With more than a homicide a day in Baltimore to start 2017, Mayor Catherine Pugh said Wednesday that her administration is searching for answers to the city’s persistent crime.
Through the first 39 days of the year, 40 people were killed — a 118 percent increase from the same time in 2016. More than 112 people have been shot.
"This strategy that we have in place is not working to the extent we need it to," Pugh said.
She cited the case of an 18-year-old teen who was shot and killed by police Tuesday. Police said the teen was carrying a gun and had been arrested three times in the past month on drug and gun charges.
He had just been released from jail Monday on bail for felony gun and drug possession charges, and was back on the street with another gun, according to a police spokesman.
"It shows dysfunction, I believe, in our criminal justice system," Pugh said of the case. "People who have those many gun charges probably should not be on our streets. We’ve got a crime problem in our city. We’ve got a lot of work to do."
A man was shot to death near Mount Clare Junction in broad daylight Monday afternoon, the 40th homicide in Baltimore so far in 2017.
The man was found around 2:45 p.m. at the intersection of West Pratt and South Carey streets and had been shot multiple times, according to police. He was taken to…
A man was shot to death near Mount Clare Junction in broad daylight Monday afternoon, the 40th homicide in Baltimore so far in 2017.
The man was found around 2:45 p.m. at the intersection of West Pratt and South Carey streets and had been shot multiple times, according to police. He was taken to…
In contrast to the soaring homicide rate in Baltimore — where about 620,000 people live — New York City is experiencing record lows in violence. In January, 20 people were killed in the city of 8.4 million.
Pugh said she’s meeting with experts from the U.S. Conference of Mayors and Bloomberg Philanthropies to try to come up with solutions to the crime problem. She noted last week she called a meeting of nearly 100 community members to discuss a different direction for the city.
"It was focused on what we need to do about the crime problem in our city," Pugh said. "While I know that gun violence is a major problem in our city, I also know that police can’t solve this problem by themselves. … A group of us came together to talk about solutions. How do we get the community engaged? How do we make our streets safer?"
Police shot and killed a man who jumped out of a car that was being tailed by police in Baltimore. He was allegedly holding a handgun during the foot pursuit and the officer who shot him after fearing for his own life. (Karl Merton Ferron, Baltimore Sun video)
Police shot and killed a man who jumped out of a car that was being tailed by police in Baltimore. He was allegedly holding a handgun during the foot pursuit and the officer who shot him after fearing for his own life. (Karl Merton Ferron, Baltimore Sun video)
Baltimore Police found the body of Tonja Deshaun Chadwick, a 20-year-old mother from the city. Her body was in a wooded area in southwest Baltimore. Her boyfriend Marco Jamal Holmes, 22, is a "person of interest" in the case. (Baltimore Sun video)
Baltimore Police found the body of Tonja Deshaun Chadwick, a 20-year-old mother from the city. Her body was in a wooded area in southwest Baltimore. Her boyfriend Marco Jamal Holmes, 22, is a “person of interest” in the case. (Baltimore Sun video)
Pugh said the urgency of the problem hit home this week as she read to third-grade students. One of the students asked her, "How do you make us feel safe?"
"You know that when third-graders are thinking about it, that kindergartners are thinking about it," she said. "This is serious business. We’ve got to get to the bottom of it."
The mayor recently authorized the hiring of 100 additional officers to patrol Baltimore’s streets.
That move came after Police Commissioner Kevin Davis said in January he would reassign 100 of the department’s officers to patrol duty amid charges from the police union that the city is "at great risk" because there are not enough officers to adequately cover patrol shifts.
lbroadwater@baltsun.com
twitter.com/lukebroadwater
Our editors found this article on this site using Google and regenerated it for our readers.