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CENTER ON JUVENILE AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE | |
| www.cjcj.org |
| Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justice, 54 Dore Street, San Francisco, CA 94103 | Tel: (415) 621-5661 | Fax: (415) 621-5466 |
CONTACT: Daniel Macallair
E-mail: [dmacallair@cjcj.org]
Tel: (415) 621-5661 x310
"This recent series of killings in our schools has seared the heart of America about as much as anything I can remember in a long, long time." -President Bill Clinton, July 7, 1998.
"You never know what it's going to be one of your kids." -A parent, interviewed after the Springfield, Oregon school shooting.
In the following months, policy makers reacted abruptly to what they perceived to be a huge swing in public opinion: a moral panic swept the country as parents and children suddenly feared for their safety at school. As one parent recently put it: "It scares me to death that I'm sending my child to a school...and in light of getting an education, I may end up burying her."(1) A middle school principal from a community that has experienced a 26 percent drop in juvenile crime - a community that hasn't had a murder arrest of an adult or juvenile in two years - warned a reporter after the Jonesboro shooting, "It could happen any place."(2)
But it doesn't happen "any place." Table 1 illustrates that even in the communities in which these tragic shootings have occurred, they are atypical events. Eighty-five percent of all the communities in America recorded no juvenile homicides in 1995, and 93.4 percent recorded one or no juvenile arrests for murder. Three times as many juvenile homicide victims are killed by adults as by other juveniles, and only about 3 percent of U.S. murders consist of a person under 18 killing another person under 18.(3) The best data on the very specific threat of school-associated violent death reveals that children face a one in a million chance of being killed at school. Other research shows that the number of school shooting deaths have declined slightly since 1992. To give the reader a sense of the idiosyncratic nature of these events, the number of children killed by gun violence in schools is about half the number of Americans killed annually by lightning strikes.5
| School Shooting Town | 1997 | 1996 | 1995 | 1994 | 1993 | 1992 | 1991 | 1990 |
| Springfield, Oregon | ||||||||
| Jonesboro, Arkansas | ||||||||
| Edinboro, Pennsylvania | ||||||||
| Pearl, Mississippi | ||||||||
| West Paducah, Kentucky |
This is not to say that our children face no threats to their safety in society or in schools. However, with all the media coverage these school shootings have received, we have not witnessed the kind of reporting or analysis needed to give worried parents or concerned policy makers the context by which to judge the safety of our institutions of learning.
11 -The number of children shot and killed in Pearl, Mississippi; West Paducah, Kentucky; Jonesboro, Arkansas; Edinboro, Pennsylvania; and Springfield, Oregon.
11 -The number of kids who died in two days from family violence (child abuse or neglect, at the hands of their parents or guardians).(6)
8 -The number of children who die from gunfire every day.(7)
3,024 -The number of children who die from gunfire every year.(8)
90% -The percentage of children under age 12 who are homicide victims, and are killed by adults.(9)
75% -The percentage of youths between 12-17 who are homicide victims, and are killed by adults.(10)
Likewise, concern among school administrators has reached such a fever pitch that children are now being expelled or suspended from school for making fake threats to harm the musical band "The Spice Girls" and "Barney" the purple dinosaur.
The authors agree that there are many threats facing this nation's children and youth that could be alleviated through public policy reform. However, as the risk of school-associated violent death is overblown, we are witnessing a tragic misdirection of attention and resources. This report will seek to catalog the real risks children and youth face in our schools. With this proper perspective in hand, we then hope to refocus the debate over our children's safety and to alleviate the real sources of violence facing our communities and kids.
Utilizing data and research from the United States Department of Education, the United States Department of Justice, the FBI's Uniform Crime Reports, the Centers for Disease Control, the National School Safety Center, the National Safe Kids Campaign, the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, the Center to Prevent Handgun Violence and the Bureau of Justice Statistics, the Justice Policy Institute sought to get a comprehensive picture of crime and shootings in school as compared to non-school violence, and violence in and out of school over time. As the reader can discern from the report, no one data source gives a complete picture of the school killing issue, but together they offer a more complete analysis than any one or two data sources could.
Unfortunately, no reliable, scientific counts are maintained regarding the true number of children killed in America's schools each year. The closest academic survey in existence is the data compiled annually by the National School Safety Center since the 1992-93 school year. The Center's data requires two cautionary notes - one definitional and one methodological - with respect to the goal of discerning the true number of children killed in schools and whether there is a trend over time.
In conducting their count, the Center uses a broad definition of "school related violent deaths" which are any deaths, whether they are suicides or homicides and whether they are deaths of adults or children, caused by adults or children in, near or on the way to school. As such, some deaths are included in the count simply because they occur on school property. An example of this kind of methodological bias is a case the Center counted occurring on May 29, 1998 at Stranahan High School in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Nichole Weiser, a 26 year old speech diagnostician was shot and killed in the high school's staff parking lot by Michael Gramming, her jealous boyfriend, who then turned the gun on himself.(11)
A similar killing/suicide of two adults on school grounds occurred in Hoboken High School in New Jersey in February. As such, of the 40 "school-related violent deaths" which occurred in the 1997-98 school year, these adult deaths counted as 4, or 10 percent of the total.
Secondly, the Center relies on newspaper clippings as its school related violence death data source. Obviously, the place an issue occupies on the media's radar screen may affect whether a homicide appears in a newspaper or not. Between 1990 and 1995, for example, homicides in America dropped by 13 percent according to the FBI, but coverage of homicides on the ABC, CBS and NBC evening news programs increased by 240 percent.(12) If evening news stories were used as a means of counting homicides in America during that time, a miscount of colossal proportions would have occurred. As such, particularly with regard to the 1997-98 data, what the Center may be counting is a change in reporting of school killings, rather than a change in school killings themselves. The research we collected from the Centers for Disease Control also used newspaper clippings as its counting mechanism, and has employed a broad definition for school deaths.
In both the Students' Reports of School Crime: 1989 and 1995 (U.S. Departments of Education and Justice) and Violence and Discipline Problems in U.S. Public Schools, 1996-97 (U.S. Department of Education) much broader assault and violent crime definitions are used than are generally utilized by the FBI and national law enforcement agencies. The reader should be cautious lest these data create the misperception that violent crime is higher in schools than in the community where the FBI data is the standard.
We raise these limitations not as a critique of the integrity or intentions of the aforementioned research efforts, which should be credited for attempting to creatively make sense of an important phenomenon. Insofar as the data offered herein present a lower rate of homicides and violence in school than is expected, it should be remembered that even these data may present an inflated portrayal of "school associated violent deaths."
Furthermore, over the 2 year period, 1992-94, 105 school-associated violent deaths were identified; 76 of which were student deaths. The researchers estimated that 0.62 percent of homicides and suicides among school-aged children were school-associated violent deaths.(15) As such, more than 99 percent of violent deaths of children occurred outside of school grounds during that period.
Again, it warrants noting that even this relatively small figure of 40 school associated violent deaths is larger than the number of children killed in America's schools because it also includes suicides and killings of adults in schools, even when those killings occurred at the hands of other adults.
| 1992-93 | 55 deaths |
| 1993-94 | 51 deaths |
| 1994-95 | 20 deaths |
| 1995-96 | 35 deaths |
| 1996-97 | 25 deaths |
| 1997-98 | 40 deaths |
A recent study published by the National Center for Education Statistics also evidences the relatively safe and stable environment that American public schools provide. During the spring and summer of 1997, a representative sample of principals of 1,234 public elementary, middle and high schools in all 50 states and the District of Columbia was surveyed to measure the state of school violence and discipline problems. One of the target areas of the survey included the incidence of crime and violence that occurred in public schools throughout the 1996-97 academic year. Ninety percent of the principals surveyed reported no incidence of serious, violent crime defined as murder, suicide, rape or sexual battery, robbery, or physical attack with a weapon. Furthermore, none of the principals interviewed reported any murders or suicides. The authors did note that the sample was too small to reliably estimate that no suicides or murders were committed in schools nationwide because they are "relatively rare events."(17)
In this same study, 80 percent of schools reported 5 or fewer crimes of any kind (serious or petty) in their schools during the 1996-97 school year.(18 ) Approximately 1,000 crimes were reported per 100,000 students in our nation's public schools; 950 of the crimes per 100,000 students were not serious or violent acts and only 50 crimes per 100,000 students were serious or violent crimes, as defined by the researchers.(19)
The amount of crime differed according to the instructional level of the school. Secondary schools were found to have a higher incidence of crime than elementary schools. 21 percent of high schools reported one or more serious crimes as compared to 19 percent of middle schools and only 4 percent of elementary schools.(20)
The location of schools was also noted by the authors as a significant variable in determining the incidence of crime within schools. City or urban schools were much more likely than other schools to report serious violent crime with 17 percent of city principals reporting at least one serious crime as compared to 11 percent of urban fringe schools, 8 percent of rural schools, and 5 percent of suburban/town schools reporting at least one serious crime.(21) These statistics flatly contradict the idea that the recent series of publicized shootings are an indication that rural schools are suddenly under siege from a new crime wave, as some articles suggested after the incidents in Springfield, Jonesboro, Pearl and Paducah.(22)
The study did conclude that between 1989 and 1995, "more students were exposed to certain problems at school," because they were more likely to report violent victimization and exposure to drugs, gangs and guns.(25)
In the Metropolitan Life Survey of The American Teacher 1993: Violence in America's Public Schools, the nationally representative sample of students responded overwhelmingly that they believed their schools were safe. Eighty-nine percent of urban students responded that they felt either very safe or somewhat safe at school while 90 percent of suburban and rural students responded that they felt very safe or somewhat safe in school. Again, this survey was conducted at a time which, we now know, was the national peak of violent juvenile arrests this decade.(26)
These findings closely match readily accessible, but often overlooked, data published in The Sourcebook of Criminal Justice Statistics. In the 1996 edition of this encyclopedia of crime statistics, it shows that the proportion of students who reported being threatened or injured by a weapon at school was actually lower in 1996 than it was in 1976.(27)
Another way of looking at the context of the threat children face during the day is to measure admissions to hospital emergency rooms for "violence related" injuries. In a 1997 U.S. Department of Justice survey of over a million "violence related" admissions to hospital emergency rooms only 6 percent of the recorded "places of occurrence" were said to be a school. By contrast, 48 percent of the injuries occurred at home, 29 percent at work and 15 percent on the streets.(31)
A wide spectrum of criminologists, teachers and community advocates agree that afterschool programs and events are necessary to create a safe environment because most juvenile offenses occur after school hours. In fact, data from the FBI's National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS) show that 1 in 5 violent crimes committed by juveniles occur in the 4 hours following the end of the school day (i.e., between 2 p.m. and 6 p.m.).(34) These programs offer a voluntary safety net that can catch many children at risk and also provide enriching experiences and programs that are key to healthy childhood development.
-Two elementary school students in Tyrone, Georgia were suspended for composing a list of people they wanted to harm. Targeted victims on the list included the Spice Girls and Barney, the purple dinosaur.(37)One survey of a computer database of newspaper stories found that between May 1 and July 1, 1998 there were a total of 216 stories of separate incidents of student suspension and expulsions, ranging from children writing notes that say, "kill, kill, kill," to a child being suspended for opening up a school computer with a pen-knife.(42) Setting aside concerns for freedom of speech, most educators and criminologists would warn against using expulsions and suspensions as a crime control mechanism, unless there is an authentic threat. If anything, kicking kids out of school for pranks will place them in harm's way and may contribute to more intense forms of delinquency as they miss out on education and become social pariahs.-In Parsippany, New Jersey, a 7th grader was discovered to have a list entitled "People I Would Want Gone," of 20 classmates and teachers. The 13 year old was placed under house arrest and must undergo psychiatric treatment as a result.(38)
-In Mesa, Arizona, 8th grader Raymond Granillo was suspended from school for 9 days for writing a story about an escaped convict who kills a teacher, 2 students and a janitor. The mother of the writer said, "They're overreacting. They're paranoid because of everything that's going around. That's the bottom line."(39)
-A 15 year old from Ocean County, New Jersey was arrested for a drawing he made of a man in the cross hairs of a rifle sight. The Pinelands Regional High School freshman was charged with making terroristic threats and was also suspended from school for at least 10 days.(40)
-In North Smithfield, Rhode Island, three 5th graders were suspended for the rest of the school year because they were overheard talking about how to plant a bomb in the building. No explosives or bombing plans were found.(41)
The Senate juvenile crime bill is just one example of major criminal justice reform being proposed to remedy the "crisis" of school shootings that will fundamentally change the nature of children's rights. Others include:
-A bill in Texas which proposes that 11 year olds who commit serious crimes be eligible for the death penalty. "Current juvenile laws could not have anticipated violent crimes being committed by children this young,"(45) said sponsor State Senator James Pitts.While the idea of executing the 11-year-old suspect in the Jonesboro school shooting may fit someone's sense of vengeance, it will have dubious, if any, crime control impact. In reality, homicides committed by children under age 13 occur less frequently today than in 1965.Z(47) According to the FBI's Uniform Crime Reports, there were 25 homicides committed by juveniles under age 13 in 1965 (48) compared to 16 homicides committed by juveniles under age 13 in 1996 - a 36 percent decline.(49) Again, the real threats facing our children won't be dealt with by putting them in jail, or putting them to death.-A bill before the Arkansas legislature that would allow a juvenile court judge to decide whether children of any age should be tried as adults. Introduced after the Jonesboro shooting, State Senator Ted Thomas' bill could see pre-teenage children serving 40 year sentences. "I've gotten more comments from people who...say, 'Just fry the little b****,' he says."(46)
Another example of effective afterschool programs which provide an opportunity for youth to resist being drawn to delinquent behavior are the "Beacon," or full-service, schools operating successfully in New York. As children are increasingly raised in families with both parents working or by single working parents, crime data reveal that the hours between the end of school supervision (3:00 pm) and the beginning of parental supervision (8:00 pm) are peak juvenile crime hours. For many of these children, the alternative to closing schools immediately after the school day ends is leaving children alone on the streets.
Full-service schools address this dilemma by productively occupying children during those peak crime hours in either educational, recreational or counseling activities. By leaving currently existing school open late - which in some communities are the most resource-rich settings in the neighborhood - full-service schools are able to provide a relatively low cost response to juvenile crime that does not restrict children's freedom, provides them with recreational and educational opportunities, and enhances our communities in the process.(53)
For example, since both Virginia and Maryland have instituted "one-gun-a-month" laws, homicides committed by juveniles in Washington, D.C. have dropped by 63 percent, a drop explainable by no other demographic or policy-related factor.(54)
Prior to the enactment of Virginia's one-gun-a-month law, Virginia was a leading supplier of guns seized in homicides in Massachusetts. Since Virginia enacted its law, it is no longer a leading supplier of guns seized in Massachusetts crimes, and the odds of tracing a gun seized in a crime in Massachusetts to a Virginia gun dealer have declined by 72 percent.(55) After Virginia's law went into effect, Boston enjoyed a two-and-a-half year period without a juvenile being shot to death.(56)
America cannot set rational public policy in the important area of child killings without better information from the media. No one expects the press to ignore tragic killings of kids, whether they occur on school grounds or in other places. But the data contained in this report show that the public and policy makers are done a great disservice if they are led to believe that school houses are a primary locus for juvenile homicides in America.
As other school shootings occur and/or the juveniles involved in the previous shootings are brought to trial, the public discourse could tremendously benefit from the presentation of a broader perspective on juvenile killings. To provide greater context to such cases, the media should at least explain: that school killings are not on the increase; that such killings make up a small minority of all killings of and by juveniles; that the specific communities in which these killings occurred generally experience very few killings by juveniles; that children are 3 times more likely to be killed by adults than by other juveniles; and that there is no trend toward younger and younger juvenile killings. These data are readily available, and would tremendously benefit the public's understanding of youth crime.
The recently publicized school shootings could provide a long overdue call to action for America to productively occupy our children and keep them away from guns, but only if our elected officials look in the right place for solutions.
This research was funded in part by a generous grant from the Annie E. Casey Foundation
The authors would like to thank Jeffrey Butts, Ph.D. of the Urban Institute; Lori Dorfman, DrPH, University of California, Berkeley, School of Public Health; Mike Males, Doctoral Student at University of California, Irvine, School of Social Ecology; and Randall Shelden, Ph.D., University of Nevada, Las Vegas, School of Criminology, for their review and comments on this analysis.
The authors would also like to thank Christine Gralow, Jill Herschman, Amy Rossi, Eli Segal, Wendy Shang and Cheryl Upshaw for their assistance in preparing this report.
2 Ibid.
3 Federal Bureau of Investigation (1996) Crime in the United States: Uniform Crime Reports. Washington D.C.: US Department of Justice.
4 Table was compiled by calling the state Uniform Crime Bureaus for each relevant town, community or county.
5 According to "1996 Annual Summaries," by the National Climatic Data Center, Asheville, North Carolina, 1997, 88 people were killed by lightning in 1997.
6 A conservative figure of the number of children killed by abuse and neglect is 2,000 per year. "A Nation's Shame: Fatal Child Abuse and Neglect in the United States." A Report of the U.S. Advisory Board on Child Abuse and Neglect. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services: Washington, D.C., 1995.
7 The U.S. Mortality Detail File, National Center for Health Stastics, Division of Vital Statistics. Rockville, MD. 1995.
8 Ibid.
9 Snyder, Howard N., Sickmund, Melissa and Foe Yamagata, Eileen (1996). Juvenile offenders and victims: 1996 update on violence. Washington, D.C.: Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention.
10 Ibid.
11 National School Safety Center. Total School-Associated Violent Death Count: July 1992 to Present. Updated June 29, 1998. www.nssc1.org.
12 Center for Media and Public Affairs. "Network News in the Nineties: The Top Topics and Trends of the Decade." Media Monitor, Volume XI. July/August 1997.
13 Ibid. 1729.
14 Sickmund, Melissa. Snyder, Howard N., and Poe-Yamagata, Eileen. (1997). Juvenile Offenders and Victims: 1997 Update on Violence. Washington, D.C.: Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention. 1. NB: The 3.8 figure only includes homicides of juveniles, compared to the .09 figure which includes homicides and suicides.
15 Hachur, 1731.
16 National School Safety Center. Total School-Associated Violent Death Count: July 1992 to Present. Updated June 18, 1998. www.nccs1.org. Percentage calculated by the Justice Policy Institute. It is expected that this is a close estimate to the ultimate number of 1997-98 school year deaths because school is recessed for the summer and the 1997-98 counting period ends in August, 1998.
17 U.S. Department of Education. 4
18 Ibid., 10.
19 Ibid., 9.
20 Ibid., v.
21 Ibid., 8.
22 Fields, Gary, and Paul Overberg. "Juvenile homicide arrests rate on rise in rural USA." USA Today, March 26, 1998, 11A.
23 Chandler, I.
24 Ibid., 1.
25 Ibid., 12.
26 Metropolitan Life: Survey of the American Teacher, 1993: Violence in America's Public Schools. Project Directors Robert Leitman and Katherine Binnus. New York, New York: Louis Harris and Associates, Inc., 1993: 11.
27 Maguire, K., Pastore, AL., "Sourcebook of Criminal Justice Statistics 1996," Bureau of Justice Statistics. The Department of Justice, Washington: D.C., 1997.
28 Webster., DW et al. Parents belief about preventing gun injuries to children. Pediatrics, 1992: 89; 908.14, 1995.
29 Ibid.: Choi E., er al. Deaths Due to Firearms Injuries in Children. Journal of Forensic Sciences, 1994.: Center to Prevent Handgun Violence. "Child's play: a study of 266 unintentional handgun shootings of children." CPHV, Washington D.C.: 1988 July 2.
30 Ibid.
31 Rand, Michael R. "Violence-Related Injuries Treated in Hospital Emergency Departments." Bureau of Justice Stastics, U.S. Department of Justice, Washington D.C.: 1997.
32 Baker, Donald P., and Spencer S. Hsu. "Two Are Shot at School in Richmond." The Washington Post. June 16, 1998, A1, A16.
33 ----. "After Gunfire. Richmond Faces Fears." The Washingon Post. June 17, 1998. B3.
34 Sickmund, 26.
35 "Clinton Wants More Police Assigned to School Beats." The Washington Post. June 17, 1998. A12.
36 Ibid.
37 Brett, Jennifer. "Responding to trouble at Metro Schools." The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. May 30, 1998. D 07.
38 McHugh, Margaret. "Ominous wish list sparks fear in school." The Star-Ledger, June 2, 1998, p. 19.
39 The Associated Press. "School Suspends Student who penned murder tale." The Dallas Morning News, June 1, 1998. 14A.
40 The Associated Press. "Teen Suspended After Arrest for Gun Drawing." The Bergen Record. May 30, 1998. A05
41 "North Smithfield Suspends 5th Grader Over Bomb Threat." The providence Journal-Bulletin. May 30, 1998. A3.
42 This search was completed on Westlaw, a legal and legislative database that includes a sampling of newspapers from across the country. The search terms used were "suspend, expel, school and threat." Given that this does not include all the newspapers in the country, and the fact that not all of these cases could (or should) be covered by the press, this count understates the number of children who may have been suspended or expelled during this period.
43 Weisman, Jonathan. "Shooting revives drive to toughen juvenile justice." The Baltimore Sun. March 25, 1998. 12A.
44 Ziedenberg, Jason and Schiraldi, Vincent. The Risks Juveniles Face When They Are Incarcerated With Adults. July 1997.
45 Templeton, Robin. "First, we kill all the 11-year olds." Pacific News Service. May 27, 1998.
46 Satter, Linda. "The Kids and the Courts." The Arkansas Democrat, Tuesday, June 30, 1998.
47 FBI. Uniform Crime Reports for the United States. 1965. Washington, D.C. U.S. Government Printing Office. 1966..
48 Ibid.
49 ---. Uniform Crime Reports for the United States. 1996. Washington, D.C. U.S. Government Printing Office. 1997. 16.
50 Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, Centers for Disease Control, February 7, 1997. p. 101
51 Snyder, Howard N., Sickmund, Melissa, and Poe-Yamagata, Eileen. (1996). Juvenile Offenders and Victims: 1996 Update on Violence. Washington, D.C.: Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Programs. 24.
52 Guide for Implementing the Comprehensive Strategy for Serious, Violent and Chronic Juvenile Offenders. ed. James C. Howell, Washington D.C.: Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention. June 1995. 95.
53 "Quality Child Care and After School Programs: Powerful Weapons Against Crime." Fight Crime: Invest in Kids. Washington, D.C., 1998.
54 Crime and Justice Trends in the District of Columbia. Prepared by the National Council on Crime and Delinquency. Washington, D.C.: Office of Grants Management and Development, District of Columbia Government, Fall 1997. Calculated by the Justice Policy Institute.
55 Weil, Douglas, S., Ph.D., and Knox, Rebecca, MPH, MSW. "Evaluating the Impact of Virginia's 'One-Gun-A-Month' Law." The Center to Prevent Handgun Violence, 1995, p.1.
56 Harden, Blaine. "Boston's Approach to Juvenile Crime encircles Youths, Reduces Slayings." The Washington Post. October 23, 1997. A3.
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