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January 1st, 2006

Murder in 2005

The homicide total for New York in 2005 is 540. It could change as other deaths last year are investigated, but aside from the 540 deaths that represents, that’s a good number. Last year it was 572.

Congratulations New York, for killing each other a little less. Thank you to everyone who made this possible, the NYPD and all the community groups and organizations and individuals who strove to make life better and people less murderous.

Goodbye, 2005. Rest in peace, 540.

UPDATE: I just heard a rumor that we’ve had four homicides already in 2006.

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December 30th, 2005

What Cold Case Work is Really Like

Spending a couple of years with the Cold Case detectives was in some ways a fantasy-killer. Yeah, it’s no surprise that TV and movies romanticizes what they do, we know this, but still. We expect more excitement. It’s weird to see how it’s still a job, with all these office-y, 9 to 5 elements. It’s guns and bad guys and crime scenes then, ” … wrangling for more money, steaming about someone else’s promotion, sitting on hold, reading, filling out forms, and every once in a while, arresting a bad guy, that’s what they do. That’s their job.” (That was from my book.)

Nothing looks like what you think. DNA screens look like spreadsheets, it’s not graphic, it’s all numbers. The programs used to find fingerprints are messy-looking and slow. Here’s what a homicide file really looks like.

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Reality, in the end, is always more interesting, though. Maybe precisely because we only get rare glimpses of it. The living, breathing guy, the real detectives, with whatever combination of talent, quirks and flaws are better than the cowboys on TV.

The depressing part, of course, was how ordinary, everyday and mundane murder is. Murder isn’t exciting. It’s dull and ugly. And smells bad.

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December 27th, 2005

Cold Case Work in the UK

I talked to John Bearchell last year. Bearchell is an Acting Detective Chief Superintendent of the Metropolitan Police Service, and the Commander of Homicide Support, which includes the Murder Review Group. Formed in 1999, the Murder Review Group investigates serious crimes in London including unsolved murders. With a staff of about 75, it is the largest such group in the United Kingdom. The Murder Review Group utilizes the newer LCN testing for DNA analysis (low copy number – this enables them to test from smaller samples). LCN testing should be available in New York when the new lab at the OCME is complete (Office of the Chief Medical Examiner).

Like New York, the Murder Review Group generally looks at cases going back to 1985, but they will look at earlier murders on a case-by-case request. Their clearance, (they call it detection rate) is 90% or better, according to Bearchell. With roughly 200 murders a year in London, that’s 20 cold cases every year.

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December 25th, 2005

Homicide Total Update

We’re up to 515 murders in New York as of December 15th. Still well below last years total of 572. It’s weird (and sad) to think that since the last time I was sitting here, typing away in this very same place, seven more people who were just going along, living their lives, were murdered. Seven more people who won’t see today. (And probably many more people spending Christmas day shell-shocked from the loss.)

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