CQ Press City Crime Rankings for 2008 Affect You More Closely Than You Know

Are You Living in a High Crime City, as Rated by CQ?

Sylvia Cochran
Although the CQ Press city crime rankings do qualify themselves as being controversial, their very existence has far reaching results for the affected communities. This time around the 2008 city crime rankings names New Orleans, LA, as the number one den of iniquity.

Top 10 CQ Press City Crime Rankings 2008

The CQ Press city crime rankings 2008 - from worst to number 10 - are as follows: New Orleans, LA; Camden, NJ; Detroit, MI; St. Louis, MO; Oakland, CA; Flint, MI; Gary, IN; Birmingham, AL; Richmond, CA, and North Charleston, SC.

Being a Californian, I cannot help but wonder how the rest of the state did. Compton, CA came in at number 17, San Bernardino at number 36, Stockton at number 45, Sacramento at 51, Vallejo at 67, Salinas at 76, Inglewood at 95, San Francisco at 102, Antioch at 104, Pomona at 108, Rialto at 112, Hawthorne at 114, San Leandro at 117, Lancaster at 118, Hayward at 125, Berkeley at 132, Modesto at 140, Merced at 142, Fresno at 144, and Carson at 150.

Still wondering where Los Angeles ranks, we read on: Victorville ranks at 152, El Cajon at 157; Los Angeles (where we have open gang fights on the streets, shootouts at schools and convenience stores, and gangs charge protection money to street vendors) ranks at number 158.

Denver residents (in deference to Associated Content's home state) will be glad to know that Denver, CO came in at number 129.

City Crime Rankings by CQ Press Challenged By Mayors

Mayors of the high crime cities are not happy. Law Enforcement News suggests that the U.S. Conference of Mayors issued harsh criticism to CQ Press over its rankings which the elected officials term "misleading and a disservice to the public."

Rochester Mayor Robert Duffy in particular was rather rankled at the results and finds that they are little more than FBI raw data taken out of context. It most likely did not help that Rochester, NY ranked number 32 on the list of most crime ridden cities.

CQ Press Defends City Crime Rankings as Being Valuable Research Tool

In spite of the entire hullabaloo, CNN quotes CQ Press as standing unabashedly behind their facts and figures. Rather than worrying about the reputations of cities and the politicians associated with them, CQ Press claims to offer a service to consumers comparing and contrasting communities.

CQ Press Makes Valid Points

You may - or may not - recall my 11-2007 article entitled Compton, California, Has Dubious Record of Fourth Most Dangerous City in America. Anyone living in sunny So Cal knows that Compton is a rough patch to be traversed cautiously, yet its change in rankings - Compton slipped from number four to number 17 - is heartening and shows that the revitalization attempts by the City Council and individual business owners are paying huge dividends.

Perhaps the U.S. Conference of Mayors would be better served to check out what caused their cities to make it into the high crime categories, and then learn from cities that decreased their crime rates, such as Compton, what worked for them.

Of course, blasting CQ Press and its city crime rankings is a lot easier.

Sources: http://www.cqpress.com/pages/citycrime2008; http://www.officer.com/online/article.jsp?siteSection=1&id=44288; http://www.cnn.com/2008/CRIME/11/24/crime.stats/; http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/453824/compton_california_has_dubious_record.html

Published by Sylvia Cochran - Featured Contributor in Automotive, Politics, Travel and Lifestyle

Sylvia Cochran works out of sunny Southern California and has been freelance writing -- full-time -- since 2005. SEO-optimized Internet copy includes news analysis, political Op/Ed and parenting as well as a...   View profile

11 Comments

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  • Lisa Curcio 1/28/2009

    =)

  • Shanika 11/29/2008

    Phew! Oklahoma didn't make the list. I was worried. Great report.

  • Michael Thompson 11/29/2008

    Hi Sylvia. I agree that the Conference of Mayors sounds like a bunch of whiners, but there truly is incentive for communities to underreport their crime. We can't really believe L.A., can we? At our daily paper in Saginaw, the police in the image-conscious suburbs and small towns always tell the police reporters that "nothing is going on," then all of a sudden they will bust somebody who did 50 B & Es.

  • Larry Rouse 11/28/2008

    Interesting article. I noticed of the top ten cities on the list, eight mayors are Democrats, one is a Green, and number ten is a Republican. Cause, or effect? Seriously though, the CQ data differs markedly from the FBI's, I'd be interested in the internals of the CQ data to see how they vetted the figures.

  • Sandra Essary 11/27/2008

    If Los Angeles is ranked number 158, with all of its various crime and gangs, I can't imagine what living in the top ranked city must be like. OK, I'm off to my karate class now.

  • Carly Hart 11/26/2008

    Crime rate should be a factor in home searches. If you had to choose between a low rate city and a high rate city, I think most folks would choose the one where they could go to the mall unafraid. My little burg has a crime problem - and has had murders. And it isn't even big enough to be a city!

  • Pam Gaulin 11/25/2008

    Great coverage!

  • 3lilangels 11/25/2008

    Super coverage!

  • jcorn 11/25/2008

    Super -and Dugg!

  • Carol Bengle Gilbert 11/24/2008

    Great approach to covering this story.

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