:-( I wish I could find better news for the Big Easy...
Post-Katrina, crime back in Big Easy
New Orleans' struggle to regain its footing is hampered by high murder rate
By James Oliphant | Tribune national correspondent
December 31, 2007
NEW ORLEANS - A few blocks but a world away from the French Quarter, Rev. Bill Terry, an Episcopal priest at St. Anna's Church, began compiling a very public and very sobering list this year on a board hanging outside his church doors on Esplanade Avenue.
Terry recorded the name of every murder victim in the city, along with the date, in large black letters. Midway through the year, Terry had to buy a second board. "That was a sad day," he said as he updated the list recently.
At least 207 people have been murdered in New Orleans in 2007, according to a police count. "A sign like this holds us accountable," the priest said.
In the third year of its recovery after Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans has seen a troubling spike in murder and violent crime. The storm has reduced the population of New Orleans to some 288,000 people, from about 455,000, which means that its per capita murder rate now dwarfs every other large city in the United States, even gang-plagued Compton, Calif.
Criminologist Peter Scharf, who left New Orleans after Katrina to teach in Texas, wonders if a city with such a high a murder rate can remain viable. According to one study, there were 96.6 slayings per 100,000 residents in 2006.
The violence has touched every section of a place that has always been densely packed, a condition exacerbated by Katrina, which has rendered huge swaths of the town uninhabitable. And it has had such an impact on the daily affairs of New Orleans that some long-time residents are asking whether it will jeopardize the city's efforts to rebuild, whether those who committed to staying in the city will ultimately surrender to the rampant crime and flee, this time for good.
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http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/chi-nola_crimedec31,0,5242828.story