One of the curious happenings in last week's announcement by the police of the crime statistics for 2009 was the seeming priming of the event with an earlier press conference to give data on police operations during the year, as though the constabulary first needed to convince us of just how hard they had worked on behalf of Jamaicans.
Indeed, Glenmore Hinds, the acting deputy commissioner in charge of operations, unveiled a raft of numbers showing that the police had gone on more raids, conducted more searches, mounted more roadblocks and detained more people than the previous year and, perhaps, since the police started keeping records. The police were, in fact, on the basis of time and motion, quite active.
What, however, is not apparent from the statistics that were later revealed is whether the police were working smarter or were any more efficient than in previous years. The data - one piece in particular - do not suggest that.
Major crimes up 18 per cent
Frighteningly for Jamaicans, major crimes, under-reported as we believe they are, jumped approximately 18 per cent. Critically, homicides, at 1,680, were up four per cent, to surpass the previous record of 2005 when there were 1,674 reported murders. House break-ins rocketed by 54 per cent. At the same time, police homicides, having declined by nearly 18 per cent in 2008, jumped last year by nearly eight per cent to 241.
But perhaps the most critical data of police (under)performance is the cleared-up rate of major crimes, of which murder is the most important and offers the best measure of the situation.
Gang violence
Even on this front, the outcomes have deteriorated over the past three years. Of last year's murders, the police say that 52 per cent were gang-related, which we interpret to mean the result of gang-on-gang or intra-gang violence.
Last year though, the Jamaica Constabulary Force cleared up a mere 29 per cent, a drop of three percentage points from 2008 and a slippage of five points in three years.
These figures may even be worse than they appear, given that of all the homicides reported in 2009, the police
There must be a lesson somewhere in these figures. One is that criminals behave with impunity because they know they can get away with their actions. Another is that even as the constabulary becomes more active, it has, at the same time, to be more cerebral if it is to thwart the criminals.
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