Murder stalks poverty in L.A. County
Homicides are down sharply overall, but not in poor areas and not among blacks and Latinos.
By Jill Leovy
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-homicide19aug19,0,2205256.story?coll=la-home-center
Los Angeles Times
August 19, 2007
Homicides are down sharply in Los Angeles County this year, possibly by as much
as 14% countywide. But the stubborn problem of deadly violence grinds on in poor
neighborhoods of the county at a rate far above the U.S. average. And although
fewer family members are suffering this year, they are not suffering less.
An online project of The Times called the Homicide Report has tracked Los
Angeles County homicides, as they have happened, since the beginning of the
year. The project has yielded a vivid statistical outline of the county's
current homicide problem -- at least 520 killings by early August. It also has
chronicled some of the damage that rippled through families and communities rent
by deaths that happened before their time.
Homicide is not fair, hitting hardest among Latinos and especially among blacks.
Latinos are killed at more than three times the rate of whites, while blacks
succumb to homicide at three times the rate of Latinos, the Times analysis
shows.
Adult males are the eye of the storm. The national homicide rate is about six
deaths per 100,000 people each year. But for Latino men in their 20s in Los
Angeles County, the rate is 52 deaths, and for black men, 176 deaths. In human
terms, that means that losing a son to homicide, a remote possibility in some
neighborhoods, looms as a daily threat in others.
In South Los Angeles and Athens this year, for example, there have been at least
20 homicides within a single ZIP Code in just seven months. A few miles away, in
the Woodland Hills, Tarzana and Brentwood ZIP Codes, months go by without any.
People living close to frequent violent death find refuge in denial. On the same
streets where sidewalks are stained by the melted wax from homicide shrines and
young men loiter in wheelchairs, people talk about being "caught slippin' "
(letting one's guard down) or about friends having "passed" (not having been
killed). Bereaved parents describe years of obsessively protective behavior --
children locked indoors, hourly cellphone calls to check in. Then, in the next
breath, they avow that they never thought their child could be murdered.
But no matter how they work to avoid it, the demographics of homicide ruthlessly
pursues its targets. In parts of South Los Angeles, for example, there are
people who have lost not one, but two or more family members. Michael Presley,
19, killed in the Los Angeles Police Department's Southwest Division, was buried
in the same grave as his father, also a murder victim.
Theodore Giddens, 44, killed in LAPD's Newton Division on July 13, was the third
member of his immediate family to be murdered. Dovon Harris was the second of
his father's sons to die from homicide. Both Julio Ramirez, 21, killed in a
double homicide in Paramount on July 29, and Noel Velazco, 26, killed in
Southwest Division on Aug. 9, were preceded in death by brothers who were also
murdered.
"After this pain, we can lose nothing more," said Velazco's mother, speaking
after her second son, twin to the first, was shot and killed only yards from
where his brother had fallen six years before.
For many grieving parents, all that's left is endurance. "It's still moment to
moment," said Dovon Harris' mother, Barbara Pritchett, two months after his
death.
"Today may be good. Tomorrow may not."
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