Crime & Safety
These NC Cities Make America’s Most Dangerous Cities List
A review of 2017 crime data ranks the most dangerous big cities in America. See How Charlotte fared.

CHARLOTTE, NC -- When it comes to the most dangerous cities in America, North Carolina has two, according to a new analysis of crime data.
Charlotte ranked the 23rd most dangerous out of the nation’s 50 biggest big cities in the country with Raleigh, ranking much safer by comparison, coming in 45th. USA Today on Monday named Baltimore the most dangerous big city in America, but said overall killings fell ever so slightly across the country.
Homicides fell in the country’s largest cities by 2.3 percent in 2017 compared to the previous year, with 5,738 slayings compared to 5,863 homicides the year before. The steepest drops were seen in Chicago, New York City and Houston, which each saw double-digit percentage drops, the analysis found.
Find out what's happening in Charlottefor free with the latest updates from Patch.
In Charlotte, there were 85 homicides last year — good for a rate of 21.8 per 100,000 residents, the analysis found. That’s 17 more/less killings than in 2016. Raleigh had 26 homicides last year, three more than 2016, giving it a homicide rate of 5.7 per 100,000 residents.
While Chicago had the most killings last year with 650, Baltimore — which had 343 killings — tallied the highest killing rate per capita with about 56 homicides per 100,000 people.
Find out what's happening in Charlottefor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Other cities that topped the per capita list include New Orleans, Detroit, Memphis and Kansas City. Each had killing rates of at least 30 per 100,000 residents.
Columbus, Ohio, saw the largest spike with 143 slayings — 37 more than 2016.
For some good news, New York City’s yearly killing total dropped below 300 for the first time and the city saw its lowest per capita homicide rate in nearly seven decades. Peter Scharf, a criminologist at the LSU School of Public Health and Justice, told USA Today the success was attributable to focusing efforts on the correct neighborhoods, as well as spending on predictive analytics and technology.
The FBI hasn’t released its annual crime report and the analysis was based on an “early review” of police department crime data, the news outlet said.
Dr. Nicole Gonzalez Van Cleve, a criminology expert and professor at Temple University in Philadelphia, tells Patch that readers shouldn’t put too much stock into “dangerous city” rankings.
“We kind of throw around these rankings and it makes it sound like everyone is equally vulnerable to violence, when really, in most cities, especially a city like Chicago for instance, violence is mostly concentrated in areas that are most socially neglected. Areas with the highest rates of poverty. Failing schools.”
Major American cities with high levels of segregation, poverty and inequality will often see high rates of violence, she says. But crime statistics and rankings don’t paint an accurate picture of where that violence actually happens. Violence is concentrated within communities, and individual blocks within neighborhoods see vastly different levels of violence than others, she says.
“Literally, one side of the street will have less crime in the same neighborhood than the other side of the street,” she says.
Criminologists are looking into what’s behind such violence gaps and have found that it could be rooted in politics. Some streets receive social programs and rehabilitative services — such as violence prevention and job screening — but individuals on the opposite side of the street might be neglected.
“The rankings, while great for click-thrus, don’t really tell us the complex nature of how violence is impacted in some ways by social conditions, poverty, and other types of complex variables,” she says. “It’s never equally distributed throughout a city.”Click here to read the full rankings from USA Today.
Photo credit: Scott Olson/Getty Images
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.