Scott Hechinger Profile picture
Feb 20, 2022 18 tweets 7 min read Read on X
I want to put crime data in perspective. So much lying about bail reform. So I looked up NYPD arrest data on 7 major felonies in NYC each year since 2000. Crunched numbers. To see how 2020/2021 compares. Given all this talk about “reform” & “surges,” I think you’ll be surprised.
All of these numbers are available on the NYPD’s public website. Im using their numbers bc they are the ones doing the lying. And their own numbers expose the lie. Note: Arrest charges are often higher than actual charges brought. www1.nyc.gov/site/nypd/stat…
Let’s start here: In every year btwn 2000-2011, NYC jails averaged 12,000+ people. In 2020/2021, 53% less people are jailed. And guess what: *Substantially less serious felony arrests across the board.* Historic decarceration paralleled historic, continuing drops in crime.
The total number of major felonies (homicide, rape, robbery, burglary, assault, grand larceny, motor vehicle larceny) in 2020, the year after bail reform started, was less than every year between 2000-2019 before bail reform. 2021 was less than every year between 2000-2015. Look:
Every single person killed is one too many. Also we need to follow facts. The total number of homicides in 2020 & 2021 are less than each year from 2000-2011 (save 2009) when number of people in NYC jails was over 50% higher. Homicide numbers has nothing to do w/ bail reform.
The average number of homicides per year between 2000-2011 when NYC jails had over 12,000 people was 562. Then jail numbers started plummeting. In the last two years, w/ over 50% less people jailed: 2020 homicide numbers were 16% lower. 2021 homicides 13% lower than 2000-2011.
Still, homicides numbers were higher in 2020/2021 than in more recent previous years. What’s that about?

As NYC jail numbers started declining even more sharply after 2011, homicide rates reached remarkable, historic lows. 2013-2019 averaged just 323 per year! Unprecedented.
Please sit w/ this for a moment. For the 6 years leading up to bail reform, the NYC jail population *plummeted* from 12,000 to under 6000. At the same time, all major crime plummeted. This is clear evidence over a long period that decarceration cannot be tied to crime increases.
Today, post bail reform, unfortunately the numbers of people incarcerated in NYC jails is about the same as it was in 2019 before reforms. As of today: 5,642 people currently caged too poor to buy their freedom, & average length detention is close to a year (319 days!).
2017-2019 had lowest numbers of homicides in modern NYC history. Even an increase to the historically low average annual homicides from 2013-2019 (323) would be between a 1-10% increase. Then a once in a lifetime pandemic happened & homicide numbers increased round the country.
There were around 150 more homicides in each of 2020 & 2021 than in 2019. That’s 150 too many. But again, 2017-2019 were unprecedentedly low. And the 2020/2021 numbers are still substantially less than average annual homicides between 2000-2011 when jail populations were double.
Other crimes: There were 264 less rapes in 2021 than in 2019, the year before bail reform. 328 less rapes in 2020 than in 2019, the year before bail reform. A 15% & 18% decrease. Should we credit bail reform with reducing number of rapes just like police blame it for homicides?
There were 7745 less grand larcenies in 2020 than 2019, the year before bail reform. A 18% decrease. 2380 less in 2021 than in 2019. A 5% decrease. Should I credit bail reform? Of course not. There’s no way to determine causation based on short run statistics.
Robberies. There were 265 less robberies in 2020 than in 2019, the year before bail reform. A 2% decrease. Shouldn’t NYPD *credit* bail reform for these decreases if they’re also blaming it for any increase? Wouldn’t that be consistent?
Burglaries numbers in 2020 and 2021, while higher than the year before bail reform, were relatively consistent with years 2015-2017. Normal fluctuations.
I could keep going with this but I think it’s just helpful to see these hard numbers. To see how historically low violent crime continues to be, not just compared with “the 1980s” or “90s” when things were particularly bad. But recent history.
I think it’s also helpful to see how small increases/decreases in total numbers w/o broader context can lead to massive sounding percentage increases/decreases that can so easily be weaponized by cynical, leaders & police interest groups to mislead people into hardened opinions.
I wrote on how journalists all too easily fall for this tactic of trying to use short run statistics to make conclusions about causation. What they need to differently. And how we as consumers can be more skeptical. thenation.com/article/societ…

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More from @ScottHech

May 11
Wow. Fiona Apple is a real one. Watch this video. Calling for donations to bail out Black mothers for Mother’s Day. Her fans already came through w donations & spreading the word. Over $30k! Let’s “fetch the bolt cutters” & support even more. I just gave. givebutter.com/nHSrnp
Two years ago, Fiona Apple popped up on a zoom call to get trained by local organizers to Court watch. Dedicated ever since. Her work has led to freedom, lawsuits, accountability.

The stories all here in this short video. She wrote & performed the score:
Be like Fiona Apple. Volunteer to CourtWatch. Visit this campaign hub, learn more, connect w/ a local courtwatch program, &/or learn how to start your own.

Injustice happens in empty courtrooms. Which allows police brutality to continue outside of them. Courtwatch.org
Read 10 tweets
Mar 18
“No judge has ever lost their job setting bail on someone.”

A NYC judge whispered that. To a public defender. Before depriving their destitute client of freedom. This happens every day. Judges are intimidated to throw poor people in cages.

Thread on a history of intimidation: Image
Public defenders @elizaorlins & @APetrigh tell about the open secret of "justice" throughout the country People are deprived of liberty, not based on merit. But judicial fear of negative press.

Story is paywalled. So Im transcribing it here:nydailynews.com/2024/03/15/int…
"The NYPD’s recent social media attack against a judge who released a defendant under supervision instead of setting bail and detaining them. The case drew headlines because the NYPD’s aggressive social media posts were full of misinformation, including misidentifying the judge." Image
Read 11 tweets
Feb 17
How copaganda works. Police, prosecutor, & prison interests use media to exaggerate & lie about "sensational" cases. Amplify them on repeat. Create the *perception* that "crime" or "migrants" are a "Crisis!"

Perpetual anger/fear buys votes & public opinion. Facts be damned. Image
How copaganda works. Police release a highly edited video that doesn't include their unprovoked, violent, & unjustified attack on a migrant. Manufactured "outcry" ensues. Lawmakers call for sweeping policy changes. New video later released. It's too late. Profound damage done. Image
How copaganda works. Even after previously withheld police footage showed the "attack on police" in Times Square was the opposite: An unprovoked attack *by police* on innocent people, reports continue only center the lie.

None (that I've seen) report on the overt police lie. Image
Read 12 tweets
Dec 4, 2023
An interesting story for you. Was catching up w/ a friend at coffeeshop. The mother of her friend walked by & joined us briefly. She’s from Chicago. She told us a story about talking to a Chicago police officer. Thanking him for his service.

What he told her will surprise you.
As quick background, she is a white woman. In her 60s. Well off. Grew up in the suburbs of Chicago. Now downtown. Forever Dem. Supported the end of cash bail. But is “fed up” w/ “all the violence.” Thinks “something has to be done.”

She saw a cop the other day & went up to him.
She told the cop how scared she was by everything she was reading in the news. Couldn’t imagine how tough things were “for him” given the “crime rates.” (Note: Homicides are down significantly in most of Chicago, but violence remains a scourge).

The cop told her to “buy a gun”
Read 17 tweets
Sep 18, 2023
Extraordinary work again from @TeenVogue -- the best justice journalism outlet in the country. On the day that cash bail is finally eliminated in Illinois, they release a critical explainer on "Copaganda."

How to identify & respond to lies & fearmongering about safety. Watch:
Must watch. The week that cash bail is finally eliminated in Illinois, local experts debunk harmful myths that the media peddles about bail reform. In this @TeenVogue video explainer.

"This fear has been built up & stoked by media misinformation. A refrain. A scapegoat " Watch:
Last year: Artists, survivors of violence, organizers, entrepreneurs, public defenders, policy experts, restorative justice practitioners, and system-impacted people sat for a series of conversations while exploring a groundbreaking exhibition on torture and incarceration.
Read 9 tweets
Aug 4, 2023
Teen Vogue out again w/ the best in political commentary, justice journalism & truth. A compelling & easily digestible explainer on "Abolition."

New vision of safety: "If policing prosecution & incarceration created safety, we'd be the safest country in the world." Watch. Learn:
When people hear the word "abolition" they think 'crazy leftist.' 'Idealistic.'

In reality: "We're the clear eyed ones. We have the whole history of the world to let us know what were doing now is not sustainable. We want a world where violence isn't the norm." Part 2:
Last year: Artists, survivors of violence, organizers, entrepreneurs, public defenders, policy experts, restorative justice practitioners, and system-impacted people sat for a series of conversations while exploring a groundbreaking exhibition on torture and incarceration.
Read 9 tweets

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