Crime rates down in Surf City
Danette Goulet and Bryce Alderton
Crime rates in Huntington Beach dropped a fraction last year, while
most large cities in Orange County saw significant increases -- some in
the double digits.
While neighboring cities such as Costa Mesa, Anaheim and Fullerton
experienced a jump in crime rates of 16%, 12% and 11%, Surf City’s numbers dropped by 0.3% from 2000 to 2001, according to crime statistics
released Monday by Attorney General Bill Lockyer’s office.
Violent crimes dropped 9.3% in the same period. They include homicide
and aggravated assault.
It was the second year in a row without a homicide for the city, said
Sgt. Gary Meza.
“We’re doing really well statistics-wise for a city with over 200,000
people,” he added.
The almost 10% decrease in violent crimes in Huntington Beach is
significant, Meza said.
“It’s a safe community where people are involved,” he said. “People
report something when they see it so it makes us more active and people
see that.”
Meza credits the city’s drop in violent crimes and relative stable
total-crime rates to the police department’s community policing, where
officers will speak with residents after the officers have investigated
such crimes as a suspected burglary, Meza said.
“If officers are out on a burglary call, they’ll take care and talk to
people afterward and ask, ‘What’s going on in your neighborhood?”’ Meza
said. “And it’s not just crimes but anything we may be able to do to
impact them.”
But the report wasn’t without a downside.
Property crimes in the city increased by 6.8%, a number thatincludes
burglary and vehicle theft.
It also includes identity theft, which Meza said is becoming more
prevalent.
Mayor Debbie Cook was unexcited about the numbers.
“To me it just indicates that the economy overall is worse than it was
a year or two ago and it’s just cyclical,” said Cook, who added she
didn’t feel Huntington Beach was particularly comparable to other large
cities in Orange County.
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