May 19, 2024
The clearance rate for homicides in the United States in 2020 dipped to around 50%, continuing a downward trend that has plagued the country for the last 40 years. America now ranks last among Western nations for murder clearance rates.

The clearance rate for homicides in the United States in 2020 dipped to around 50%, continuing a downward trend that has plagued the country for the last 40 years. America now ranks last among Western nations for murder clearance rates.

The rate at which murders are solved decreased from 71% in 1980 to an all-time low of almost 50% in 2020, making America the first developed nation where most homicides go unsolved, according to Thomas Hargrove, founder of the Murder Accountability Project.

EXPECTED SURGE IN VEHICLE THEFT CRIMES IN 2023 AS VIOLENT CRIME FALLS

Hargrove said there are countries in Europe solving more than 70% of their homicides, “rates that we haven’t seen for a long time in this country.”

“Frankly, we’re last among developed nations,” Hargrove told the Washington Examiner. “And we’re a bit of sore thumb. We stick out. We are underperforming compared to what most Western democracies are performing.”

Both the Murder Accountability Project and the Marshall Project, who separately analyzed FBI data, determined that roughly half the country’s killings remained unsolved for 2020 and 2021, both years that had an unprecedented rise in homicides.

Clearing a homicide can come in several ways, according to the FBI’s Uniform Crime Reporting. Law enforcement agencies can clear or close a murder case by arrest or through “exceptional means.”

To clear a homicide by arrest, a case must include at least one person arrested, charged with the offense, and turned over to the court for prosecution. Sometimes, circumstances occur that prevent police from arresting or charging an offender. To close a case through exceptional means, an agency must identify the offender, gather evidence to support an arrest or charge, and pinpoint the offender’s exact location.

In 2019, 45.5% of violent crimes — which can include homicide, rape, sexual assault, robbery, and assault — and 17.2% of property crimes were cleared, per the FBI. When clearing homicide offenses alone, 61.4% of cases were closed in 2019.

Violent crimes slightly declined across 35 cities known for high crime rates in 2022, per a report from the Council on Criminal Justice. The amount of less-deadly infractions, such as vehicle theft and property crimes, spiked, with signs showing 2023 might look similar.

Murder Clearance Data
A chart depicting the number of murders compared to the clearance rate.
Murder Accountability Project

Hargrove said the drop in 2020 murder clearances is primarily associated with the reaction from the African American community to the murder of George Floyd by police in Minneapolis, as well as decades of mistreatment or injustice.

“Police were regarded to be illegitimate,” he said. “That sense that ‘These are not our friends, they are not enforcing the law, they’re actually killing our people,’ that kind of message has a deleterious effect upon witness cooperation and participation.”

Homicides of young black and Latino men are the most likely to be left unsolved compared to other demographics, David Bjerk, an economics professor at Claremont McKenna College, told the Guardian. His study, published in 2022, determined that the clearance rate for minority men was 15 to 30 percentage points lower than any other racial demographic.

The solution, Hargrove said, is to properly fund, not “defund,” the police, a hot-button topic that gained traction after Floyd’s death.

He said that across the country, there are not enough detectives or technicians available to investigate, gather, or process evidence to solve a murder properly. Increasing the caseload for existing homicide detectives can also severely affect the clearance process, per the Justice Department’s Bureau of Justice Assistance.

“No homicide detective should be asked to handle more than four, maybe five murders a year, and that’s pushing it,” Hargrove said. “To do anything more is just a formula for failure.”

“And frankly, that is not happening. Homicide detectives are getting a far heavier load than that all over the country,” he continued.

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Hargrove added the responsibility falls on local police and political leaders to bridge the disconnect between police and the communities that they serve, particularly African Americans.

“It’s incumbent upon the elected officials to change the narrative from ‘police are illegitimate’ to ‘police are people with whom we should partner to try to reverse the violence in my neighborhood,'” Hargrove said.

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