Villa said the most effective method of intervention with those considered the most at-risk was to “pull up” and interact directly with them. “They should have been locked up, but they were released onto the streets.” “That’s nearly 30 percent of the cases,” McBride said.
10, McBride said that of the city’s then 66 homicides, 17 of them involved a victim or suspect that had been released early from lockup. He singled out the early releases of inmates from jails and prisons due to health and safety precautions as having an effect as well. Some of the factors McBride attributes to the violence include “COVID anxiety” as well as civil unrest. He did not know the exact year the record occurred, but - according to the FBI’s Uniform Crime Reporting Program that achieves back to 1995 - the highest mark recorded in the city took place in 1995, with 67 homicides.Īlanis feels like many factors have contributed to create this “perfect storm” in the rise of violence: kids not being in school “free money” through government stimulus programs going toward the purchase of guns and unemployment. San Bernardino is not near the department’s high of about 90 killings that happened as recently as the early 1990s, McBride said. “We’re up 31 or 32 percent, near the average across the country.” “223 police agencies in a survey found that cities are reporting an average of a 28 percent increase of homicides through the first eight months of 2020,” McBride said. “We were on course to see better numbers this year, until COVID hit.”Īcting San Bernardino Police Chief Eric McBride pointed out that while homicides are higher in 2020, they are in line with a nationwide trend.
“They’re on the front-lines dealing with these homicides. “Our front-line workers are catching COVID,” Young said.
Reginal Young, CEO of San Bernardino Pastors United. Some volunteers have contracted the virus while seeking to help prevent violence, said Rev. As of Thursday, San Bernardino police had logged 68 homicides in 2020 - 21 more than in all of 2019.īut even as the need for direct community action has grown, the coronavirus has erected a wall between local organizers and community engagement. While the city faces a grim toll not seen in a quarter-century, community leaders have sought to work in the face of safety restrictions brought on by the coronavirus, forcing many to face elevated risks in the field as they work to curb growing violence in the streets. Like many American cities, San Bernardino has seen a dramatic spike in homicides this year, yet traditional efforts to combat the soaring violence have been badly hampered, community organizers say, as the pandemic has made it more difficult and dangerous for once-successful outreach programs to operate on the streets.