South Has Highest Murder Rate in 2001
According to data released on October 28 as part
of the FBI's Uniform Crime Report for 2001, the South again has the
highest murder rate of the four regions in the United States. The
South was also the only region above the national average. In 2001,
almost 80% of executions in the country occurred in the South. The
report noted that the Texas crime rate rose 4% in 2001, nearly five
times the national average, and the state posted a 7.6% increase in
homicides. At the same time, the total number of executions in Texas
is more than three times that of any other state in the nation. The
Northeast, the region with the lowest murder rate, had no executions
in 2001. (See DPIC's Execution Statistics, Crime in the United States,
2001, New York Times and Houston Chronicle, October 29, 2002) See also,
Deterrence.
REGION |
MURDER
RATE/100,000 |
Northeast |
4.2
|
Midwest |
5.3 |
West |
5.5 |
South |
6.7 |
National |
5.6
|
Crime in the United States, 2001 |
|