Murder Capitals Of The World

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Welcome To The Murder Capital Of The World


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At just past 6 a.m. on Saturday, May 7, a young woman named Ana Beatriz Pereira Frade was riding with her stepfather along a busy highway in northern Rio de Janeiro, not far from where many of this year's Olympic events will take place in August. They were going to the airport to surprise Ana's mother, who was returning from a trip.

According to police and media reports, a gang of five to eight masked men surrounded their car in the middle of the highway when traffic slowed. The men brandished guns, and demanded money. Perhaps panicking, Ana's stepfather jammed the gas and attempted to surge through a blockade. The move backfired; one of the gunmen shot into the car. The bullet struck and killed Ana, who was 17 years old.

The suspects are still at large.

Ana Beatriz’s murder was "barbaric," a homicide detective said. But it was not an anomaly. While Brazil is perhaps known best for its entrancing music, delicious food, beautiful beaches and decadent nightlife, the country is internationally notorious for its violence and crime, too. Police shootouts are a near-daily occurrence, and about 40,000 Brazilians die every year from gun-related homicides, making Brazil the "murder capital of the world." One recent study found that, of the 50 most dangerous cities in the world, 21 are in Brazil. [Moderator's Comment: Four of the most dangerous are in the United States.]

“Things are getting uglier here every day. I advise everyone with plans to visit Brazil for the Olympics in Rio — to stay home.”

Deaths like Ana's are tragically common in this part of the world, but hers gained international attention when Rivaldo, considered one of the greatest soccer players ever, seized on the crime to showcase just how violent Rio can really be — and why tourists should stay away from the 2016 Olympics.

“Things are getting uglier here every day,” Rivaldo wrote on his Facebook page. “I advise everyone with plans to visit Brazil for the Olympics in Rio — to stay home. You’ll be putting your life at risk here. This is without even speaking about the state of public hospitals and all the Brazilian political mess. Only God can change the situation in our Brazil.”

Many of the wealthier people who plan to attend the games in August aren't waiting for help from on high: They'll be bringing their own security forces — and even, in some cases, their own medical personnel.

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© Provided by IBT US A Brazilian police sharpshooter secures a position atop a school building in front of the Rocinha shantytown in Rio.​

Matt Bradley, regional security director for the Americas for International SOS, a London- and Singapore-based firm that has contracts with 80 percent of the Fortune 500, says hundreds of International SOS employees will be devoted to providing security services during the games to a variety of clients, especially Olympic sponsors. Bradley declined to say who the company’s clients were, but he noted that the company was setting up private medical clinics and direct contacts with ambulance services on the ground in Rio.

“We set up a special clinic because we know that during the games, even the regular hospitals will be overrun with cases, so we’ve actually set up special clinics to make sure [clients] get proper medical treatment if they need it,” Bradley says. “We have ambulances on standby.”

There is truth to Rivaldo's comments about crime and danger in Brazil.

This month, Brazil's Public Security Institute published new crime figures for Rio de Janeiro, and they paint an ugly picture. The number of murders is up 15.4 percent from last year. Street robberies increased 23.7 percent. Car thefts increased by 19.7 percent. Part of the rise in crime has been attributed to an economic recession, as well as budget shortfalls for police and security forces.

"The recession has really hit Rio hard," says Abbott Matthews, an intelligence analyst at iJET International. "The police suffered budget cuts, and that’s hurt their security forces. ... There’s shortages. There’s not enough police officers all the times."

From pickpockets to kidnappers to fears of an Islamic State group terror attack, there is enormous pressure to keep athletes and tourists safe.

Some of Brazil's top officials are recognizing that they may not be prepared for the surge of nearly 500,000 people expected to come to Rio for the games. On the day he became interim president upon the impeachment of Dilma Rousseff, Michel Temer appointed a new defense minister, Raul Jungmann. Jungmann, in turn, immediately blasted the federal government for not preparing enough security for the Olympics.

"There’s been a lack of federal attention up until now,”Jungmann told O Estado de S. Paulo daily newspaper. He added that there's "been a pulling back by intelligence organizations from other countries because the federal government did not take care of this issue."

From pickpockets to kidnappers to fears of an Islamic State group terror attack, there is enormous pressure on event organizers for the 2016 Summer Olympics to keep athletes and tourists safe. Brazil’s federal government has pledged $200 million to staff the events with 85,000 officers, but in the months leading up to the event, it’s become increasingly unclear if Brazil’s security forces can actually handle the breadth and scope of the games.

According to recent reports, basic safety contracts have yet to be signed, surveillance cameras have not been installed, and, more recently, one of the event’s top security chiefs resigned. Skepticism hangs over all the planning. As one former police captain put it recently: "If we depend on the structure that is being prepared for these games, we are extremely vulnerable to these attacks, just like what happened in Paris and Brussels.”

Fear, however, can be a lucrative commodity — especially for the bodyguards and private security forces that are offering protection services to wealthy individuals and corporate sponsors for the 2016 Olympics. These sorts of contractors find work at all major international events, but according to several private security company executives interviewed, rising concerns about Brazil's level of violence means that their services are increasingly in demand. “For the Olympics, prices have quadrupled,” says Luke Bencie, managing director of Security Management International, a Virginia company that will be escorting an unnamed Olympic sponsor to Rio.

According to Bencie, travelers who elect to be shuttled from stadium to stadium in armored vehicles should expect to pay $3,000 to $7,000 per day in Brazil, driver included. A “high-end” bilingual bodyguard who knows the streets, Bencie says, “can run anywhere around $2,500 per day, if not more.”​

Others want a more personal touch. Jaclyn India, founder of the ultra-luxe travel consultancy Sienna Charles, is currently working with a family that has hired two security guards to bring them to the Olympics, where they are spending $500,000 for a villa for the three weeks of the event. “They wanted an extra layer of knowledge and extra layer of security on the ground,” she said.​

Bencie says most contractors, his company included, will partner with local security companies because foreigners are not allowed to bring in guns. “It’s not as if a foreigner can come in with a weapon into the country,” he says. “It’s impossible. Even bringing pepper spray or something like that is prohibited. Same with stun guns.”

Andrei Rodrigues, special safety secretary at the Ministry for Justice for major events, has been placed in charge of security for the Olympics. Rodrigues will oversee 47,000 Brazilian security professionals — that is, unarmed security guards — as well as 38,000 members of the armed services. According to event organizers, it will be the largest security operation in Brazilian history. Rodrigues' office did not respond to a request for an interview, but in statements, he's assured the public that Rio will be safe for Olympic visitors and athletes.


SOURCE: http://www.businessinsider.com/most-violent-cities-in-the-world-2016-1

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The 50 most violent cities in the world


Latin America holds the undesirable distinction of having the most cities on the Mexico Citizens Council for Public Security's annual
ranking of the world's most violent cities.

Of the 50 cities on the list, 41 are in Latin America, including 21 in Brazil.

The lion's share of the elevated violence in the region is due to drug trafficking supplemented with gang wars, political instability, and the deregulation of economies triggering widespread poverty.

"Narcotics are the biggest black market earner of all. Estimated to be worth more than three hundred billion dollars a year, the global industry has pumped huge resources into criminal empires decade after decade," wrote Ioan Grillo the author of "Gangster Warlords: Drug Dollars, Killing Fields, and the New Politics of Latin America."

"So that amount of money, $100 billion a year, 10 years, a trillion dollars, 30 years, $3 trillion. That amount of money pumps in these organizations ... buying more guns, paying more assassins, bribing more police, bribing more politicians ... and that is why the region right now, Latin American and the Caribbean, are at a boiling point," Grillo told Business Insider.

The council's ranking contains cities with populations of more than 300,000 and does not count deaths in combat zones or cities with unavailable data, so some dangerous cities may not be represented on the list.





50. Obregón, Mexico, had 28.29 homicides per 100,000 residents.
50-obregn-mexico-had-2829-homicides-per-100000-residents.jpg

Reuters Patrons eat at a taco stand, as the body of a man lies on the pavement, in Ciudad Obregon August 10, 2010. According to local media, the man died after suffering a fatal heart attack.


49. Maracaibo, Venezuela, had 28.85 homicides per 100,000 residents.

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Reuters - People blocking a road in protest after a large blackout affected five states in Venezuela, in the western city of Maracaibo, in 2011.


48. Macapá, Brazil, had 30.25 homicides per 100,000 residents.

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Google Maps/Amanda Macias/Business Insider


47. Johannesburg, South Africa, had 30.31 homicides per 100,000 residents.

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Reuters - A soldier standing guard as the police raided a hostel in Johannesburg's Alexandra township on April 23.



46. Victoria, Mexico, had 30.50 homicides per 100,000 residents.

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Reuters - A soldier standing guard at the site of a car-bomb attack outside the broadcaster Televisa in Ciudad Victoria in Mexico.



45. Pereira, Colombia, had 32.58 homicides per 100,000 residents.

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Reuters - Troops unloading the body of a FARC rebel from a helicopter in Pereira, Colombia, in 2006.


44. Curitiba, Brazil, had 34.71 homicides per 100,000 residents.

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Paulo Lisboa/Reuters - Police officers clashing with teachers during a protest in Curitiba in Parana state on April 29.


43. Porto Alegre, Brazil, had 34.73 homicides per 100,000 residents.
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Reuters Riot police officers detaining two men during a protest against the 2014 World Cup in Porto Alegre in 2014.


42. Nelson Mandela Bay, South Africa, had 35.85 homicides per 100,000 residents.

42-nelson-mandela-bay-south-africa-had-3585-homicides-per-100000-residents.jpg

Thomas Mukoya/Reuters - South African soldiers seen before welcoming the funeral cortege carrying the coffin of former South African President Nelson Mandela to the Union Buildings in the capital Pretoria on December 12, 2013.


41. Durban, South Africa, had 35.93 homicides per 100,000 residents.

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Reuters - Striking workers of the South African Municipal Workers Union marched through Durban in 2011.


40. Campina Grande, Brazil, had 36.04 homicides per 100,000 residents.

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Reuters - Brazilian soldiers carrying the FN FAL rifle.


39. Campos dos Goytacazes, Brazil, had 36.16 homicides per 100,000 residents.

39-campos-dos-goytacazes-brazil-had-3616-homicides-per-100000-residents.jpg

Reuters - Residents reacting to the effects of tear gas, which was fired by the riot police during a clash with demonstrators attending a protest against fare hikes for city buses in Rio de Janeiro on January 8.


38. Aracaju, Brazil, had 37.7 homicides per 100,000 residents.

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Secretaria de Estado de Seguranca Publica de Sergipe/AP - Prisoners on the roof of the Advogado Antonio Jacinto Filho state prison, with military police officers gathered nearby, in Aracaju, Brazil, in 2012.


37. Recife, Brazil, had 38.12 homicides per 100,000 residents.

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Reuters - A demonstrator chasing vandals during a protest against the Confederations Cup and the government of Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff in Recife City in 2013.


36. Vitória da Conquista, Brazil, had 38.46 homicides per 100,000 residents.

36-vitria-da-conquista-brazil-had-3846-homicides-per-100000-residents.jpg

Reuters - Police officers blocking the main entrance to the construction site of the Belo Monte hydroelectric dam in Vitoria do Xingu, near Altamira in Para State.


35. Tijuana, Mexico, had 39.09 homicides per 100,000 residents.

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Reuters - Soldiers outside the attorney general's office after Jorge Hank Rhon was transferred following his arrest in Tijuana in 2011.


34. Gran Barcelona, Venezuela, had 40.08 homicides per 100,000 residents.

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Reuters - Police officers near the body of Anzoategui state police officer Mario Figueroa after he was shot dead in Barcelona, in the state of Anzoategui, Venezuela, on January 24, 2015.


33. Kingston, Jamaica, had 41.14 homicides per 100,000 residents.

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Hans Deryk/Reuters - A pick-up truck loaded with Jamaican police officers patrolling a market area near the Tivoli Gardens neighborhood of Kingston, Jamaica, in 2010.



32. New Orleans had 41.44 homicides per 100,000 residents.

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Reuters - Orleans Parish mounted police officers marching down Bourbon Street in the French Quarter announcing the official end of Mardi Gras in New Orleans in 2006.



31. Vitoria, Brazil, had 41.99 homicides per 100,000 residents.

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Reuters - Amazon Indians from the Xingu, Tapajos, and Teles Pires river basins facing a riot-police officer while invading the main construction site of the Belo Monte hydroelectric dam site in protest against the dam's construction, in Vitoria do Xingu, near Altamira in Para State, in 2013.


30. Teresina, Brazil, had 42.64 homicides per 100,000 residents.

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Paulo Whitaker/Reuters
Residents on a street that was flooded by the Poti River in Teresina in the northeastern Brazilian state of Piaui on May 8, 2009.


29. Goiânia y Aparecida de Goiânia, Brazil, has 43.38 homicides per 100,000 residents.

29-goinia-y-aparecida-de-goinia-brazil-has-4338-homicides-per-100000-residents.jpg

Reuters - Demonstrators burning a Brazilian flag while protesting against the 2014 World Cup in Goiania.




28. Detroit had 43.89 homicides per 100,000 residents.

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AP - Police officers outside the scene of a multiple shooting in Detroit in 2013.



27. Feira de Santana, Brazil, had 45.5 homicides per 100,000 residents.

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Reuters - Police officers searching youths for weapons and drugs while on patrol in the Nordeste de Amaralina slum complex in Salvador, Bahia State, in 2013.



26. Belém, Brazil, had 45.83 homicides per 100,000 residents.

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Reuters - Demonstrators clashing with police officers during an anti-government protest in Belem, at the mouth of the Amazon River, in 2013.


SOURCE: http://www.businessinsider.com/most-violent-cities-in-the-world-2016-1


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25. Guatemala City, Guatemala, had 47.17 homicides per 100,000 residents.

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Reuters - Riot police officers seen during a protest against the reelection of the city's mayor, Rubelio Recinos of the Patriot Party, in Barberena, northwest of Guatemala City, on September 8.


24. Cumaná, Venezuela, had 47.77 homicides per 100,000 residents.

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AP Venezuelan National Guard troops showing bags containing seized cocaine in three houses outside Cumana, about 270 miles east of Caracas.



23. Manaus, Brazil, had 47.87 homicides per 100,000 residents.

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Reuters - Police officers arriving as members of different Amazonian tribes occupied the headquarters of Brazil's Indian affairs bureau, protesting a court decision to evict them from a nearby plot of land they had been occupying for several weeks, in Manaus in 2013.



22. Cuiabá, Brazil, had 48.52 homicides per 100,000 residents.

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Reuters - A Brazilian soldier standing guard near where the South Korean team was attending a training session at the stadium of the Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso in Cuiaba in 2014.



21. São Luís, Brazil, had 53.05 homicides per 100,000 residents.

21-so-lus-brazil-had-5305-homicides-per-100000-residents.jpg

Reuters - The body of Brazilian journalist Decio Sa seen after Sa was shot at a restaurant and bar in Sao Luis, Maranhao state, Brazil, in 2013.



20. Barquisimeto, Venezuela, had 54.96 homicides per 100,000 residents.

20-barquisimeto-venezuela-had-5496-homicides-per-100000-residents.jpg

REUTERS/Carlos Garcia Rawlins - Venezuelan riot guards seen outside the Centro Occidental (Uribana) prison in Barquisimeto, Venezuela.



19. Baltimore had 54.98 homicides per 100,000 residents.

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Reuters - Police lined up shortly after the deadline for a city-wide curfew at North Ave and Pennsylvania Ave in Baltimore on April 30.



18. Maceio, Brazil, had 55.63 homicides per 100,000 residents.

18-maceio-brazil-had-5563-homicides-per-100000-residents.jpg

AP - Hooded police officers on strike standing guard at a balcony during a clash with Brazilian army troops in downtown Maceio, in the northern state of Alagoas, some 1,500 miles north of Rio de Janeiro, in 1997.



17. Culiacan, Mexico, had 56.09 homicides per 100,000 residents.

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Henry Romero/Reuters - Mexican federal police officers preparing to fly to Culiacan from Mexico City's airport in 2008.



16. João Pessoa, Brazil, had 58.40 homicides per 100,000 residents.

16-joo-pessoa-brazil-had-5840-homicides-per-100000-residents.jpg

Flickr/Ben Tavener - Authorities seen in João Pessoa, Brazil.



15. St. Louis had 59.23 homicides per 100,000 residents.

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Reuters - A man seen in early 2014 during rioting after a grand jury returned no indictment in the shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri.



14. Salvador, Brazil, had 60.63 homicides per 100,000 residents.

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Reuters - Police patrolling in the Nordeste de Amaralina slum complex in Salvador, Bahia State, in 2013.



13. Natal, Brazil, had 60.66 homicides per 100,000 residents.

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REUTERS/Leo Carioca - A bus pictured after an attack by suspected bandits in Natal, Rio Grande do Norte state, on March 17.



12. Fortaleza, Brazil, had 60.77 homicides per 100,000 residents.

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REUTERS/Stringer/Brazil/Nereu Jr - Police officers frisking participants of a demonstration in Fortaleza, Brazil.



11. Ciudad Guayana, Venezuela, had 62.33 homicides per 100,000 residents.

11-ciudad-guayana-venezuela-had-6233-homicides-per-100000-residents.jpg

REUTERS/Miraflores Palace/Handout - Nicolas Maduro arriving to a campaign rally at the state of Amazonas, in this picture provided by Miraflores Palace on April 6, 2013.



10. Cali, Colombia, had 64.27 homicides per 100,000 residents.

10-cali-colombia-had-6427-homicides-per-100000-residents.jpg

Reuters - Colombian police officers arresting three men during a raid, at Comuna 20 in Cali in 2013.



9. Cape Town, South Africa, had 65.53 homicides per 100,000 residents.

9-cape-town-south-africa-had-6553-homicides-per-100000-residents.jpg

Reuters - Police officers firing on demonstrators in 2013 during a strike by farm workers at De Doorns on the N1 highway linking Cape Town and Johannesburg.




8. Palmira, Colombia, had 70.88 homicides per 100,000 residents.

8-palmira-colombia-had-7088-homicides-per-100000-residents.jpg

REUTERS/Jaime Saldarriaga - A soldier standing guard alongside explosives confiscated by soldiers during a raid in Palmira, Colombia.



7. Valencia, Venezuela, had 72.31 homicides per 100,000 residents.

7-valencia-venezuela-had-7231-homicides-per-100000-residents.jpg

REUTERS/Carlos Garcia Rawlins - A family seen September 3 posing on the ruins of the house they had lived in for eight years, which was demolished by government officials during a security operation called "Operation to Free the People" in Valencia, Venezuela.



6. Distrito Central, Honduras, had 73.51 homicides per 100,000 residents.

6-distrito-central-honduras-had-7351-homicides-per-100000-residents.jpg

Reuters - Members of the military police during a parade in 2014 commemorating Independence Day in Tegucigalpa.



5. Maturin, Venezuela, had 86.45 homicides per 100,000 residents.

5-maturin-venezuela-had-8645-homicides-per-100000-residents.jpg

Google Maps/Amanda Macias/Business Insider

4. Acapulco, Mexico, had 104.73 homicides per 100,000 residents.

4-acapulco-mexico-had-10473-homicides-per-100000-residents.jpg

Reuters - Police officers and forensic technicians next to the dead, covered bodies of two men at a crime scene in Acapulco in 2012.





3. San Salvador, El Salvador, had 108.54 homicides per 100,000 residents.

3-san-salvador-el-salvador-had-10854-homicides-per-100000-residents.jpg

Reuters - A suspected member of the Mara 18 street gang being arrested by Salvadoran police officer during an anti-gang operation in San Salvador in 2006.


2. San Pedro Sula, Honduras, had 111.03 homicides per 100,000 residents.

2-san-pedro-sula-honduras-had-11103-homicides-per-100000-residents.jpg

Fernando Antonio/AP




1. Caracas, Venezuela, had 119.87 homicides per 100,000 residents.

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Reuters - An antigovernment protester setting up a barricade next to a burning kiosk during a protest at Altamira square in Caracas on March 9, 2014.

Read more about life in Caracas here.

SEE 2015 RANKINGS: The 50 most

SOURCE: http://www.businessinsider.com/most-violent-cities-in-the-world-2016-1

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Violent Crime In America

The country saw a drop in overall violent crime by 1.6 percent between 2013 and 2014. That includes a 2 percent drop in murders, a 6.7 percent drop in robberies and a .7 percent rise in aggravated assaults across America.

In 2014, America had a violent crime rate of 365.5 per 100,000 residents and a murder rate of 4.5.

Big Cities With The Highest Murder Rates


St. Louis, Missouri 49.91
Detroit, Michigan 43.52
New Orleans, Louisiana 38.75
Baltimore, Maryland 33.84
Newark, New Jersey 33.32
Buffalo, New York 23.22
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 22.43
Memphis, Tennessee 21.38
Atlanta, Georgia 20.47
Cincinati, Ohio 20.16

Chicago had a murder rate of 15.09, New York had a rate of 3.93 and Los Angeles had a rate of 6.66 (well, 6.65511 if you don’t round to the nearest hundredth).

murderrate.jpg


Violent Crime Rates For Medium Cities

There are 210 cities with 100,000 to 249,999 people in the FBI’s Uniform Crime Report.

Medium Cities With The Highest Violent Crime Rates

Birmingham, Alabama 1588.29
Little Rock, Arkanasas 1391.91
Rockford, Illinois 1234.74
Springfield, Missouri 1186.47
Lansing, Michigan 1116.76
Hartford, Connecticut 1104.50
Springfield, Massachusetts 1080.86
Springfield, Illinois 1064.45
New Haven, Connecticut 1054.37
San Bernardino, California 991.67

Medium Cities With The Highest Murder Rates

Jackson, Mississippi 35.39
Birmingham, Alabama 24.52
Baton Rouge, Louisiana 23.11
North Charleston, South Carolina 21.78
Little Rock, Arkanasas 21.69
San Bernardino, California 20.04
Richmond, Virginia 18.92
Dayton, Ohio 18.85
Inglewood, California 17.86
Montgomery, Alabama 17.48

Violent Crime Rates For Small Cities

There are 3,056 cities with 10,000 to 99,999 people in the FBI’s Uniform Crime Report.

Small Cities With The Highest Violent Crime Rates

Darby, Pennsylvania 3855.15
East St. Louis, Illinois 3645.89
Forida City, Florida 2771.84
Espanola, New Mexico 2605.45
Benton Harbor, Michigan 2526.46
Opa Locka, Florida 2427.85
Anniston, Alabama 2375.15
College Park, Georgia 2151.56
Gallup, New Mexico 2146.79
Cocoa, Florida 1810.40

Small Cities With The Highest Murder Rates

East St Louis, Illinois 101.8
Chester, Pennsylvania 88.09
Muskegon Heights, Michigan 73.9
Helena-West Helena, Arkansas 61.34
College Park, Georgia 60.89
Lumberto, North Carolina 50.28
Gary, Indiana 47.43
Riviera Beach, Florida 38.87
Eunice, Louisiana 38.73
Trenton, New Jersey 37.95

SOURCE: http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2015/10/22/violent-crime-statistics-for-every-city-in-america/

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