Most Dangerous US Cities: 2007 Edition

Steve Irwin, Dangerous US CitiesThere’s a new list of most dangerous US cities and the usual suspects are at the top again. Cities make the list by being leaders in murders, rapes, robberies, assaults and car thefts (and their population must be at least 75,000). The reason I’m listing 11 is because Orlando is where I grew up and was one of the biggest movers on the most dangerous cities list, the year previous Orlando was ranked 25th. I live in Tampa now and we only came in 74th which is completely shocking to me. I think we should be way higher! Clearly it’s a real jungle everywhere. Anyways, here’s the top 11:

1. Detroit, Michigan

2. St. Louis, Missouri

3. Flint, Michigan

4. Oakland, California

5. Camden, New Jersey

6. Birmingham, Alabama

7. North Charleston, South Carolina

8. Memphis, Tennessee

9. Richmond, California

10. Cleveland, Ohio

11. Orlando, Florida

To see the whole list go here. Where does your city rank? And if anybody knows of a national weird crimes list please let me know, Tampa must be in the top 5 of that.

Steve Irwin image from this joint.

22 Responses to “Most Dangerous US Cities: 2007 Edition”

  1. November 20th, 2007 | 2:07 pm

    It would be interesting to see where the top population Canadian Cities (Toronto, Montreal, Calgary, Edmonton and Vancouver) rank in terms of their crime on this list.

  2.   Alex
    November 21st, 2007 | 12:24 am

    Here’s a link that has some hard figures for crimes in Canadian cities.

    http://www.statcan.ca/Daily/English/060720/d060720b.htm

    Per capita, as far as provinces go, Quebec has the least crime followed by Ontario. The major Canadian province with the most crime is Saskatchewan. Sometimes these things aren’t always so obvious. I would have thought Ontario to be higher.

  3. November 21st, 2007 | 1:20 am

    Yeah, it seems like the west in general has higher crime rates than the east. That’s quite interesting…I always knew that Ontario in general was pretty good for having a low crime rate in relative terms considering its high population, but I didn’t realize the difference was that noticeable.

  4.   Alex
    November 21st, 2007 | 8:48 pm

    Thanks for bringing Canadian crime to the table here. And yeah, regardless of the rates, a big question is why are there fewer homicides in Canadian cities than US cities?

    It’s interesting to know that Toronto is on the lower end of per capita crime rates as far as major Canadian cities. I was born there actually but rarely visit these days as I don’t have much family there anymore. But my wife and I were just there in August-we really enjoyed Kensington Market, it reminded us of Grenich Village in NYC.

  5. November 22nd, 2007 | 4:02 am

    Yeah, that is definitely a bigger question. Admittedly I’ve never really thought about the topic at length so I couldn’t even really begin to come up with a coherent hypothesis on it. Any ideas along that vein?

    As to Kensington, yeah it’s a fantastic place! I actually attend the downtown campus of the University of Toronto, which is right next to Kensington, so I’m there a lot. I’ve actually been to Grenich before as well, and the parallels are pretty noticeable I’d have to agree.

  6.   Izaiah
    November 22nd, 2007 | 11:00 pm

    Richmond dont play its crazy out here manye!!

  7.   Alex
    November 23rd, 2007 | 5:00 pm

    Izaiah-Thanks for swinging by and sharing your listed city!

    Justin-Canada is gaining on the US in per capita homicides but is still decently behind. I think the US remains ahead because of a larger degree of gang violence (and Canada is gaining for this same reason). As for gun regulations, I don’t know Canada’s laws but contrary to what many people think, apparently, per capita there are just as many guns in Canada as the US. So I know that’s not the issue. Anybody else have any thoughts here?

  8.   brandon castro
    January 4th, 2008 | 5:07 am

    im from gary in. in 2007 we had 71 murders and im shocked its not in the top 5. in may alone there were 15 murders. orlando is 2nd home and its been all my life and its crazy thats its 11 11 come on now!!!!

  9.   Alex
    January 4th, 2008 | 11:14 pm

    Thanks for commenting Brandon. Yeah, I’m shocked Tampa wasn’t higher. Every time I watch the local news it’s like there are several vicious and stupid murders every night.

    It’s funny because a lot of my friends in Orlando look down at Tampa, think it’s dirty, etc. But damn, #11 in crime now!!

  10.   kona
    January 24th, 2008 | 10:04 pm

    k onda

  11.   205
    May 30th, 2008 | 1:40 am

    bunch a bone smokin jokes. come play in tha ham and see how much u miss ur home

  12.   Bryan Croxen
    June 9th, 2008 | 10:20 pm

    Wow. Orlando came in higher than Miami? I thought Orlando was a family-friendly city. Of course I can see Detroit, St. Louis, and Oakland being in the top ten. Has Detroit been in the top ten since the late sixties? I am surprised Los Angeles is not on the top ten. It’s interesting to see Flint on there. Most of the people that tried to get away from the crime in Detroit went to Flint! Oh well, I was wondering where Chicago is on the list?

  13.   Alex
    June 10th, 2008 | 12:53 am

    Bryan-Yes, some cities on the list are surprises. It makes sense for criminals to move to Orlando though (at least temporarily) because Orlando gets 55 million visitors a year. More than anyplace on Earth! Lots of potential victims of scams, hotel break ins, etc.

    And yes, sometimes the people who try to escape the problems of wherever they come from wind up bringing those same problems to their new home.

  14.   mike
    July 1st, 2008 | 7:04 am

    New Jersey has to be one of the most diverse states, home to some of the safest (Brick, Toms River, Edison) towns, and some of the most dangerous (Camden, Newark, Jersey City) cities in the country, although their are alot more dangerous cities in New Jersey which are unknown to those who are not natives of the state because they were not ranked in the Morgan Quinto list due to population which did not exceed 75,000, cities like Irvington – which had a murderate eight times the national average, and East Oranges another highly dangerous town, both of these towns neighbor Newark.

  15.   Alex
    July 1st, 2008 | 10:03 pm

    Hey Mike, you don’t often here New Jersey and diverse in the same sentence, hehe.

    But yeah those lists are misleading because they exclude small dangerous areas like the ones you mentioned.

    Thanks for the interesting and informative comment.

  16.   mike
    July 2nd, 2008 | 9:20 pm

    No problem, I was born and still live in Jersey City, New Jersey, but the differences in crime between Canada and the United States in my opinion is influenced by the demographics of each country, and that’s why I think the United States has more dangerous cities then Canada.

  17.   mike
    July 2nd, 2008 | 9:25 pm

    I’m also very surprised to see how much the southern cities have moved up on the list!

  18.   Alex
    July 10th, 2008 | 4:23 pm

    Mike-Well, southerners have always said “the south will rise again!” hehe

  19.   Boss Dogg
    October 4th, 2008 | 6:34 pm

    I would say it go like this!
    1. Detroit
    2. St. Louis
    3. Philadelphia
    4. New Orleans
    5. Memphis
    6. Atlanta
    7. Kansas City
    8. Dallas
    9. Baltimore
    10. DONT GET CAUGHT SLIPPIN N NONE OF THESE CITIES
    10#

  20.   ihatethespurs
    October 18th, 2008 | 1:32 am

    orlando, thats a joke, tampa and miami are three times as bad as orlando, and should be in the top ten

  21.   eric
    October 24th, 2008 | 4:34 am

    Man I live in kc the worst trin to live in all this shit how about we figure a way 2 stop it

  22.   jerry from manhattan
    November 24th, 2008 | 7:51 pm

    wow I cant believe NYC is 237, depends on where you are I guess… Orlando was the big surprise, is that really possible? Compared to Miami? Hm. Strange list. Detroit looks so strange and uninhabited, where do people actually live? Theyve cleared huge sections of it, blocks and blocks of grass, but cross ONE street (forget the name) and you are in posh Grosse Point which didnt even make the list. Blink and the whole scene changes, and there dont seem to be any cops in Grosse Point. It’s south of 8 mile, so technically I think it’s a neighborhood in Detroit. It’s posh like Greenwich CT, no gates on the windows or anything. You may as well be 100 miles from anything ‘urban’… very strange. Detroit proper is finished. They are bull-dozing it I think and replacing it with something else. It was an ugly city to begin with I think. Philadelphia FEELS more dangerous, in a way, because you can easily be victimized in a nice area, nothing unusual. The nice areas are dangerous, thats what gives the perception of Philly being worse than DC, for instance. NW DC has no crime at all. They should do crime rates by zip code.


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