Pubdate: Fri, 01 Sep 2006 Source: Daily Vidette (IL Edu) Copyright: 2006 Daily Vidette Contact: http://www.dailyvidette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/666 Author: Keith Lesniak Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) STATE OF ILL. SEES DECREASE Throughout the past year the state of Illinois has seen a decrease in crime by 3.1 percent, and continues to decline according to recently released 2005 crime statistics by the Illinois State Police. The murder rate declined for the fourth consecutive year and theft was down by the largest margin since 1999. The Illinois state police attribute this decline to the state government's providing of the resources and manpower our law enforcement needs in order for this to happen. A reported 473,834 crimes were committed within the last year in Illinois. In 2004 the number was 486,496, nearly 13,000 less than what was committed in 2005. Robbery, burglary, arson, sexual assault, aggravated assault and battery were all crimes that increased over the last year, none by more than five percent. "Larceny, or theft, is the one crime that is most dealt with by every law enforcement agency in the nation." ISU Police Chief Ronald Swan, said. Within the past year theft has decreased by 5.2 percent. "Crime statistics fluctuate, theft is always going to be the highest," Swan added. "Here in Normal the amount of thefts rose in the past year from 996 in 2004 to 1,051 in 2005. Theft is a 'crime of opportunity,'" Normal Police Department Assistant Chief Rick Bleichner said. Theft is a crime that can be deterred in most cases by taking some simple precautionary measures. Locking car doors and not leaving valuables in the vehicle in plain site are two simple measures that can be taken by everyone to not give someone that 'opportunity' to steal something from you. According to the report the methamphetamine market is one of the most dangerous and rapidly growing illegal drug trades in Illinois. The Illinois Meth Response Teams have handled a total of 559 methamphetamine related incidents, made 513 arrests and seized 34,000 grams of drugs. These teams have helped many local law enforcement drug task forces by easing the burden of investigating and confiscating this dangerous drug. "Most of the time these labs are very unstable. The ingredients aren't marked, and if you do not know what you are doing they can be very dangerous," Lt. Lincoln Hampton of the Illinois State Police, said. The report also said most of the illegal guns that come into Illinois are from Indiana and Mississippi, more than any other states. "We are working with the Federal Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms commission on tracking where guns that have been used to commit violent crime have originated from," Hampton said. "Mississippi and Indiana do not have laws that are as strict as the laws in Illinois for obtaining a weapon. We feel that if we can locate the sources of where these illegal weapons are coming from we can improve our situation," Hampton added. There have been efforts with federal authorities and law enforcement agencies, both in state and out-of-state, that have tried to find and stop the illegal trafficking of guns into the state. Since these efforts, 2,000 firearms have been seized as well as more than 300 arrests for gun related charges. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman