Crime & Safety

Violent Crime Dropped in Orange County Last Year

FBI crime stats show many drops, which police attribute to technology and teamwork.

Mirroring a national trend, violent crime dropped across Orange County last year, with some cities reporting dramatic declines, according to an FBI annual report released Monday.

Irvine had its lowest per-capita rate of violent crime last year, according to Farrah Emami, a spokeswoman for the Irvine Police Department. Irvine reported 113 violent crimes, which is actually up from 110 in 2012, but factoring in the growing population, the per-capita rate dropped, Emami said.

Orange County cities recording a drop in violent crime between 2012 and 2013 include:

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  • Aliso Viejo from 43 to 35
  • Anaheim from 1,279 to 1,130
  • Brea from 74 to 64
  • Costa Mesa from 254 to 252
  • Cypress from 56 to 50
  • Fullerton from 452 to 372
  • Laguna Beach from 57 to 41
  • La Habra from 147 to 88
  • Lake Forest from 107 to 105
  • Los Alamitos from 27 to 24
  • Mission Viejo from 73 to 62
  • Newport Beach from 101 to 73
  • Placentia from 107 to 66
  • Rancho Santa Margarita from 27 to 17
  • San Clemente from 75 to 56
  • San Juan Capistrano from 59 to 57
  • Santa Ana from 1,334 to 1,121
  • Seal Beach from 17 to 16
  • Tustin from 114 to 100
  • Westminster from 284 to 283
  • Yorba Linda from 53 to 30

Orange County Sheriff Sandra Hutchens attributed the drops to teamwork among local, state and federal law enforcement.

โ€œI think itโ€™s that focus of working together. Ever since 9/11, we have been working closer together and you see more task forces between local agencies and the FBI,โ€ Hutchens told City News Service. โ€œAnd weโ€™re using better technology and that kind of thing has a lot to do with it as well.โ€

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Orange County also has been able to avoid โ€œearly releaseโ€ programs due to jail overcrowding, Hutchens said.

โ€œThatโ€™s why weโ€™re expanding some of the jail in Musick so we can continue to keep people in jail,โ€ Hutchens said.

The shift of some non-violent offenders to jail instead of state prison, however, has had an impact on the inmate population locally, Hutchens said.

The population has zoomed from about 4,700 to 6,800, โ€œbut we see that dropping down again a little bit, although it fluctuates,โ€ Hutchens said.

To help manage the issue, the sheriff asked cities with their own jails to keep suspects behind bars as long as possible before transferring them to the countyโ€™s facilities, Hutchens said.

โ€œBut we havenโ€™t had to do that for several months, and that numberโ€™s dropping,โ€ Hutchens said.

The sheriff said she expects the recently voter-approved Proposition 47, which reduces many nonviolent property and drug crimes from felonies to misdemeanors, to also affect overcrowding.

Housing more detainees in the countyโ€™s jails, however, will cut into its revenue from the federal government, which was renting beds for people suspected of violating immigration laws. The federal government has a contract to rent about 800 beds, but lately the number available is under 450, Hutchens said.

โ€œItโ€™s something we didnโ€™t count on long-term anyway,โ€ Hutchens said of the revenue. โ€œBut it helped us through some difficult years.โ€

โ€” City News Service

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