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Scuba Forum / General / November 2006

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Douglas W "Popeye" Frederick - 08 Nov 2006 21:29 GMT
Gang killings behind highest homicide rate in decade

Last Updated: Wednesday, November 8, 2006 | 12:02 PM ET

CBC News

A jump in gang-related killings increased the national homicide rate in 2005
to its highest point in nearly a decade, according to Statistics Canada.

The number of homicides committed with a firearm also rose for the third
year in a row, the report found.

Police reported 658 homicides last year, 34 more than in 2004 and after
reaching a 30-year low in 2003.

The national homicide rate peaked in the mid-1970s at 3.03 homicides per
100,000 population. The rate has generally been dropping since then,
reaching a low of 1.73 in 2003. The 2005 rate was 2.04 homicides per 100,000
population.

Of the 2005 homicides, the study found 222 were committed with a firearm, 49
more than the previous year.

By comparison, 198 victims were stabbed to death last year.

There were 107 gang-related homicides in 2005, accounting for 16 per cent of
all homicides. The number increased by 35 from the previous year. Large
increases were reported in Ontario, particularly in Toronto, and in Alberta.

But a revision to the Homicide Survey may account for the increase, the
report said.

The survey included homicides in which gang-related activity was "suspected"
by police, and not just "determined". It is not known if suspected homicides
were included in the total before 2005.

The survey also found that the youth homicide rate reached its highest point
in more than a decade. A total of 65 youths ages 12 to 17 were accused of
homicide in 2005, 21 more than the previous year.

But the spousal homicide rate continues to drop. The 74 spousal homicides in
2005 represented the fourth consecutive annual decline.

This report also contained for the first time a detailed analysis of
homicide clearance rates among the nation's largest police services. Among
the 24,000 homicides in Canada since 1961, 85 per cent have been solved by
police.
Related

--

 There's a wealth of information there, for those that can see.

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                             Popeye
Not if, but -when- I die, half the people around here
will party because they're my friends, and they know
I would demand that. The other half will party as well,
    glad to be rid of me, and I'll see them in hell.
                www.finalprotectivefire.com

Carl Nisarel - 08 Nov 2006 21:12 GMT
Lla qindi qawdihaw "Douglas W \"Fatboy\" Frederick"
<Popeye@finalprotectivefire.com> dawghattlxhasi:

> The 2005 rate was 2.04 homicides per 100,000
> population.

Which is still a fraction of the USA homicide rate.

BTW, Fatboy, homicides in Canada are way down in 2006. 2005 is an outlier.

In the USA, however overall violent crime rates and homicides were up in
2005 and are likely to be up in 2006 as well.

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Carl Nisarel - 08 Nov 2006 21:20 GMT
Toronto proves adept at curbing gun violence

TIMOTHY APPLEBY AND UNNATI GANDHI

From Saturday's Globe and Mail

TORONTO The explosion of gun violence that convulsed Toronto last year, as
the rest of the country looked on aghast, appears to have been checked by
an aggressive package of police tactics that was three years in the making.

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Carl Nisarel - 08 Nov 2006 21:26 GMT
Lla qindi qawdihaw "Douglas W \"Fatboy\" Frederick"
<Popeye@finalprotectivefire.com> dawghattlxhasi:

> The 2005 rate was 2.04 homicides per 100,000
> population.

2005 FBI UCR Report on crime in the USA:

The estimated number of violent crime offenses in 2005 was 1,390,695, an
increase of 2.3 percent over the 2004 estimate.

Of all violent crime in 2005, the offense of robbery had the largest
increase, 3.9 percent, compared with the 2004 number. All violent crimes
increased with the exception of forcible rape,

The rate for the estimated number of violent crimes was 469.2 per
100,000 inhabitants in 2005, an increase of 1.3 percent compared to the
2004 figure.

The murder rate was 5.6 offenses per 100,000 inhabitants in 2005, a 2.4-
percent increase compared with the rate for 2004.

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