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PostMar 11, 2025#10101

^and on top of already drastic decreases... *knocks on wood... as we're having bleep bloop blurp so far🙏

927

PostMar 11, 2025#10102

^Definitely knock on wood, jinx has been in everytime theres been a post about it across social media

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PostMar 11, 2025#10103

All they'll do is take credit for the decreases already occurring. 

Can't believe we have to go through this state control BS again.  

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PostMar 11, 2025#10104

delmar2debaliviere2downtown wrote:
Mar 11, 2025
^Definitely knock on wood, jinx has been in every time theres been a post about it across social media
I struck it down, lol... hopefully that helps... as I obviously couldn't help myself. 😓

927

PostMar 11, 2025#10105

I actually never looked at how “rankings” came out last year, but an infographic has been going around social media today. I guess we still finished first in per capita which surprised me a little bit. I thought we would have moved down. So we got labeled the “murder capital” along with Chicago on the infographic.

And we were pretty high above the rest of the top 10 which is unfortunate. It looks impossible to leave the #1 spot too without everyone else jumping up in numbers. And it was discouraging to see many cities take way bigger reductions than we did.

Obviously with city-county merger, we would almost drop out of the top 20 (would go up more than I would’ve thought though in raw numbers). Im sure it would help a lot of the other general crime states a lot too. Which is frankly the saving grace we need. There would be negatives but nothing that would outweigh getting off some these lists and association with StL.

It is amazing how many outsiders considering visiting and moving here would now just see the 10th biggest city, 1.3 million population, and pretty normal big city crime stats at worst. People really don’t dig that deep. It would completely change perception for generations to come and definitely lead to population growth, more tourism, more money, more business, and more efficiency.

Or I suppose we can fall out of the top 75 largest cities that got measured for the rankings I saw (we happen to be 75) and just be irrelevant. Kind of crazy and ridiculous we have fallen that far - another shocker to me today. Didn’t realize census estimates got us all the way down in the 280Ks

I have no idea how county numbers have been looking this year. Seems like north county has had a bit of a rough go but not sure if that’s just the quantity of reporting I’m seeing on it.

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PostMar 11, 2025#10106

What about murders per capita? I believe we’re a resounding #1 in the country. I realize the city/county divide kills us here but those are the stats people will see.

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PostMar 11, 2025#10107

delmar2debaliviere2downtown wrote:
Mar 11, 2025
I actually never looked at how “rankings” came out last year, but an infographic has been going around social media today. I guess we still finished first in per capita which surprised me a little bit. I thought we would have moved down. So we got labeled the “murder capital” along with Chicago on the infographic.

And we were pretty high above the rest of the top 10 which is unfortunate. It looks impossible to leave the #1 spot too without everyone else jumping up in numbers. And it was discouraging to see many cities take way bigger reductions than we did.

Obviously with city-county merger, we would almost drop out of the top 20 (would go up more than I would’ve thought though in raw numbers). Im sure it would help a lot of the other general crime states a lot too. Which is frankly the saving grace we need. There would be negatives but nothing that would outweigh getting off some these lists and association with StL.

It is amazing how many outsiders considering visiting and moving here would now just see the 10th biggest city, 1.3 million population, and pretty normal big city crime stats at worst. People really don’t dig that deep. It would completely change perception for generations to come and definitely lead to population growth, more tourism, more money, more business, and more efficiency.

Or I suppose we can fall out of the top 75 largest cities that got measured for the rankings I saw (we happen to be 75) and just be irrelevant. Kind of crazy and ridiculous we have fallen that far - another shocker to me today. Didn’t realize census estimates got us all the way down in the 280Ks

I have no idea how county numbers have been looking this year. Seems like north county has had a bit of a rough go but not sure if that’s just the quantity of reporting I’m seeing on it.
I've seen the same list i think you're talking about.

In the top 20 list, the other 19 cities have an average land area of just over 193 square miles. If St. Louis was that average, we'd have around 700,000 people and our murder rate would be between 25 and 30/100k or very similar to Kansas City's.

The only two cities physically smaller than St. Louis are Minneapolis and Stockton, both of which are in blue states that have serious approaches to crime prevention and reducing the effects of poverty.

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PostMar 11, 2025#10108

delmar2debaliviere2downtown wrote:
Mar 11, 2025
I actually never looked at how “rankings” came out last year, but an infographic has been going around social media today. I guess we still finished first in per capita which surprised me a little bit. I thought we would have moved down. So we got labeled the “murder capital” along with Chicago on the infographic.

And we were pretty high above the rest of the top 10 which is unfortunate. It looks impossible to leave the #1 spot too without everyone else jumping up in numbers. And it was discouraging to see many cities take way bigger reductions than we did.

Obviously with city-county merger, we would almost drop out of the top 20 (would go up more than I would’ve thought though in raw numbers). Im sure it would help a lot of the other general crime states a lot too. Which is frankly the saving grace we need. There would be negatives but nothing that would outweigh getting off some these lists and association with StL.

It is amazing how many outsiders considering visiting and moving here would now just see the 10th biggest city, 1.3 million population, and pretty normal big city crime stats at worst. People really don’t dig that deep. It would completely change perception for generations to come and definitely lead to population growth, more tourism, more money, more business, and more efficiency.

Or I suppose we can fall out of the top 75 largest cities that got measured for the rankings I saw (we happen to be 75) and just be irrelevant. Kind of crazy and ridiculous we have fallen that far - another shocker to me today. Didn’t realize census estimates got us all the way down in the 280Ks

I have no idea how county numbers have been looking this year. Seems like north county has had a bit of a rough go but not sure if that’s just the quantity of reporting I’m seeing on it.
I could not agree more, get us off these stupid most dangerous lists and the national perception of STL changes. Not sure how long that takes but I don't think there's any question that they do impact how we are perceived.

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PostMar 11, 2025#10109

pdm_ad wrote:
Mar 11, 2025
delmar2debaliviere2downtown wrote:
Mar 11, 2025
I actually never looked at how “rankings” came out last year, but an infographic has been going around social media today. I guess we still finished first in per capita which surprised me a little bit. I thought we would have moved down. So we got labeled the “murder capital” along with Chicago on the infographic.

And we were pretty high above the rest of the top 10 which is unfortunate. It looks impossible to leave the #1 spot too without everyone else jumping up in numbers. And it was discouraging to see many cities take way bigger reductions than we did.

Obviously with city-county merger, we would almost drop out of the top 20 (would go up more than I would’ve thought though in raw numbers). Im sure it would help a lot of the other general crime states a lot too. Which is frankly the saving grace we need. There would be negatives but nothing that would outweigh getting off some these lists and association with StL.

It is amazing how many outsiders considering visiting and moving here would now just see the 10th biggest city, 1.3 million population, and pretty normal big city crime stats at worst. People really don’t dig that deep. It would completely change perception for generations to come and definitely lead to population growth, more tourism, more money, more business, and more efficiency.

Or I suppose we can fall out of the top 75 largest cities that got measured for the rankings I saw (we happen to be 75) and just be irrelevant. Kind of crazy and ridiculous we have fallen that far - another shocker to me today. Didn’t realize census estimates got us all the way down in the 280Ks

I have no idea how county numbers have been looking this year. Seems like north county has had a bit of a rough go but not sure if that’s just the quantity of reporting I’m seeing on it.
I could not agree more, get us off these stupid most dangerous lists and the national perception of STL changes. Not sure how long that takes but I don't think there's any question that they do impact how we are perceived.
100%. When I worked in Indianapolis, I was always hearing about STL crime and "what it's like". This was my first experience in a situation like this. All I could say is that it's not anywhere near as bad as the headlines say.

The funny thing is that Indianapolis and Marion County are merged and their murder rate is higher than what STL's would be if our city and county merged. But no one looks at that.

927

PostMar 11, 2025#10110

whitherSTL wrote:
Mar 11, 2025
What about murders per capita? I believe we’re a resounding #1 in the country. I realize the city/county divide kills us here but those are the stats people will see.
That’s literally what my post was about, yes.

PostMar 12, 2025#10111

Downtown shooting…ugh. Right outside police academy. Frustrating

596
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PostMar 12, 2025#10112

Sadly it’s very difficult to prevent these types of crimes Does it make downtown less safe no however you know how our local media likes to paint the entire downtown as dangerous unsafe & not worthy of investment. I wish stuff like this didn’t happen but these types of things happen in lots of downtowns just St.Louis seems to perpetuate the idea that downtown is very unsafe. Worse now this latest crime will motivate Missouri to get the votes it needs to finalize the state take over of the police department.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

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PostMar 12, 2025#10113

PlatinumBlues wrote:
Mar 12, 2025
Sadly it’s very difficult to prevent these types of crimes Does it make downtown less safe no however you know how our local media likes to paint the entire downtown as dangerous unsafe & not worthy of investment. I wish stuff like this didn’t happen but these types of things happen in lots of downtowns just St.Louis seems to perpetuate the idea that downtown is very unsafe. Worse now this latest crime will motivate Missouri to get the votes it needs to finalize the state take over of the police department.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
It's not as hard as you think. Actual gun laws would go a long way in getting guns off the street and keeping repeat gun offenders locked away. Additionally, expanded social welfare programs to help reduce the effects of poverty would go a long way in helping break the broken culture that makes people think it's okay to shoot other people over often small things.

None of this can be done on a large scale without support from the state. So crime in KC and STL will remain high. There's nothing the police can do about it.

927

PostMar 12, 2025#10114

I think the people that yell about “StL defunded police” and “StL hates cops, that’s their problem” and “StL doesnt have enough officers” are bogus.

I will say though that we need to use our small boundaries that kill us in these stats to our advantage. It’s hard to keep patrol on all sides of a 300 sq mile city. We have a 62 mile city, and so much of the crime happens in about 20 square miles on the north side and 5 square miles on the southeast side. Then you have a few square miles downtown/downtown west that you need to be safe and can’t afford pretty much any violent crime that is preventable.

So do hire as many as we can and keep patrol on that 30 square miles constantly, block by block with visible lights. Take the european approach - just visible present law enforcement. Simple deterrence. We have a small amount of terrain to control - use it to our advantage. Get as many out there to prevent these things that people just aren’t going to do in the presence of officers very often.

Downtown at 7 pm - patrol should be everywhere

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2,689

PostMar 12, 2025#10115

If STL maintains current rate, 17 homicides over 20% of year, it will end 2025 with 85 homicides. Locally, a fantastic improvement.

Nationally, it would still rank 5th.

Getting off the lists will not happen in any of our lifetimes unless there is legitimate turnaround in population:

927

PostMar 12, 2025#10116

addxb2 wrote:
Mar 12, 2025
If STL maintains current rate, 17 homicides over 20% of year, it will end 2025 with 85 homicides. Locally, a fantastic improvement.

Nationally, it would still rank 5th.

Getting off the lists will not happen in any of our lifetimes unless there is legitimate turnaround in population:
Yes, that was my disappointment/discouragement with seeing that yesterday. We won’t get off the top of the lists without a merger. There’s been a growing discourse that “the city doesn’t need the county” and “city has no reason to merge”. As a city promoter, I still have to admit that the city absolutely needs a merger if it ever wants to grow significantly because these stats will be too hard to overcome for us, amongst some other positives.

I am hoping that some movement gets going on the issue.

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PostMar 12, 2025#10117

addxb2 wrote:If STL maintains current rate, 17 homicides over 20% of year, it will end 2025 with 85 homicides. Locally, a fantastic improvement.

Nationally, it would still rank 5th.

Getting off the lists will not happen in any of our lifetimes unless there is legitimate turnaround in population:
I would also assume that if our homicide rate keeps trending down, other cities on the list will do the same. We may not get to 5th at 85 homicides, but that would be a huge accomplishment nonetheless.

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PostMar 12, 2025#10118

@dbInSouthCity  this feels like a 'you' question, haha.  

If I'm Sam Page, and I understand how marketing/perception works... I know that the city crime perception dwarfs anything the county could or has mustered from a PR perspective in the last few decades... could I, Sam Page, hop over to the city police department with the head of County PD and agree to just start reporting the crime stats together under the same form/process/etc?  In the vein of the current federal admin where process isn't as important... is that something we could just... do? 

Would be worth hundreds of millions of dollars in PR. Erase all of the previous records to and combine everything into one report. Hire a PR agency to update all of the old articles on the internet...

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PostMar 12, 2025#10119

Crime in STL will always look high because it is high and it will always be high until the state takes a serious approach to enacting basic gun laws and making serious efforts to reduce the effects of poverty. Until then, there is absolutely nothing the city can do to make its numbers look better.

And as normal, all of these deep systemic issues comes down to racism and that's also why it won't be fixed by the current government.

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PostMar 12, 2025#10120

The County has nothing to gain, and only to lose, in the short run by reporting crime data with the city. It’s not going to happen.

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PostMar 12, 2025#10121

Depends what you’re trying to accomplish, if it’s to change the national narrative then the county has nothing to lose and everything to gain.

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PostMar 12, 2025#10122

Right, I said short term.

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PostMar 12, 2025#10123

dbInSouthCity wrote:
Mar 12, 2025
Depends what you’re trying to accomplish, if it’s to change the national narrative then the county has nothing to lose and everything to gain.
That's where I'm at... nobody outside of St. Louis knows that St. Louis County isn't St. Louis City. And heck, probably half of folks in our metro don't know there's a difference from a statistical reporting standpoint. The county would look immensely better the moment this happens... because the city is St. Louis - there is no difference on the internet... which is where the perception exists.

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PostMar 12, 2025#10124

Yeah I think there’s essentially no downside for the county in the short or long term. Even in the short term, their trends over the last 2 years would improve.

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PostMar 12, 2025#10125

Clayton office towers are filling up with former DT firms in part due to fears of crime in the city. It tangibly benefits the county for the city to have a negative crime reputation

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