The Economist - USA (2022-02-12)

(Antfer) #1
The Economist February 12th 2022 United States 23

Carjacking

Crime and no punishment


I


n a citywithanaverageofovertwomur­
dersa day,thekillingofeight­year­old
MelissaOrtegaintheLittleVillageneigh­
bourhoodofChicagoinlateJanuarystill
causedshock.Thegirl,whohadcometo
ChicagofromMexicowithherfamilyless
thana yearbefore,wasstruckbybulletsap­
parentlyintendedfora youngmanemerg­
ingfromashopnearwheresheandher
motherwerewalking.The16­year­oldboy
whohasbeenchargedwiththemurder,
EmilioCorripio,wasonprobation,having
pleadedguiltytotwochargesofcarjacking
andbeinginpossessionofa stolenvehicle.
Themurderhasstirredupa newwave
ofangst,notonlyaboutjuvenilekillings
butalsoaboutcarjackings.OnFebruary7th
LoriLightfoot,Chicago’smayor,declared
that“there’sa veryrealandpervasivefear
ofcarjacking acrossourcity,ourregion
andourstate”,assheannouncedthatthe
city’s carjacking task­force, launched in
2020,willexpand itsoperation from 16
hoursa dayto24.Thespark,shesuggested,
wasyoungpeoplebeingoutofschooldur­
ingtheearlystageofthepandemic,and
driftingintocrimeoutofboredom.
Mostcitiesandthefederalgovernment
donotcountcarjacking separatelyfrom
otherformsofcartheft.Butstatisticsgath­
eredbypolicein Minneapolis, NewOr­
leans,Oakland andPhiladelphia,among
others,showsimilarsurgestothatinChi­
cago.InMinneapolis,thecrimeincreased
morethansix­foldfromNovember 2019 to
thefollowingyear,andhasrisenfurther

since. Therise  is  worrying  not  only  be­
causecarjacking  is  a  horrifying  crime  it­
self;itmayalso  be  contributing  to  rising
murderrates,since many stolen cars go on
tobeusedindrive­by shootings. One in 66
teenagersarrested  for  carjacking  is  mur­
dered inatypical  year,  according  to  the
UniversityofChicago’s Crime Lab.
MsLightfoot is not alone in suggesting
thatclosedschools may explain part of it.
Jacob Frey, the  mayor  of  Minneapolis,
madethesameargument in January. “With
covid,a lotofthe different things that had
kept[youngpeople] engaged, for lack of a
better word,were  shut  down,”  says  Tom
Dart, thesheriff  of  Cook  County,  which
containsChicago and most of its suburbs.
Data gatheredby  the  Crime  Lab  showed
thatarrestsofjuveniles for the crime more
thandoubledfrom  2019  to  2020,  whereas
thenumberofarrests  of  adults  increased
byonly7%.Many cars are abandoned fairly
quicklyafterbeing stolen, suggesting that
joyridingmaybe a motive.

Grandtheftthought oh
But other factors  are  also  at  play,  says
Stephanie Kollmann,  of  Northwestern
University.The availability of guns has in­
creased since the  pandemic  began.  Sec­
ond­handcarshave gone up in price. Other
sortsofrobberies have become trickier, as
peoplehavestayed at home. And although
a largenumberof arrests involve children,
thatdoesnotnecessarily  mean  that  chil­
drenarethemain criminals. According to

Mr Dart, gangs involved in carjacking often
use  children  as  getaway  drivers,  whereas
older  criminals  tend  to  do  the  actual  as­
sault and use the car later in a crime or try
to sell it. “The bad guys know that the pen­
alties for juveniles are pretty close to non­
existent,” he says, and so they use children
to do the riskiest parts of the job.
It is, statistically speaking, a fairly easy
crime to get away with. Only around 11% of
carjackings in Chicago resulted in an arrest
in  2020,  according  to  the  Crime  Lab—far
lower than the figures for robbery and bur­
glary. Carjacking is hard to police, says Mr
Dart, for various reasons. The victims rare­
ly  know  the  criminals.  Now  that  wearing
face­masks is normal, carjackers do not al­
ways  stand  out  until  the  last  minute.  And
proving that someone driving a stolen car
was involved in stealing it is difficult. Most
of the arrests come from forensic examina­
tion  of  recovered  vehicles,  rather  than
from catching criminals in the act.
Mr Dart hopes that technology will help
change  that.  Most  cars  sold  since  2015
come  with  gpstracking  systems,  but  it  is
often difficult for police officers to get ac­
cess  to  these  quickly.  Firms  insist  on  the
victims  making  the  request  themselves
and, even then, some are extremely reluc­
tant to hand out the data.
In  January  Mr  Dart  wrote  to  car  manu­
facturers demanding a more efficient sys­
tem for police to request tracking informa­
tion. “We know that these car manufactur­
ers have tools in their box that they could
utilise  that  can  really,  really  help  this,”  he
says. The advent of car immobilisers led to
a huge decline in car theft a generation ago,
he  points  out.  Already,  over  the  past  year,
greater use of tracking devices has led to an
increase in the proportion of cars that are
recovered, and a fall in the time to do that.
Cars  on  average  are  now  recovered  in  un­
der  100  hours,  compared  with  more  than
200 in 2020. 
Yet better technology will probably not
be enough on its own to bring the current
wave to an end. Some carjackers are so con­
fident  that  they  will  not  get  caught  that
they  post  bragging  videos  of  themselves
driving  stolen  vehicles  to  their  Snapchat
pages.  To  be  able  to  prevent  carjackings,
the police need to know in advance who is
most  likely  to  be  involved  and  how  to
check on them. 
Unfortunately,  American  police  forces
tend  to  be  more  reactive  than  proactive.
Just  45%  of  homicides  are  cleared  up  in
Chicago,  a  figure  not  much  worse  than  in
many  big  American  cities.  And  murders
usually  involve  people  who  know  each
other.  In  London  98%  of  murders  were
solved  in  2021,  and  unsurprisingly,  there
were far fewer of them. A serious effort to
counter  carjacking,  in  Chicagoand  else­
where, will require deep communitypolic­
ing and intelligence­gathering.n

CHICAGO
What a carjacking wave says about American policing

Asign of the times in the Windy City
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