The Homicide Report

The Times chronicles L.A. County
homicide victims

Category: FAQ

FAQ: A permanent home for questions and answers

September 22, 2009 | 10:38 pm

Jill Leovy, who started the Homicide Report is early 2007, wrote a series of posts that year that acted as the official frequently asked questions for this blog. It has come to our attention that the new design of The Times' blogs has made it difficult to find those posts. Those explanations are now available in a new FAQ section for the Homicide Report.

We will enable comments on the FAQ page so readers will have a central place to ask general questions about this blog. The reporters and editors who are responsible for the Homicide Report will attempt to answer questions posted in a timely manner, and as the blog grows and evolves we will update the page with new information.

--Anthony Pesce


FAQ: Where is the homicide count?

September 22, 2009 | 10:37 pm

A Homicide Report reader recently asked why this blog no longer posts the year-to-date number of homicides in Los Angeles County.  That number was calculated as part of our interactive Homicide Map, which is no longer live on site because of technical problems when latimes.com underwent a recent redesign.

Work is underway on a new map that will allow readers to view homicides by location, filter by characteristics of the crimes and more.  We plan to launch the new map as part of a database of homicides in L.A. County that is also under construction.

In the interim, beginning next week we will post year-to-date totals with the weekly summaries. The most recent cases typically are available from the coroner on Mondays.

As of early Monday, Sept. 21, the coroner had reported about 563 homicides in L.A. County this year. This number does not include a handful of cases in which the cause of death has been deferred.

As the coroner continues to investigate cases, occasionally homicides will be added to or taken off our list.

Beginning next week, we will post the year-to-date total with our weekly summary posts.

--Anthony Pesce


Why does the Homicide Report give the race of victims and suspects?

July 29, 2009 |  7:32 pm

In recent days, several readers commenting on different victims have questioned why the Homicide Report includes race. Some have suggested that the blog's authors must be ignorant or are in need of more education. Frequent readers of the Homicide Report know that from its inception the report gave the race of victims, as well as those suspected and/or convicted of the homicides. It seems worth revisiting the reasons that decision was made.

--Megan Garvey

The following is from the Homicide Report's FAQ, first published by the blog's originator, Jill Leovy, in February 2007, the month after the report was launched:

The Homicide Report includes information on race or ethnicity in its weekly lists of homicide victims issued by the Los Angeles County coroner, as well as the name, gender and age of each victim, and the time, place and manner of death. A number of readers have asked why race is included. Some have criticized the practice.

Racial information was once routinely included in news stories about crimes, but in recent decades, newspapers and other media outlets stopped mentioning suspects' or victims' race or ethnicity because of public criticism. Newspapers came to embrace the idea that such information is irrelevant to the reporting of crimes, and may unfairly stigmatize racial groups.

The Homicide Report departs from this rule in the interest of presenting the most complete and accurate demographic picture of who is at risk of dying from homicide in Los Angeles County.

Race and ethnicity, like age and gender, are stark predictors of homicide risk. Blacks are vastly more likely to die from homicide than whites, and Latinos somewhat more likely. Black men, in particular, are extraordinarily vulnerable: They are 4% of this country's population, but, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, they represented 35% of homicide victims nationally in 2004. Local numbers mirror these national disparities. According to an analysis for The Times by county health officials of homicide data between 1991 and 2002, Latino men ages 20 to 24 were five times more likely than white men the same age to die, and black men were 16 times more likely.

The Homicide Report recognizes the peril of dehumanizing victims by reducing their lives and deaths to a few scant facts--particularly racial designations which provide only the roughest markers of ancestry and history. But given the magnitude of difference in homicide risk along racial and ethnic lines--and the extremity of suffering which homicide inflicts on subsets of the population--we opt here to present information which lays bare racial and ethnic contours of the problem so conspicuous in the coroner's data. The goal is to promote understanding, and honor a basic journalistic principle: Tell the truth about who suffers.

As you read The Homicide Report, keep in mind the racial breakdown of the population of Los Angeles County. We are, according to the Census Bureau, about 47% Latino, 29% white, 12% Asian and 9% black. If homicide were distributed equally among racial groups, not quite half the victims included in The Homicide Report's weekly listings from the coroner would be Latino, and fewer than one in 10 would be black.   


FAQ

January 1, 2009 |  1:09 pm

Why does the Report talk about race?

June 6, 2007 |  7:38 am

(re-run of a February post)

The Homicide Report includes information on race or ethnicity in its weekly lists of homicide victims issued by the Los Angeles County coroner, as well as the name, gender and age of each victim, and the time, place and manner of death. A number of readers have asked why race is included. Some have criticized the practice.

Racial information was once routinely included in news stories about crimes, but in recent decades, newspapers and other media outlets stopped mentioning suspects' or victims' race or ethnicity because of public criticism. Newspapers came to embrace the idea that such information is irrelevant to the reporting of crimes, and may unfairly stigmatize racial groups.

The Homicide Report departs from this rule in the interest of presenting the most complete and accurate demographic picture of who is at risk of dying from homicide in Los Angeles County.

Continue reading »

Why Does The Homicide Report List Killings by Police?

March 16, 2007 |  3:39 pm

Susiepena_4

(Bullet holes after a 2005 shootout between LAPD officers and a hostage-taker in which the hostage, a child, was killed.--Gary Friedman/LAT)

Any death of a human being by the hand of another is included in The Homicide Report.

This is the Los Angeles County coroner's definition of homicide. The definition wraps in both criminal homicides and justifiable homicides by police, as well as justifiable homicides by civilians acting in self- defense.

Continue reading »

Are there a lot of homicides in Los Angeles?

March 5, 2007 |  2:45 pm

Not particularly, although it depends on the point of comparison.

Continue reading »

Are Black vs. Brown race tensions driving homicide?

March 1, 2007 |  4:45 pm


55thandcompton_1

(Jesus, Martin Luther King Jr., and the Virgen de Guadalupe on the side of Lupita's Discount Market, 55th & Compton Ave., Florence)

Are Black-vs.-Brown Racial Tensions Driving Homicide in L.A.?

No. A few high-profile cases, including the suspected racially motivated killing of 14-year-old Cheryl Green in LAPD's Harbor Division, have fueled speculation of rising racial conflict in L.A. But among detectives and police officers who deal daily with homicides, the prevailing view is that the race problem--for now, anyway--remains marginal. "I don't think it's there," says Watts homicide Det. Chris Barling. Det. John Radtke, a South-Central homicide investigator, agrees. "We don't see it happening," he says. Statistics back them up.

Continue reading »

What would a map of homicides look like?

February 15, 2007 |  2:15 pm

View the most recent homicide map by clicking here, courtesy of USC professor Michael Quick

June_map2

(Tan markers indicate homicides from the last week. Click on each marker for details on individual cases. Some computers may take a long time to load this map. Wait, and scroll down if you get a blank screen.)

Homicides year after year are concentrated in the same areas of Los Angeles. The neighborhoods south of the 10 Freeway and east and west of the Harbor Freeway have long suffered disproportionately from homicide. But there are some trends. A dozen years ago, Westlake, just east of downtown Los Angeles, used to have more homicides than any other place in the city, as bodies piled up from gang wars around MacArthur Park. Now, as the map shows, Central Los Angeles has very few homicides. Today, Athens and Florence are particular hot spots. For an account of where this map comes from, click here.


What is The Homicide Report?

February 13, 2007 | 12:06 pm
Continue reading »


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About the Bloggers
The Homicide Report is compiled using information from the Los Angeles County coroner's office, local law enforcement agencies and the Los Angeles Times. It is written by Times staff writers.


Recent Posts
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Florence: Jermaine Tillman, 30 |  November 16, 2009, 5:01 pm »
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