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Slay names Crime Commission members as crime numbers come out: up 2 percent in 2015

St. Louis Metropolitan Police chief Sam Dotson and Mayor Francis Slay discuss the 2015 crime numbers on Monday, Jan 11, 2016.
Rachel Lippmann | St. Louis Public Radio
St. Louis Metropolitan Police Chief Sam Dotson and Mayor Francis Slay discuss the 2015 crime numbers on Monday, Jan 11.

Crime in the city of St. Louis went up from 2014 to 2015, driven by a nearly 8 percent spike in crimes against persons.

"One hundred and eighty-eight people lost their lives to senseless and destructive violence the city of St. Louis in the past year," said St. Louis Mayor Francis Slay. "Overall crime was up 2 percent over the previous year. None of these deaths were warranted, and neither of those numbers are acceptable."

Every individual crime except for burglaries, vehicle thefts and rape was up year over year, though a quarter of the increase in arsons came from a series of church fires in October. Aggravated assaults with a gun — which St. Louis Metropolitan Police Chief Sam Dotson calls an unsuccessful homicide — climbed 13 percent.

"Too many guns are on the street. When we arrest people, we don't get the outcomes from the court," Dotson said. "And I'm still perplexed why we're here for over a year, still talking about an armed offender docket, and we haven't gotten one."

Part II crimes — less serious offenses, such as larceny, simple assault and vandalism — were up more than 13 percent from 2014 to 2015.

Dotson noted that over the last 10 years, crime in the city had dropped nearly 50 percent. And he also was keen to point out that the increase in crime slowed later in 2015. Compared to 2014, crime was actually lower in September, October, November and December.

"We've put additional officers, through overtime, into the neighborhoods," he said. "We've re-organized inside the police department to really put all of the enforcement pieces into one silo. What I also realize is that officers are just now catching up from what I call the Ferguson effect. They are back in the neighborhoods, doing the jobs that they do well, focused on the areas and the people that are responsible for the crimes."

Crime commission

Also on Monday, the mayor named the 15 members of his reconstituted Commission on Violent Crime

They are:

"Crime reduction is my number one priority in the city of St. Louis," Slay said. "Until every neighborhood is safe, and every person can work and play in our city without fear of criminals looking to harm them, we have a lot more work to do."
He angrily dismissed the notion that the committee is nothing more than a last-minute response to crime, or that other issues proved more important.

"The press focuses a lot of attention on things like the stadium or minimum wage," Slay said. "Believe me, we spend a lot more time on the other things we talked about in the PIER plan."

Bruce Franks (L) and Missy Kelley, (R), listen as the mayor and police chief discuss the city's crime statistics on Monday, January 11, 2016
Credit Rachel Lippmann | St. Louis Public Radio
Bruce Franks, left, and Missy Kelley listen as the mayor and police chief discuss the city's crime statistics on Monday, Jan. 11.

"I'm honored to be a part of this," said Kelley, the Downtown STL CEO. "I'm thrilled to have even more people focused on the same thing that I can connect with to see what we can do together. I really do see momentum and positive change taking place."

Many of the names on the list are from familiar organizations with their own crime-fighting programs. But Bruce Franks, of 28 to Life, said the commission forces everyone to compare notes.

"It's like Transformers, right? Like Voltron," he said. "Everything comes together to create one big machine that's going to help fight this."

Slay said the commission's members have been asked to oversee the implementation of his new crime-fighting strategy. They'll likely meet quarterly in public meetings and release annual reports.

Follow Rachel Lippmann on Twitter: @rlippmann

Rachel is the justice correspondent at St. Louis Public Radio.