Huntington Beach’s serious crime rate dips 17%
Eron Ben-Yehuda
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- The city last year enjoyed the biggest drop in
serious crime among large cities in Orange County, according to an FBI
report released this week.
“Obviously, we’re pleased,” Huntington Beach Police Sgt. Janet Perez
said. “Who wouldn’t be?”
Compared to 1998, crime dove 17.4% in 1999. The average drop was 6.5% for
other large cities in the county, the report shows. Statistics are
limited to cities with a population of 100,000 or more. The crimes
tabulated include murder, rape, robbery, burglary and arson.
Aggressive law enforcement helped, but that in itself doesn’t tell the
whole story, Perez said.
A good economy, an aging population and more public awareness are also
credited for the drop.The booming economy is keeping unemployment rates
low. City government is helping with that by sponsoring programs such as
the job center, which offers work for unskilled laborers, Councilman
Ralph Bauer said.
With a population that is growing older, there are less people in their
“prime crime committing years,” ages 17 to 28, Perez said.
Also, there is greater public awareness of ways to avoid becoming a
statistic. Schools educate children about the dangers of drugs, Bauer
said, and volunteers form neighborhood watch groups, in which residents
keep an eye on each other’s property.
But other cities have taken similar steps without making such great
strides. The closest rival to Huntington Beach was Fullerton, with an 11%
reduction, according to the report.
The difference in Huntington Beach is that residents are activists who
are eager to get involved to make the city a better place to live, Bauer
said.
“It’s an indication that people really do care,” he said.
Although most serious crime is down, the report shows the number of
murders and arsons increased. There were 29 arsons last year, compared to
18 the year before. And there were five homicides in 1999, as opposed to
none in 1998.
Perez said it’s difficult to tell why there was a greater prevalence of
those crimes, especially murders.
“There’s absolutely no way, zero way, to predict homicides,” she said.
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