
Philadelphia, the nation's sixth largest city, recorded 523 murders as of Dec. 7, surpassing its formal grim milestone of 500 murders, which was set in 1990, police data showed.
The City of Brotherly Love had recorded significantly more murders in 2021 than New York City's 443, despite having approximately six times fewer residents.
"It's terrible to every morning get up and have to go look at the numbers and then look at the news and see the stories. It's just crazy. It's just crazy and this needs to stop," Philadelphia Mayor Jim Kenney, a Democrat, reportedly said after his city broke its own infamous benchmark.
Columbus, Ohio; Indianapolis, Indiana; Louisville, Kentucky; St Paul, Minnesota; Portland, Oregon; Tucson, Arizona; Toledo, Ohio; Baton Rouge, Louisiana; Austin, Texas; Rochester, New York and Albuquerque, New Mexico also had their deadliest years on record, according to ABC News.

Comment: "as are the vast majority of US cities". Nice way to cut the knees from under the issue. How many Republican-led cities are calling to defund police forces?
Nationally, homicides rose by about 30% in 2020 compared to the previous year, according to FBI data. It was the largest one-year jump since the bureau began keeping records. Guns were used in more than three-quarters of the murders, statistics showed.
Although violent crime had gone up in New York City during the pandemic, the boroughs were far safer than in 1990, the city's deadliest year, when 2,626 murders were recorded, according to the NYPD.

"In the '90s, New York and Los Angeles accounted for 13.5% of all murders nationally. Last year, it was under 4%," data consultant Jeff Asher told NPR in September. "So it's a lot more diffuse than it was in the '90s."
The US city with the most homicides was Chicago, the nation's third largest. Chicago's 753 murders so far to date this year were still well behind its 1970 record of 954 killings, according to ABC.
Some criminologists have blamed the soaring murder rate on pandemic-related stress, criminals having too much free time, political and racial conflicts exacerbated by the police murder of George Floyd, and the subsequent retirement of police officers en masse.



Comment: Who can blame police officers for quitting a job they are vilified for performing? Progressive mayors woke up to reality real quick:
- Black Lives Matter-backing mayor of Washington, DC now wants to FUND the police, citing spike in murders
- Minneapolis spending millions to recruit new police officers after losing hundreds in the wake of 'defund the police'
- 'Defund the police' comes back to bite: Oakland votes to add police as crime rates surge
Sen. Ted Cruz says the quiet part out loud: