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Gun violence in the Big Apple has declined by 8.4 percent, from 1,457 shooting incidents last year to 1,335 this year, police statistics through Dec. 16 show. Meanwhile, the number of stops declined by 30 percent during the last two quarters, from 331,135 to 239,922, according to NYPD data.
The downturn comes after two consecutive years of increasing gun violence in the city. But law enforcement sources say the shootings decline undercuts arguments that the controversial volume of stopping-and-frisking New Yorkers was a central factor in tamping down gunplay.
In fact, NYPD insiders say the decline in gun violence is largely attributable to laser-like deployment of manpower to target crime flare-ups and to the department's focus on identifying drug and gang crews prone to use weapons.
"It's the use of cops and Impact Zones, targeted deployment and building cases against these crews that will be the reasons for the drop in shootings," one top cop said. "To a large degree it debunks the line that stop-and-frisks prevented shootings."
Since Mayor Michael Bloomberg took office in 2002, stop-and-frisks rose a staggering 600 percent, from approximately 98,000 to nearly 700,000, raising alarms that the NYPD was racially profiling because the majority of frisks are in minority communities.
Under pressure from the public and the courts, NYPD Commissioner Raymond Kelly earlier this year announced that the department would retrain cops about when and how to conduct proper stops-and-frisks.
Source: Black Voices / DNAInfo.com













