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Unregistered
10-29-2019, 09:34 PM
Good afternoon, I am currently conducting a research paper regarding the arrest and incarceration rates in Miami-Dade. My research has shown that from 2008 through 2014, arrests declined gradually. For instance, 2008-25,000 total arrests versus 2014-20,000 arrests. However, from 2015-through 2018 the decrease was very sharp. From 2015-18,275 to 13,839 in 2018. The sharpest areas were in theft, drugs, and vehicle thefts. Can anyone advise why the arrest rates dropped so significantly? Were notices to appear increased? Were there policy changes? Any help is greatly appreciated.

Overall, the arrest rates have decreased almost by half over the past decade.

Unregistered
10-29-2019, 09:38 PM
F off!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Unregistered
10-29-2019, 09:55 PM
Good afternoon, I am currently conducting a research paper regarding the arrest and incarceration rates in Miami-Dade. My research has shown that from 2008 through 2014, arrests declined gradually. For instance, 2008-25,000 total arrests versus 2014-20,000 arrests. However, from 2015-through 2018 the decrease was very sharp. From 2015-18,275 to 13,839 in 2018. The sharpest areas were in theft, drugs, and vehicle thefts. Can anyone advise why the arrest rates dropped so significantly? Were notices to appear increased? Were there policy changes? Any help is greatly appreciated.

Overall, the arrest rates have decreased almost by half over the past decade.

Simple, we really can't chase a vehicle, unless your in the F&F or one of up and coming favorite. Drugs are just a pain the in azz! Officers take a chance, that Tyrone, will say he had more money or yes I did have either less or more drugs'. Now, your honesty falls into question. The department wants stats and proactive BUT NO DRAMA with it. Beside you get paid almost the same doing nothing but report calls. You just miss out on some court time, depending on your shift and day's off.

Unregistered
10-31-2019, 04:46 AM
Id be interested in your research if it can correlate arrests per officer, shifts, demographics, crime etc. Just citing it went down has not enough substance. We need the stat data analysis. Then predictive analytics gets interesting. Some records are public, get your arshe diwn there and peel thru the chief,s database. Data is a commodity now but public records are available if open and unclassified.

Unregistered
10-31-2019, 06:08 AM
Several things happen during that period.

2009-2010 mass pay cuts housing crises
2009- 2017 mass majority of the department enter the seven year drop
2016-2017 over 80% of the department retired
2012-2019 housing market started to boom again. Black neighborhoods were relocated to other areas in Dade county and replace with high rise condos Housing became to expensive for low income people.
2015-2019 body cameras came out.
The arrest numbers will keep going down. Why do work and get in trouble? Only thing you have to do is sit in your car and look at social media or do a dance video.

Unregistered
10-31-2019, 06:48 PM
Good afternoon, I am currently conducting a research paper regarding the arrest and incarceration rates in Miami-Dade. My research has shown that from 2008 through 2014, arrests declined gradually. For instance, 2008-25,000 total arrests versus 2014-20,000 arrests. However, from 2015-through 2018 the decrease was very sharp. From 2015-18,275 to 13,839 in 2018. The sharpest areas were in theft, drugs, and vehicle thefts. Can anyone advise why the arrest rates dropped so significantly? Were notices to appear increased? Were there policy changes? Any help is greatly appreciated.

Overall, the arrest rates have decreased almost by half over the past decade.
There is still just as much crime as before. At least for MPD, they change signals to make appear the crimes are low. One crime can be 3 different signals. Another issue are the gps and bwc. They use the bwc to burn officers more than to save them. And for this, I will not go above and beyond for the citizens anymore. If I can avoid the arrest, I will and I do.

Unregistered
10-31-2019, 08:54 PM
Several things happen during that period.

2009-2010 mass pay cuts housing crises
2009- 2017 mass majority of the department enter the seven year drop
2016-2017 over 80% of the department retired
2012-2019 housing market started to boom again. Black neighborhoods were relocated to other areas in Dade county and replace with high rise condos Housing became to expensive for low income people.
2015-2019 body cameras came out.
The arrest numbers will keep going down. Why do work and get in trouble? Only thing you have to do is sit in your car and look at social media or do a dance video.


I forgot the ferguson effect

https://scholarship.law.berkeley.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1120&context=bjcl