Happy new year! We're covering a drop in crime — plus, last night's celebrations, Ukraine and food trends.
Understanding crimeThe last year was often tumultuous and chaotic, but it ended with good news: Murders and crime in general declined across the country throughout 2024. I know some of you will be skeptical about the trend. You may have seen reports about the problems with national crime data. The F.B.I. recently had to revise its own numbers, showing that violent crime actually increased in 2022 — not decreased, as it previously reported. Can you really trust national crime statistics? But here at The Morning, we have never relied on the F.B.I.'s data. We use figures directly from local and state police departments, independently compiled in the Real-Time Crime Index by the crime analyst Jeff Asher's team. In today's newsletter, I'll explain what the numbers show. Continued declineThe data contains a lot of good news. First, the drop in murders that began in 2022 has accelerated. Murders fell so quickly that 2024 could have ended with fewer murders than the year before the pandemic. The nationwide murder rate was still on track to be higher than it was during its lowest point ever recorded, in 2014, but not much higher. (The 2024 data is up-to-date through October.)
If the drop in murders continued at the same rate for the rest of the year, 2024 had the largest percent decrease — nearly 16 percent — ever recorded nationwide. Other violent crimes also declined. Robberies and rapes were lower than they were before the pandemic. Aggravated assaults were still elevated from the pre-Covid days, but they trended down in 2024. Property crimes as a whole also fell, although auto thefts in particular remained higher than they were before the pandemic.
In general, the data suggests the pandemic, and its consequences, contributed to more crime: Disorder rose and fell along with Covid. The data does not encompass the entire country. It tracks 300 cities with about one quarter of the U.S. population. But national trends are historically similar to those of so many cities put together. This data is also all we have for now, although the F.B.I. told me that, soon, it plans to start releasing national crime data on a monthly basis. Finding agreementIt is strange that we have to rely on a privately funded crime index instead of the government to get this data. Asher and his team are simply collecting data from as many police departments as possible and posting it in real time. A federal agency should be able to do the same. The data is a matter of public interest, but also one of public safety. The country's inability to reliably track national crime statistics makes it harder to respond to problems. Consider how Congress deals with economic crises. We get economic statistics on a monthly basis, and federal lawmakers can quickly pivot. In 2020 and 2021, Congress passed three major stimulus measures in response to data showing that Covid had damaged the economy. In that same period, murders and other crimes were on the rise. But the lack of national data made it difficult to know if the rise was truly national or constrained to the few cities releasing real-time data. Congress never passed an anti-crime equivalent of an economic stimulus bill. Asher hopes that his work will help get people to agree on the crime trends. Then, policymakers can work on solutions. "The conversation we should be having isn't: What are the trends?" he said. "The conversations we should be having are: What's causing it? Who's at fault? Who's to credit? What programs are working?"
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Opinions Democrats in Congress should not act as an opposition party against Trump, but compromise on his agenda instead, Tom Suozzi, a representative from New York, writes. Society needs messy people, KC Davis argues. Here's a column by Carlos Lozada on disagreement. A subscription to match the variety of your interests. News. Games. Recipes. Product reviews. Sports reporting. A New York Times All Access subscription covers all of it and more. Subscribe today.
Rio: Under a highway, a dance style born in the 1970s is charming a new generation. Y2K: A Times reporter reflects on the computer panic that gripped the world 25 years ago. Insights: These are the charts that surprised Upshot reporters this year — including flight delays and Connections scores. California: Dangerous encounters with mountain lions are on the rise in the state. Can humans and big cats coexist? Letter of Recommendation: Relish embarrassment. Did you know? Here are some of the most fascinating facts found in The Times last year. Home refresh: The backsplash could be the star of your kitchen, if you let it. Lives Lived: Aaron Brown was a CNN anchor whose live coverage of Sept. 11 became one of the best-known accounts of the attacks. He died at 76.
College football: Penn State beat Boise State, 31-14, to advance to the College Football Playoff semifinals. The rest of the quarterfinal slate is today. N.H.L.: Fans packed Wrigley Field to watch the Blues beat the Blackhawks, 6-2, in the Winter Classic. Read a recap. Tennis: The Olympic medal winner Gabriela Dabrowski revealed that she had played the entire 2024 season with breast cancer.
What food trends can Americans expect this year? Forecasters are looking out for an obsession with sauces; savory coffee drinks with flavors including lemongrass and rosemary smoke; and more buzz around nonalcoholic drinks. See more predictions. For more: Our Styles desk made their own predictions about fashion, politics and life in 2025. More on culture
Crisp the edges on these pancakes. Score a first-class upgrade. Try these fitness resolutions that aren't about weight loss. Invest in self-care this year. Cozy up with an electric blanket.
Here is today's Spelling Bee. Yesterday's pangram was hyphenate. And here are today's Mini Crossword, Wordle, Sudoku, Connections and Strands. Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you tomorrow. —German Sign up here to get this newsletter in your inbox. Reach our team at themorning@nytimes.com.
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2025/01/01
The Morning: Murders plunge
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