Pubdate: Sat, 27 Dec 2008 Source: Clarion-Ledger, The (Jackson, MS) Copyright: 2008 The Clarion-Ledger Contact: http://www.clarionledger.com/news/about/letters.html Website: http://www.clarionledger.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/805 Author: Kathleen Baydala JACKSON'S 73 KILLINGS HIGHEST SINCE 1995 The killings in Jackson so far this year were fueled by drugs, arguments or revenge. Others were robberies gone bad, and a few were the result of domestic. Sometimes the victims knew their attackers. Sometimes they didn't. In most cases, both victim and suspect were of the same race. Jackson's 73 homicides have happened in every corner of the city, from outside nightclubs to shady motels and vacant buildings. Some victims also were discovered in their own homes or cars. The homicide figure, Jackson's highest since 1995, likely will put the city near the top of the national rankings in homicide rates, with 41 per 100,000 residents, when the FBI releases its national crime report next year. That number also is a one-year jump of 57 percent. Jackson police officials have not pinpointed what caused the increase, and Chief Malcolm McMillin has said he is at a loss as to what to do about it. The city's 73rd homicide occurred late Saturday in northwest Jackson's Queens neighborhood. "As far as having a blueprint to stop this, I know at this time we don't have that," he said in mid-December from his office inside the Hinds County Sheriff's Department, where he has split his time as police chief and sheriff since November 2007. "The great majority of these homicides are committed by people who know each other. They can be over drug deals. They can be family disturbances. "Then you have murders that are committed in the act of armed robbery, you know, other types of robberies that we can impact on by increased patrols and by our interdiction program getting guns off the street," McMillin continued. "We can have an impact there. But as far as domestic violence, drug deals gone bad, these type things, I can't think of a way to change that. I mean, it's a cultural thing that I think everybody is experiencing." The city is three-quarters African American, and its homicides reflect that racial makeup, as most were African-American men killing each other. Jackson police have named 56 suspects in the slayings, with some suspects accused in the same homicide. Of that number, 82 percent are black men, and about two-thirds of their victims are black men. Of the five white suspects, all have been accused of killing white people. Nationally, 54 percent of known murder suspects are African American, while 45 percent are white, with 1 percent of another race. Also, 90 percent of known suspects are male. Among victims, 49 percent are black, 47 percent are white and nearly 80 percent are male. The average suspect in Jackson's homicides is a 26-year-old black man who lives somewhere between Fortification Street to the north and U.S. 80 to the south in neighborhoods devastated by poverty. The average victim was a black man around 30 years old. While the suspects tended to live in south Jackson, the killings occurred in every ward. Almost 40 percent of the killings took place north of Fortification Street. A third of the suspects have spent time in prison. One in five victims had prior indictments. While Jackson police have labeled a lot of this year's homicides as "domestic," that does not explain the increase. Historically, most people are killed by people they know. According to FBI statistics, in homicides where the circumstances are known, three out of four victims knew their attacker. The Rev. John Cameron Sr., pastor of Greater Mount Calvary Baptist Church, has seen two dozen homicides within two miles of his church. Like McMillin, he points to societal problems, including drugs, but is troubled by the "lack of urgency" he sees among city leaders to combat the wave of violence. "I think one of the most pressing issues now is the recognition of the breakdown of the fabric of the family - absence of fathers - and we have the defiance of law and order from too many of the young people. "I think that it's got to be a new sense of urgency that must take place in order to combat this senseless killing. A lot of it has to do with the drug-trafficking," he said. "There really has been a lack of real leadership in the city and the state to combat drugs. Nobody is really trying to stop it at the top." Cameron said the response to the killings cannot just come from law enforcement. Poverty, unemployment and the disparity in sentencing on drug crimes all play a role in perpetuating a cycle of violence in the inner city, he said. "We need to address the totality of the problem and not piecemeal it," he said. Cameron said he addresses the violence in the surrounding community frequently from the pulpit, but fears that the message is not getting through. "People are asking the question, 'What is the church doing about it?' But the people who are committing these crimes don't go to church," he said. This month, the Foundation for the Mid-South, a community development group, released a report on the issues facing black men in Mississippi, Louisiana and Arkansas, including crime and incarceration. Chris Crothers, the author of the report, said the foundation released the study in an effort to spark discussion in the nonprofit community on a group often overlooked by policymakers when they take aim at social ills. "There is a lot of focus on families or on women and children and very little on males in general and especially on males of color," he said. "The whole idea was to get more people to talk about it." Nationally, the homicide rate has stayed relatively steady throughout the decade. But a report released this past summer by researches at the Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health found that the national figures masked an increase in firearm homicides among black and white men. Susan Baker, one of the study's authors, said Jackson's poverty, the general economic downturn, lax gun laws and a dearth of social services for recently released inmates all may be playing a role in the upswing of violence in the city. The city is not alone in facing this dilemma, according to findings in the report. An increase in incarceration in the 1990s produced a short-term decline in homicide rates, but large numbers of recently released inmates are prone to reoffending. According to the study, ex-convicts are released from prison into the most disadvantaged neighborhoods, and half commit another crime within three years. "I don't know that the solution is to lock them up for forever and throw away the key, but the people who are being released are being released to situations of unemployment and lack of social services," she said. Johns Hopkins professor Daniel Webster, another author of the report, said the nation's rising level of incarceration is not proving to be the answer to violent crime. "We just can't afford to lock up as many people up as we have been over the past few decades," Webster said. "But arresting people on drug charges has become addicting for the police, politicians, and prison guard unions. ... They think they're cleaning up the streets and making neighborhoods safer, but it leaves neighborhoods full of young people who spend time in jail and severely compromise their ability to get good jobs and stay out of trouble long-term. When they get out of jail, there's a predictable upturn in crime and violence." McMillin said he is searching for solutions. He supports a uniform closing time for bars and nightclubs in the city, but he failed to get the necessary support of the Jackson City Council. At least seven people were killed outside Jackson nightclubs this year. "I'm really disappointed in the City Council's failure to act on the proposed ordinance for a 2 a.m. closing of bars and after-hours clubs," he said. "If they want to allow them to stay open and don't want them regulated, we're certainly going to answer calls and make our presence known. ... I feel that council is not as concerned about it. Their vote clearly indicates it." Councilman Frank Bluntson said he voted against the uniform closing time because he didn't think it was fair and didn't think it would deter violent crime. "I didn't think all clubs in the city should be penalized for what a few have done," he said. "And a majority of these homicides didn't happen in nightclubs. They were in the streets and in the neighborhoods." Rather, JPD should adopt a "no-tolerance" policy against minor crimes as a way to prevent major crimes, he said. "I think if you crack down on folks violating laws like speeding or running red lights, that would help. People don't tolerate that clowning in other cities, like Ridgeland," he said. "You know, a lot of times when you stop folks who are (committing minor violations) you'll find them with guns in their cars or drugs." McMillin also blames a lack of police manpower, the availability of guns and drugs and an unraveling social fiber for contributing to violent crime. "A lot of these murders are fueled by the drug trade or the need to have the resources in order to purchase a drug," he said. "I would say if we didn't have a drug problem we'd have less homicide. Now, as to how we would go about (eradicating) it, I would say that we've been working on the drug problem here since the early '60s and we haven't solved it yet." While JPD's top brass seem uncertain of how to lower the homicide rate, they take satisfaction that the department's homicide clearance rate - measured by arrests of suspects - is about 70 percent and has hung close to that for the past two years. The figure, though, is cold comfort to some families of homicide victims. Kenyatta Payne, whose brother was Jackson's 70th victim, said he doesn't trust JPD to solve his older brother's killing. Adrian Payne was gunned down in an apparent robbery attempt Monday and died a day later in the hospital. "We'll definitely have our ears to the ground," he said, gesturing to a dozen of his friends who had gathered on Adrian Payne's yard on Tuesday. "Jackson's not that big. Word will start to float around. When I get my answers, I'm not going to call the police." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin