Pubdate: Sat, 26 Jul 2008 Source: Daily Herald, The (Provo, UT) Copyright: 2008 The Daily Herald Contact: http://www.heraldextra.com/component/option,performs/formid,1 Website: http://www.heraldextra.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1480 Author: Jeremy Duda PROSECUTIONS ON THE RISE, BUT WHY? t's no secret that crime rates have increased over the years in Utah County, and with that in mind, few Happy Valley residents would be surprised to learn that felony prosecutions are on the rise as well. But since the turn of the century, the Utah County Attorney's Office has been busier than most people would probably guess, and the numbers have left a lot of people scratching their heads. Utah County's population has risen steadily since 2000, and crime rates have risen along with it. But the number of felony cases filed by the county attorney's office has left other statistics in the dust, rising at twice the rate of the county's rapidly growing population. Felonies include serious crimes such as burglary, robbery, murder and rape. Between 2001 and 2006, Utah County's population grew by an average of 5.5 percent each year, according to statistics compiled by the Utah County Public Defender Association. In contrast, the number of felony cases filed by the county attorney's office has increased by an annual average of 11 percent. Utah County Attorney Jeff Buhman and Tom Means, the director of the public defender's office, have pondered the effect, but the cause remains elusive. So what's the cause of the growth in the crime rate? Is it drugs? Gang activity? Economics? "I don't really know the answer," Buhman said. "Why would it grow faster?" A natural assumption would be that prosecutions have increased because there is more crime. Certain types of crime have certainly increased since 2000, and there is an impression among many Utah County officials that crime in general is on the rise as well. But crime has not risen to an extent that would explain an 11-percent annual increase in felony prosecutions. Crime statistics are inherently hard to interpret. For example, according to the Utah Bureau of Criminal Identification, which compiles annual crime statistics for the state, burglaries increased by a yearly average of 4.8 percent from 2001 to 2006. Motor vehicle thefts in the county increased by an average of 2.8 percent in the same period. Yet the crime rate per 1,000 people in Utah County actually decreased in those six years by an average of 4 percent. Another theory could be that the county attorney's office has taken a more aggressive approach to prosecutions, but Buhman said that is not the case. Buhman, who has been in office since 2006, said his office has increased its level of cooperation with law-enforcement agencies, while deputy county attorney Tim Taylor points out how the office has cut down on the number of plea bargains offered to defendants. Both factors could contribute to a modest increase in prosecutions, they said, but neither believe those policies fully explain the 11-percent annual jump. Lt. Doug Edwards of the Orem Department of Public Safety said the increase may be attributable to the Utah County Major Crimes Task Force, a collaborative effort of county law enforcement agencies that focuses heavily on drug enforcement. Indeed, possession or distribution of most drugs, aside from marijuana, are felony crimes, and the task force has made a lot of drug arrests since it began operations in the late 1990s. In 1998 it arrested 363 people on drug charges, and that number hit its high-water mark in 2004 with 789 drug arrests. Task force Lt. Phil Murphy said the focus that county law-enforcement agencies put on drug enforcement has become more aggressive over the past decade. "I think it has to be because it's so much more prevalent in the news and in our society that people are wanting to see that there is more of an aggressive stance," Murphy said. Taylor said it is possible that drug convictions are the driving force, or at least part of it, behind increased felony prosecutions in his office. As many as 50 percent of felony cases filed by the Utah County Attorney's Office involve drug possession or distribution charges without any of the associated crimes that often accompany drug cases, such as burglary or fraud. But it's hard to say whether that percentage has increased during the past few years, he said. Means, whose public defenders represent about three-fourths of felony defendants in Utah County, is skeptical that increased drug enforcement is causing the increased prosecutions. The Utah County Major Crimes Task Force focuses heavily on drug enforcement, he said, but before that agency formed about a decade ago, there were other countywide law-enforcement programs operating in its place. Spanish Fork police Lt. Carl Johnston said the precursor agency of the task force was the Narcotics Enforcement Team, or NET. That program was similar to the task force, but it focused solely on drug crimes. The primary focus of the task force is narcotics enforcement, Johnston said, but unlike the NET, it investigates all major crimes. "It's not a big change in its function. It got a name change is what it all boiled down to," Johnston said of the transition from the NET to the task force. "We have the same thing in a different package." Means said one way in which the task force might have contributed to increased prosecutions is that it allows police departments from across the county to cooperate on major crimes, while some criminals may have previously been able to escape capture by moving from city to city. "Just that communication alone prevents somebody from living in P.G. and going down to Payson and committing offenses," Means said. "I think that [the task force has] become very efficient." Most Utah County law-enforcement agencies have added personnel over the past decade, which could contribute to more felony prosecutions. Arrests for "self-initiated" incidents such as DUIs and traffic citations usually go up when there are more cops on the street, said Utah County Sheriff Jim Tracy. Regardless of what is driving up felony prosecutions, crime does appear to be on the rise in Utah County. Stephen Bahr, a sociology professor at Brigham Young University, said a number of factors could contribute to rising crime rates. The three main factors, Bahr said, are an increase in drug use, increasing immigration and an increase in the percentage of the population that is between the ages of 15-30. People in the 15-30 age group generally commit more crimes than their counterparts in other age groups, while drug use usually encourages a variety of crimes that people commit while under the influence or to support their habits. Some Utah County judges say that as much a 90 percent of their criminal cases are drug-related. In addition, Bahr said there is some evidence that crime rates rise in areas where a large percentage of the population is not from the area, especially young people. Crime rates also tend to be higher in large cities than small towns. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin