US homicide clearance rate plunges to all-time low

Unprecedented increases in US homicides are being met with the lowest-ever clearance rate — leaving at least half of the killings unsolved, according to alarming data and experts.

Analyses of FBI data up show that 71% of homicides were deemed solved in 1980 — dropping to an all-time low of only about 50% in 2020, the last time the data was compiled.

“We’re on the verge of being the first developed nation where the majority of homicides go uncleared,” Thomas Hargrove, founder of the Murder Accountability Project, told The Guardian.

A graph by the group shows that the clearance rate was even higher before 1980, seemingly marked as high as 90% in 1965.

A separate graphic shows a sudden spike in homicides in 2020 — with the number marked as solved barely increasing from preceding years.


The red for homicides show a rapid rise around 2020, with the dull color representing solves cases barely increasing.
Murder Accountability Project

The Marshall Project — another nonprofit focused on criminal justice — also noted a “historic low” in 2020 of only “about 1 of every 2 murders” being solved.

Some experts blame the spike in 2020 on the pandemic, with the Big Apple among major cities to see shootings and murders skyrocket that year but later show signs of settling.

The Marshall Project and Murder Accountability Project compile data because there is no publicly available government database tracking homicides and the outcomes of police investigations into them.


Thomas Hargrove, founder of the Murder Accountability Project.
Thomas Hargrove, founder of the Murder Accountability Project, warned that the US is “on the verge of being the first developed nation where the majority of homicides go uncleared.”
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The research is confounded by the fact that different agencies have different criteria for marking a case cleared.

For most it means someone has been arrested, charged and turned over to a court for prosecution.

However, the FBI also allows homicides to be marked clear over “exceptional means,” including when a victim refuses to cooperate to take a case to trial or when a suspect is being tried elsewhere for other crimes.

It also applies when the suspect dies, which critics call putting “bodies on bodies” to help boost clearance numbers, The Marshall Project noted.

Some experts, however, caution that the data does not take into account key factors that have also changed over the decades — suggesting that the lower clearance rate could in fact be a sign of progress.

“It also could be that the standards for making an arrest have gone up and some of the tricks they were using in 1965 are no longer available,” said Philip Cook, a public policy researcher at the University of Chicago Urban Labs who has been studying clearance rates since the 1970s.

He noted to The Marshall Project that outrageous cases were convicts are cleared because of “shoddy” evidence were at the time listed as a “successful” homicide clearance.

Critics note previous reports that suggest the issue is particularly stark in
low-income black and Latino neighborhoods.

“People don’t need to see the data to know that the police are not doing their job,” Tinisch Hollins, the executive director of a California justice-reform group, told The Guardian.

“My perception is that police are failing to do their job.”


Experts are divided on what is to blame for the decreasing rate of homicides getting cleared.
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Others, however, suggest that the recent backlash against cops over protests against police killings have also harmed investigations, both through defunded forces and witnesses unwilling to help.

“You hear every cop saying, ‘We can’t do better because they don’t cooperate,’” retired homicide detective John Skaggs, who now trains officers across the US, told The Guardian.

Peter Moskos, a professor at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice, previously told The Marshall Project that it was a vicious cycle.

“If people criticize the police constantly, it is natural that people would be less willing to talk to police,” Moskos said, with that handicapping any investigations and further raising criticism of cops.

The spike in cases has also overwhelmed many homicide squads.

“For us, it’s the volume,” veteran Philadelphia homicide detective Joe Murray previously told CBS News.

Murder Accountability Chairman Thomas Hargrove, however, has blamed “a failure of political will by local leaders.”

“The Murder Accountability Project firmly believes declining homicide clearance rates are the result of inadequate allocation of resources — detectives, forensic technicians, crime laboratory capacity, and adequate training of personnel,” he said said.

Either way, Jessica Pizzano of Survivors of Homicide noted the importance for families to see their loved ones’ killers taken off the streets.

“Is the murderer in my neighborhood? Will I run into them at the grocery store? Or when I’m pumping gas? … These are real fears that families live through,” Pizzano previously told The Marshall Project.

“They just want that person to never, ever do that to another family again.”

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Fugate a ‘Natural Born Killer’ or Starkweather victim?

There’s a lot to unpack in “The 12th Victim.”

Showtime’s riveting four-part documentary recounts 19-year-old Charles Starkweather’s random killing spree in and around Lincoln, Neb. in late 1957 and early 1958 that claimed 11 lives — the first horror show to play out in real time on television as the entire state went into lockdown while the madman, a twisted James Dean wannabe with an IQ of 70, was on the loose. The murders have since been mythologized in pop culture: movies including “Badlands” and “Natural Born Killers“; songs such as Bruce Springsteen’s “Nebraska” and Billy Joel’s “We Didn’t Start the Fire” (which includes the line “Starkweather homicide”).

Starkweather was convicted and executed in 1959, which leaves us with the subject of “The 12th Victim”: Caril Ann Fugate, the 14-year-old girlfriend/witness to Starkweather’s carnage who accompanied him, whether willingly or unwillingly, on his homicidal rampage. She was freed from prison in 1976 after serving 18 years of a life sentence — and to this day she still divides public opinion: was she Starkweather’s blinded-by-love, cold-hearted accomplice or a petrified, manipulated child unaware that he brutally killed her own mother, stepfather and 3-year-old half-sister — depositing their bodies in the backyard and stuffing her mother, Velda, into an outhouse toilet and sexually violating her?


Caril Ann Fugate, 14, and Charles Starkweather, 19, before the Nebraska killing spree. Starkweather implicated her in some of the murders.
Courtesy of SHOWTIME

Fugate after she and Starkweather were arrested in 1958. She’s wearing the coat of murder victim Clara Ward.
Courtesy of SHOWTIME

(Fugate and Starkweather lived in her parents’ house in Lincoln, Neb. for five days after those killings. Fugate insisted from the get-go that Starkweather told her that her family was kidnapped — and that they would be safe as long as she went along with his murderous rampage, which included a farmer, two well-liked high school students — Starkweather sexually molested the female victim — and a wealthy Lincoln businessman, Lauer Ward, his wife, Clara, and their maid, Lilyan Fencl. Caril was wearing Clara’s jacket when she was arrested.)

“The 12th Victim” goes a long way toward setting the record straight, at least according to director Nicola B. Marsh. She’s utilized a wealth of archival footage, re-enactments and interviews with experts, authors and even Fugate’s childhood next-door-neighbors to paint a portrait of a frightened teenager railroaded by Nebraska authorities embarrassed by letting Starkweather escape their clutches for so long — and who needed Fugate to fit their “modern-day Bonnie & Clyde” narrative, evidence be damned. The documentary is “inspired by” Linda M. Battisti and John Stevens’ book, “The Twelfth Victim: The Innocence of Caril Fugate in the Starkweather Murder Rampage” (they’re both interviewed).


Caril Ann Fugate on TV in the 1980s. She insisted she did not know until after she was arrested that Starkweather killed three members of her family.
Courtesy of SHOWTIME

But, really, the most important person seen and heard in “The 12th Victim” is Fugate herself. She’s now known as Caril Clair (after marrying Fred Clair in 2007; he was killed in a car accident in 2013) and, nearing 80, suffered a serious stroke in 2014. But her voice is strong and clear throughout “The 12th Victim,” dating back to a disastrous first-person interview she did with a Nebraska TV reporter before her trial in 1958 — which aired on NBC’s “Today Show” — to her many post-prison TV appearances including “A Current Affair” and a 1983 guest spot on “Lie Detector,” a syndicated series hosted by F. Lee Bailey in which she sat for a lie-detector test … and passed with flying colors. Also featured intermittently throughout the documentary are audio recordings of Fugate undergoing hypnosis in 1989 to help prove her innocence.

It’s all very compelling, but I’m guessing “The 12th Victim” still won’t sway a number of those people old enough to remember the case and its immediate aftermath. I do think, though, that anyone watching the documentary with an open mind, or those who eschew the standard, well-worn Starkweather narrative of a psycho killer and his 14-year-old starry-eyed girlfriend, will find compelling evidence that Fugate/Clair is the only person who knows what really happened in Nebraska — and that her version of those shocking events is the most reliable.

“The 12th Victim” premieres Feb. 17 at 8 p.m. on Showtime.



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NYC 13-year-old charged with murdering teen after school

A 13-year-old boy has been charged with murdering an older Brooklyn teen during an after-school fight over a girl, cops said Monday. 

Two other boys, ages 14 and 15 — and both with previous felony arrests — were busted in the heinous crime as well, charged with assault and gang-assault raps, police said.

The three young accused hoods turned themselves in to police Sunday night in the fatal stabbing of 17-year-old high-school senior Nyheem Wright, who was killed in front of his twin brother in a parking lot in Coney Island on the afternoon of Jan. 20.

The suspects’ names were not released by the NYPD because of their ages.

The oldest suspect has been busted in the past for assault, grand larceny and criminal possession of a loaded firearm, cops said. 


Nyheem Wright was stabbed to death in front of his brother, Raheem.
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The 14-year-old has been arrested for two previous robberies, police said. 

The busts come as the NYPD grapples with what city Police Commissioner Keechant Sewell has called a “deficient” juvenile criminal-justice system hampered by the state’s “Raise the Age” statute.

The statute, signed into law by former Gov. Andrew Cuomo, took effect in October 2019, upping the age for a teen to face adult charges to 18, from the previous 16- and 17-year-old threshold.

Since then, police statistics show drastically fewer arrests in the seven major crimes and gun cases for under-18 suspects.

Cops said Nyheem’s senseless slaying stemmed from a dispute over a girl, and the teen’s mother, Simone Brooks, has told The Post that his stricken sibling, Raheem, “stayed with his twin brother the whole time,” trying to help him and then watching him die.

“I was on the phone with [Raheem] … and when the ambulance came, they kept saying, ‘[Nyheem’s] losing a lot of blood, he’s losing a lot of blood!’ ” Brooks said.


Two of the arrested teens have prior felony arrests, cops said.
Peter Gerber

Brooks said Nyheem’s wound severed a major artery.

“There was nothing anyone could have done because the blood would just drain right out,” she said.

The principal of Nyheem’s school, K728 Liberation Diploma Plus High School, spent the night at the hospital with the family trying to help comfort them before his death, Brooks said.

After the teen’s death, city schools Chancellor David Banks tweeted, “I spoke with the young man’s principal this evening, who described him as a joyful leader.

“He was on the verge of graduation, and was a hard worker who took an active role in leading other young people at his school,” Banks wrote of Nyheem.


Nyheem Wright was remembered by his principal as a “joyful leader.”
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Brooks told The Post before the arrests that she wanted the “little punks” who killed her son to pay. 

“These ones nowadays, they all want to pull weapons,” Brooks, 50, said at the time. “They don’t want to fight it out because they’re just little punks.”

“We want justice for my son Nyheem because he did not deserve this, and we are not OK.”

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Bryan Kohberger kept low profile living at WSU housing complex

The man suspected of slaughtering four University of Idaho students reportedly kept a low profile at his Washington State University apartment complex with some neighbors not even realizing the accused killer lived among them.

Bryan Kohberger, 28, who was charged with four counts of first-degree murder, returned to college following the slayings and finished off his first semester as a doctoral student studying criminal justice, the school confirmed in a statement.

Justin Williams, a 34-year-old employee at WSU who lives in an adjacent building to Kohberger, told Fox News Digital that he rarely saw the alleged murderer.

“I’d see him go check his mail, that was it. Other than that, I’ve only seen him like twice the whole time, and I’ve lived here since July 2021,” Williams said, who added he noted “nothing unusual” in Kohberger’s behavior.

Bryan Kohberger when he was a student at DeSales University.
DeSales University

Neighbors told the news outlet the Steptoe Village building is part of a WSU housing complex, which is mostly inhabited by graduate or PhD students and is a “quiet” area in the typically safe city of Pullman — about a 15-minute drive across the Idaho border to Moscow, where the four students were slain.

Andrew Chua, a 28-year-old graduate student who lives just steps from Kohberger’s building, said in the nearly seven weeks since the murders, he hadn’t noticed anything “at all” unusual in the neighborhood.

“I didn’t know about this issue, it’s a very quiet, very nice place to live,” said Chua, who did not recognize Kohberger’s photo. “Now, I’m like, ‘Maybe I should stay home.’”

Bryan Kohberger was arrested in Monroe County, Pennsylvania on Friday, Dec. 30.
WSU

Shawn Domgaard, a 36-year-old PhD student at WSU, said the news of the arrest just a stone’s throw from his home is “hard to process.” 

“It’s just so, like I said, a high contrast to what we’re used to,” said the Utah native and father of three young kids told Fox. “It feels like it’s happening far away even though it’s literally in my backyard.” 

Kohberger has been charged with murdering Kaylee Goncalves, 21, Madison Mogen, 21, Xana Kernodle, 20, and Ethan Chapin, 20, who were found stabbed to death in their beds in their off-campus home on Nov. 13.

State Police Forensics Unit leave with bags of evidence from the dorm room at Washington State University, where Bryan Koehberger lived.

Neighbors recalled only seeing Bryan Koehberger on a few instances.


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Bryan Koehberger returned to Washington State to finish his semester following the slayings.



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More information on the murders and the investigation that led to Kohberger’s arrest will remain sealed in a probable cause affidavit until he’s extradited back to Idaho, Prosecutor Thompson told reporters at a press conference Friday, citing Idaho state law.

Kohberger is being held without bond in Monroe County, Pa. He has an extradition hearing on Jan. 3.

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California mom charged with homicide for smothering baby against her breast

A California mom has been charged with homicide for smothering her infant daughter with her breast — frustrated the twin wouldn’t latch on to feed, according to police and the woman’s friends.

Celina Juarez, 29, of San Jose allegedly snapped, pressing 8-month-old daughter Melani to her skin for 10 minutes as the baby kicked and gasped for air Nov. 4, police charged.

Juarez then picked up twin, Zari, and tried to smother her as well, the San Jose Police Department alleged in a press release.

When cops arrived, unconscious Melani was rushed to a hospital and pronounced dead. Juarez was charged nearly two weeks later with one count of homicide.

Friends and relatives insisted Juarez is a dedicated mom who needs mental health help — not jail time — and are raising money for her legal defense.

“This is a mother who needs help, not to be vilified,” friend Crystal Conroy wrote on the family’s GoFundMe page. “Although these circumstances are tragic, I know there was no malice behind them.”

The mom’s husband, Artemio Juarez, said the incident came in a moment of weakness — and that his wife is a victim of tragic circumstances.

“Those who know her, know this is not in her character. She has devoted her entire life to children and her life revolves around our children and our family,” he wrote on the fundraising site.

“There are two sides to every story and we need all the help we can get to give Celina the chance to say hers! This judgment is not right, she is a victim here too,” he wrote.

Another friend, identified only as Michael, speculated the incident may be related to “the desperation and the concern of a mom” who was  “having difficulties with the babies latching during breast-feeding.”

“It is such a fragile time,” he said.

As of Friday, the family had raised $3,500 of its $10,000 goal.

Juarez had reportedly called her mother to ask for help after trying to smother the babies. The older women performed CPR before calling Juarez’s brother, who dialed 911.

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Pennsylvania cops ID Jose Pizarro as suspect in killing of former NFL player Antonio Dennard

Pennsylvania police are on the hunt for a suspect they believe murdered former NFL player Antonio Dennard

Jose Daniel Pizarro, 24, is suspected of fatally shooting Dennard, 32, outside Legends Bar and Restaurant in Reading, Penn, on Oct. 16, according to local outlets.

“Mr. Pizzaro has been charged with first-degree murder, third-degree murder, aggravated assault, related charges, including persons not to possess a firearm,” Berks County District Attorney John Adams said via WFMZ-TV.

Antonio Dennard, a former NFL cornerback, was shot and killed outside a bar in Pennsylvania on Oct. 16, 2022.
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Dennard spent time with the Giants, Jaguars and Packers during his NFL career, per reports.
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Pizarro is currently on parole for a prior robbery conviction and is not allowed to legally carry a firearm, Adams said according to the outlet.

Adams said they were able to identify Pizarro as a suspect because of a “handprint or a latent fingerprint” on Dennard’s car outside the bar.

Pizarro and Dennard allegedly got into an argument that escalated outside the bar on North Fifth Street in Muhlenberg Township, police reported.

Pizarro and Dennard got into an argument outside of Legends Bar — where police were able to identify Pizarro’s fingerprints on the former NFL player’s car.
WFMZ

The Berks County native was later pronounced dead at a Pennsylvania hospital.

He spent time with the Giants, Jaguars and Packers during his NFL career, per reports. The Giants waived Dennard in May 2013.

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Queens man Martin Motta pleads guilty to WWI vet cold-case slaying

A Queens man pleaded guilty to manslaughter in the killing and dismemberment of a World War I veteran more than 45 years ago.

Martin Motta, 75, entered a guilty plea Tuesday in the gruesome cold-case slaying of George Clarence Seitz, whose partial remains were discovered in the backyard of a Richmond Hill home in March 2019, the Queens District Attorney’s office announced.

Prosecutors said Motta fatally stabbed Seitz in the head after stealing approximately $7,000 to $8,000 from him in 1976.

Seitz’s body had been dismembered at the neck, shoulders and hips, according to the Queens DA’s office.

Investigators spent two years working to identify the skeletal remains — a pelvis and partial torso — that were buried under concrete before they were able to positively identify Seitz as a match through DNA tests with the help of the FBI.

George Clarence Seitz went missing on Dec. 10, 1976.
Queens DA

“This long-cold case marks the first successful application in New York City of forensic genetic genealogy,” Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz said. “No matter how much time has passed, we will use every tool at our disposal to achieve justice.”

Seitz, who was 81 at the time of his death, had gone missing on the morning of Dec. 10, 1976.

George Clarence Seitz’s remains, consisting of a pelvis and partial torso, are dug up.
Queens DA

He was last seen leaving his home in Jamaica, Queens to go get a haircut. Investigators learned that Seitz was a regular customer of Motta at the barbershop and linked him to the murder through witness interviews and record searches across five states, according to the Queens DA.

Motta, of Jamaica, is expected to be given 20 years in prison at his sentencing on Nov. 7, according to the Queens DA.

“For the gruesome murder of a World War I veteran, the defendant eluded arrest for more than 46 years,” Katz said.  “Now he is headed to prison thanks to the collaboration between the NYPD and our Cold Case Unit.”

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5 killed in shooting inside South Carolina home

Five people were killed in a shooting inside a South Carolina home over the weekend, local authorities said.

Police discovered the bodies of four people who were fatally shot inside a home on Bobo Drive in the town of Inman around 7:45 p.m. Sunday, the Spartanburg County Sheriff’s Office said.

A lone survivor was rushed to Spartanburg Regional Medical Center, where they died in surgery, according to local CBS News affiliate WSPA.

Two of the victims, 37-year-old Thomas Ellis Anderson and 32-year-old Adam Daniel Morley, lived in the home, the outlet reported, citing the county coroner.

None of the victims, who were found in different areas of the house, were related. All were adults.

Some of the victims had multiple gunshot wounds, the coroner said.

“The sheriff’s office, my office, nobody’s going to let up — not even the prosecutor’s office is not going to let up on this,” Spartanburg County Coroner Rusty Clevenger said of the quintuple shooting. “They’re all hands on deck. Everybody is really working hard on this.”

The identities of the three other victims have not been released.

The victims were found in different areas within the home and some had multiple gunshot wounds.
FOX Carolina

It’s unclear how long the victims had been dead inside the home before they were discovered.

A neighbor told the local FOX station that she heard gunshots on Saturday, a day before the bodies were found.

“You don’t think nothing of it because you’re living in the country,” Sue Gonzalez told FOX Carolina. “But it’s scary.”

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