Violent crime goes up, property crime down
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Deepa Bharath
The city saw an increase in violent crimes but a decrease in property
crimes during the first nine months of 2003 compared with the same
time in 2002, a report released by the state attorney general’s
office on Wednesday showed.
Overall, crime was up by 1.4%, the report said. Violent crimes, a
category that includes murders, rapes, robberies and assaults,
increased by 10.4%, and property crimes -- burglaries and auto thefts
-- dropped by 1.6%.
The attorney general’s report released in October, comparing the
first six months of 2003 and 2002, had actually shown a 6.1% decrease
in overall crime, a 10.8% dip in violent crimes and a 6.4% drop in
property crimes.
*--*
Crime 2002 2003 % change
Murder 2 1 -50
Forcible rape 11 28 154 Robbery 81 87 7.4 Assault 108 107 -0.9
Burglary 373 372 -0.3
Auto theft 317 307 -3.2
Total 2,868 2,907 1.1
*--*
It is still premature to tell how the year 2003 ended for Costa
Mesa crime-wise, said Capt. Tom Warnack, who oversees the police
department’s Field Operations Division.
“Numbers do fluctuate all the time,” he said. “They go up and down
from month to month.”
It’s hard to explain an increase in crime over three months,
Warnack said.
“We usually look at these numbers over a year to get a clear
picture,” he said.
Although forcible rapes showed a 154% increase, officials say
those numbers are misleading because the actual number of incidents
increased from 11 to 28.
“And even those are only the raw numbers,” Warnack said. “As
patrol officers, we take reports of rape, but it is the detective
division which determines which ones are [legitimate claims].”
The report does not request that final number that would give the
public a more realistic picture. That is true of all incidents, he
said.
There were six more robberies between January and September 2003
compared with the same time in 2002. That added up to a 7.4% increase
in that category.
“We don’t like to see any increases,” Warnack said. “But an
overall increase of 1.4%? That’s low relative to the overall crime
picture.”
Warnack said he is happy to see a dip in property crime.
“We’ve seen increases in that category in the past,” he said. “But
we’ve been involved in preventive patrol as far as auto thefts and
vehicle burglaries and we’re pleased to see the results.”
The report releases the numbers each year for cities with a
population of more than 100,000, which left Newport Beach out of the
picture.
Statewide, violent crime dropped 2.2%, murders decreased by 7%,
and property crimes went up by 4.7%. Overall, crime increased by
2.3%, the report showed.
Jeff Wilcox, president of the Mesa del Mar Homeowners Assn., said
he feels safe in the city as well as in his neighborhood.
He is concerned about recent shootings in the city, especially the
one on Coolidge Avenue that left two people wounded the night before
Thanksgiving Day.
“But it’s not as if I’m panicking,” he said. “We live in a society
with violent tendencies. It’s the reality.”
He supports Chief John Hensley’s new community policing program,
Wilcox said.
“It’s important for us to know who is patrolling our streets so we
can do our part and be the eyes and ears of the police department,”
Wilcox said. “We need to work together.”
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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