As I have said before, these homicide data from cities are likely not fully representative of what may be going on with homicides nationwide, and homicide trends always seem to be unpredictable and data can change in lots of ways in coming months. Still, the latest nationwide homicide data from the AH Datalytics webpage continue to reinforce my hope that the surging number of homicides in just about every part of the US through 2020 and 2021 were mostly a pandemic era phenomenon and that homicide rates may nor be trending back toward pre-pandemic norms.