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FBI: More people are getting away with murder

By Karen Hawkins
Associated Press

CHICAGO — Despite the rise of DNA fingerprinting and other “CSI"-style crime-fighting wizardry, more and more people in the United States are getting away with murder.

FBI figures obtained by The Associated Press show that the homicide clearance rate, as detectives call it, dropped from 91 percent in 1963 - the first year records were kept in the manner they are now - to 61 percent in 2007.

Law enforcement officials say the chief reason is a rise in drug-and gang-related killings, which are often impersonal and anonymous, and thus harder to solve than slayings among family members or friends. As a result, police departments are carrying an ever-growing number of “cold-case” murders on their books.

“We have killers walking among us. We have killers living in our neighborhoods,” said Howard Morton, executive director of Families of Homicide Victims and Missing Persons. “It is a clear threat to public safety to allow these murders to go unsolved.”

The clearance rate is the number of homicides solved in a year, compared with the number of killings committed that year. The solved killings can include homicides committed in previous years.

The number of criminal homicides committed in the U.S. climbed from 4,566 in 1963 to 14,811 in 2007, according to the FBI. The clearance rate has been dropping pretty steadily over the past four decades, slipping under 80 percent in the early 1970s and below 70 percent in the late 1980s. In cities with populations over 1 million, the 2007 clearance rate was 59 percent, down from 89 percent in 1963.

Detectives say homicides generally become harder to solve as time goes by, as witnesses die and memories fade. Yet cold-case detectives say their units are often understaffed. And local police are getting less help for cold cases from Washington. Funding for the main federal program for such cases was cut 40 percent from 2005 to 2007.

Richard Walton, author of “Cold Case Homicides: Practical Investigative Techniques,” attributed the falling clearance rate to a “significant change in crime patterns.”

Many slayings nowadays are gang- and drug-related killings - often, drive-by shootings that involve a burst of gunfire so indiscriminate that killer and victim don’t know each other.

Also, gang-related killings are increasingly going unsolved because witnesses are too scared to help police, said Dallas Drake of the Center for Homicide Research, a Minneapolis-based nonprofit organization.

DNA has clearly revolutionized crime-fighting, enabling police to solve decades-old crimes. Walton pronounced it “arguably the greatest identification tool to come down the pike.” Police are also using other sophisticated forensic techniques, including digital fingerprint matching and high-tech bullet-fragment analysis.

Nevertheless, DNA and other physical evidence solve only about 30 percent of cold cases, said James Adcock, assistant professor at the University of New Haven in Connecticut. Finding witnesses and getting them to talk still plays a major role.

In fact, detectives warn that technology can be both a blessing and a curse, saying jurors who have watched shows like “CSI” come into court with unrealistic expectations of what science can do.

“They think we can pull a rabbit out of our hats,” said Houston police Sgt. Mike Peters. “Technology is great, but it’s the ability to get people to talk that’s important. That solves cases.”

Technology can also be expensive. In 2005, the National Institute of Justice awarded $14.2 million to law enforcement agencies through the Solving Cold Cases With DNA program. In 2007, only $8.5 million was awarded. No grants were given in 2006.