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LTC 099-2018 Uniform Crime Report (UCR) Statistics for Crime inI W, 1 At"A � B E A C H OFFICE OF THE CITY MANAGER No. LTC# 099-2018 LETTER TO COMMISSION TO: Mayor Dan Gelber and Members of the City .ommission FROM: Jimmy L. Morales, City Manager DATE: February 23, 2018 SUBJECT: Uniform Crime Report (UCR) Statistics for Crime in Miami Beach in 2017 This Letter to Commission is prepared to inform the Commission of the official Uniform Crime Report (UCR) statistics for crime in Miami Beach in 2017. The UCR data (attached) is the official data collected nationally on crime. It is the only way to compare an individual city's record over time on crime or one city's crime to another's. Each city reports its data to the state, which in turn reports it to the FBI. UCR data consists of seven major index (or Part 1) crimes. They are homicide, rape, robbery and aggravated assault (i.e., the violent crimes) and burglary, larceny and auto theft (i.e., the property crimes). The definitions of some of these crimes differ in how they are counted by the FBI and by Florida under our state statutes. Therefore, the Police Department reports our crime to the State of Florida this time of year. Our reported crimes are validated by the State, adjusted to be made consistent with the FBI UCR definitions, and then forwarded to the FBI. The FBI releases an official report for all participating cities for the prior year each June. Attached are the final official crime numbers that the Police Department has submitted for 2017. 1 am pleased to report that Miami Beach had a 9.49 percent reduction in UCR major index crime last year, with a 5.96 percent reduction in violent crime and a 9.88 percent reduction in property crime. I attribute the success in 2017 to many factors, starting with the excellent work of the men and women of the Police Department and the support they receive every day from our city leadership and community. Here are some additional, specific factors the Police Chief believes were particularly important to this past year's success: • MBPD Officers made 13 percent more arrests in 2017 • Self -initiated calls for service by our officers increased by 20 percent, with much of this increased activity focused on the Entertainment District. • MBPD further refined its crime strategy meetings and approach, becoming still more effective at directing resources toward hot spots and known repeat offenders • MBPD's Homeless Liaison Unit was particularly effective in addressing certain areas that presented chronic, troublesome crime and quality -of -life problems • The Department expanded its beat officer efforts in Mid -Beach, particularly in the beach walk/boardwalk area and along the 41St Street corridor • The Department deployed extensive resources to Ocean Drive, Lummus Park and Entertainment District, including the regular use of the Overlap Shift on Ocean Drive on weekend evenings • Patrol teams with mobile license plate readers were regularly deployed along the 5t" Street corridor/MacArthur Causeway entrance to the city and other select areas on high-volume weekends • DUI Arrests increased by 23 percent • The Department was increasingly effective at using fixed license plate readers and surveillance cameras to intercede to prevent crime or to promptly catch suspects afterward • Community policing/problem solving efforts in general, across the city, were particularly successful in 2017, with effective partnerships between the Area Police Captains, their teams and neighborhood and community leaders The Police Chief and I also believe that the vigilance and advocacy of the Facebook group known as "Miami Beach Crime Prevention and Awareness," newly established in 2017, made a significant contribution to our overall crime reduction in 2017. This group has been particularly successful in alerting the Police Department to suspicious activity and to the location of wanted suspects. The group has also engaged in very effective courtroom advocacy that has resulted in the setting of higher bonds, more jail time and stay -away orders for chronic offenders. Miami Beach Crime Prevention and Awareness started their advocacy in September. Among the persons this group has focused on, as of today's writing approximately 30 persons who were chronic offenders in the Entertainment District, particularly along Ocean Drive and Lummus Park, are either convicted and sentenced to jail, in jail awaiting trial, in some form of institutionalized treatment, or subject to court -imposed stay -away orders from all or a portion of the city. Because many of these individuals were frequent, even prolific in committing crimes, their absence from Miami Beach is almost certainly a factor in the City's overall crime decline. There is evidence that some of these chronic offenders have even left the City for good. JLM:DJO:tr Attachment MIAAAlBEACH 75�.777, RECORDS UNIT SNAPSHOT 2016 vs 2017 COMPARISION PERIOD COVERED: JANUARY 1- DECEMBER 31 % CHANGE 2017 HOMICIDE -42.86% 4 RAPE 77.19% 101 ROBBERY -10.72% 308 AGGRAVATED ASSAULT -11.30% 471 TOTAL VIOLENT -5.96% 884 % CHANGE 2017 BURGLARY 17.08% 706 LARCENY -11.31% 6,431 AUTO THEFT -20.35% 450 TOTAL NON VIOLENT -9.88% 7,587 2016 7 57 345 531 940 2016 603 7,251 565 8,419 TOTAL PART I 2016 9,359 2017 8,471 -9.49