Chicago Was Nation's Murder Capital in 2012: FBI

Other cities more violent when viewed at per-capita basis

Chicago was the nation's murder capital in 2012, statistics released this week by the FBI confirm.

The city recorded more than 500 homicides in 2012, exceeding New York City, which recorded 419, and Los Angeles, which recorded 299, according to FBI data. The populations of both NYC and LA are greater than Chicago.

The news comes as Chicago officials continue to push their effort to fight the city's reputation for high rates of crime and violence.

Chicago Police Supt. Garry McCarthy said earlier this month that homicides in the city were down 23 percent so far this year.

"The perception issue is something that is real hard to get across when we're having some progress," McCarthy said.

Despite taking the top spot in the 2012 rankings, statistics indicate Chicago was still safer than other U.S. cities when crime was viewed on a per-capita basis. Detroit, New Orleans, St. Louis, Baltimore, Newark, Oakland, Stockton, Kansas City, Philadelphia, Cleveland, Memphis and Atlanta all had higher per-capita murder rates, the FBI reported.

According to FBI data, the City of Chicago recorded 13,476 robberies, 12, 272 aggravated assaults and more than 17,000 vehicle thefts in 2012.


 

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