TALE OF TWO CITIES: Even as murders hit record low in NYC, unsolved cases mount in outer boroughs

SonofaGod

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http://m.nydailynews.com/new-york/n...-murder-rate-cases-unsolved-article-1.1566572

NY Daily News said:
02:00 AM
TALE OF TWO CITIES: Even as murders hit record low in NYC, a mountain of cases languishes in outer boroughs as cops focus more manpower on Manhattan cases
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TODD MAISEL/NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
As part of the unsolved homicides project, Donna Rayside remembers her son Dustin Yeates, 31, killed in a club on May 27, 2013. She is moving out of her home in the Glenwood Houses at 1690 Ralph Ave. because she can't bear to be in Brooklyn anymore.


Donna Rayside never goes more than a few days without seeing her slain son, Dustin Yeates. She sees him when she closes her eyes. And she sees him when she dreams at night.

Seven months have passed since he was shot to death outside an East Flatbush club — and Rayside still can’t shake the image of him walking out of her Marine Park home for the final time. But her sadness is sharpened by anger.

She’s convinced the cops are doing little to solve her son’s murder, dismissing it as just “one black guy against another.”


“It just seems like his case got swept under the rug,” said Rayside, 56, who added $8,000 of her own money to what is now a $10,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of her son’s killer. “If this man had killed a cop, they would have found him already.”




The NYPD has won great praise for bringing crime down to historic lows. But lost amid the fanfare is a growing segment of New Yorkers like Rayside: Those waiting for justice in the murders of their loved ones. About 1,500 murders have gone unsolved over the last decade.

The number of homicides in 2013 dipped to 334 — the lowest tally since the NYPD started keeping track in the early 1960s. The number represents a 41% decline over the past decade. Given the decrease in murders, some argue that the NYPD should be using this opportunity to get more killers off the streets.

“There are thousands of murderers walking around who haven’t been brought to justice,” said Andy Rosenzweig, a former NYPD lieutenant and ex-chief investigator for the Manhattan district attorney’s office. “It’s horrifying".

NYPD’s Cold Case Squad had about 50 detectives when it was formed in 1996. Now there are about eight.

The number of murders solved has gone down, too. In 2000, records show the NYPD solved 533, including murders that occurred during previous years. In 2012, that number was 314 — a 41% decrease.

“If we had more staffing, and if we were able to focus more on the unsolved homicides, I’m sure the clearance rate would be higher,” Palladino said.

Former Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly, who ran the department for 12 years under Mayor Bloomberg, disagreed.

“The homicide squads are always pretty well staffed. As a matter of fact they do other things because the number of murders is way down,” Kelly told The News. “I think the clearance rate is going to remain at roughly 70%, give or take. That’s just the way it is. There are … certain homicides that will never be solved. We don’t necessarily want to make that public, but that’s just the way it is.”

The News conducted a case-by-case review of the status of each of last year’s murder investigations — no arrests have been made in 48% — and detective staffing across the five boroughs:

● Brooklyn has 77 open murder investigations, followed by the Bronx with 39, Queens with 26, Manhattan with 15, and Staten Island with just two.

●The top three precincts with the most open murders are the 67th Precinct (East Flatbush) with 10 out of 12 unsolved, the 77th Precinct (Crown Heights) with nine out of 13 unsolved, and the 75th Precinct (East New York) with eight out of 17 unsolved.

● Manhattan South’s homicide squad has 10 detectives to assist precincts in murder investigations, according to a police source familiar with staffing levels, despite only 10 murders in its jurisdiction in 2013 — one case per detective. Brooklyn North’s homicide squad has 17 detectives, despite a whopping 86 homicides in its jurisdiction — five cases per detective.

● When precinct-level detectives, who could be assigned anything from a murder to a mugging, are factored in, Manhattan South has 15.6 detectives per murder, versus Brooklyn North, which has 2.4 detectives per murder.

● Roughly 86% of homicides involving a white victim have been solved compared to 45% involving a black victim and 56% involving a Hispanic victim.

Donna Rayside’s son was killed in the 63rd Precinct, which has just 12 detectives who handled around 1,500 cases involving all manner of crime, according to the law enforcement source. With eight killings in 2013, the precinct has among the fewest detectives per homicide in the entire city at 1.5, compared to most Manhattan precincts that have anywhere from five to 26 detectives per murder.

Citywide, the number of detectives on the force has dropped from 7,151 in 2001 down to 5,137 and the number of homicide squad detectives has been cut in half to just 74, Palladino said.

Giacalone said murders in the city’s rougher neighborhoods are often more difficult to solve in part because of the iron-clad street code against talking to police, particularly when the victim is a “bad guy.”

Kelly said also the “CSI effect” has made killers smarter.

“People are conscious of leaving evidence, leaving trace evidence. They’re aware of things that certainly will reduce the possibility of identification,” he said.


These reasons matter little to grieving parents like Dolene John. All she wants is closure and a sense of justice. John’s 22-year-old son, Kellan, was shot and killed in January outside his East Flatbush home, about 45 minutes after he chased away a man who was trying to break in, cops and relatives said.

John says cops only sought out the surviving victim to draw up a sketch after months of pressing by the family. The sketch was finally done in May, four months after the murder, John said.


“My son got shot on the 7th of January and they made the sketch on the 16th of May,” she said. “Do you know how far (his killer) could have went? He could be in Hawaii.”

“They push it under the carpet because he was an African-American,” she said. “If it was in Park Slope, this sketch would have been done the same night in the hospital.”

Kellan’s murder took place in the 67th precinct, which has the highest number of unsolved homicides in the city — 10 of the 12 in its jurisdiction, according to The News’ analysis.
 
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SonofaGod

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They'll just keep on ignoring it, until this goes national.

shyt is fukking sad

If white money aint there they don't give a fukk.

But it's no excuse cause NYPD has the ability to stop crime.
As soon as crown heights gentrified they flooded the street with cops and cleaned that shyt up.

But if white people don't live there they don't care.
 

SonofaGod

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So getting arrested for a body is basically 50/50 in Brooklyn:patrice:

Great odds for someone making an 'investment':mjpls:

shyt blows my mind. Growing up I always thought if u murder someone you damn near will die in jail.

But to watch shyt like First 48, and even in cities like New York you got a 52% chance to get away with murder:mindblown:
 
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