SAGINAW
School gives data on city’s crime trends to police
SAGINAW, Mich. (AP) — Saginaw Valley State University professors and students have shared with police their recent work to identify crime trends in Saginaw, noting poverty and vacant homes as key factors in the city.
The team spent a year on the project, mapping the location of every shooting and homicide in Saginaw from 2005 to 2013 and analyzing information, The Saginaw News reported. Findings were presented to city police and the Saginaw Crime Prevention Council.
“To be able to see this visual that we were providing to them, was something that they could go sell to the electorate, residents, business, and they can use to create better policing practices,” said Saginaw Valley State University professor Andrew Miller.
Police Chief Brian Lipe said he was interested to hear that predictors of crime in Saginaw found by the team included poverty and vacant housing units. The city, which has a high poverty rate, is among many in Michigan dealing with vacant and blighted property.
“They did a great job; it was a lot of work and hours,” Lipe said.
The map shows “hot spots” in red, with highly clustered shootings and homicides, and “cold spots” in blue, with diffuse or random shootings and homicides. The Saginaw News last year published a similar map of shootings and homicides in the city from 2008 to 2013 for its “Living Dangerously” series.
“The traditional areas where people would expect crime, over the past 20 to 30 years, is where the majority of crime is happening,” Miller said.
Two students, creative writing major and technical geography minor Emily Gennrich, 24, and history major and technical geography minor Kevin Erb, 23, approached Miller and professor James Bowers in the summer of 2013 with the idea for the project.
Two criminal justice majors plan to take the project further next year, looking at how the analysis will apply outside the city.
• • •
GRAND RAPIDS
Man get life in prison for death of his toddler girl
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (AP) — A Grand Rapids man convicted in the fatal beating of his 2-year-daughter has been sentenced to life in prison without parole.
Deshawn Threats on Tuesday was given the mandatory term for first-degree murder. He didn’t make a statement in court. He earlier was convicted by a jury in Kent County Circuit Court in Grand Rapids.
A medical examiner found that Zaeyana Driggs-Threats died in August of blunt force to the abdomen. She also had bruises all over her body.
The Grand Rapids Press reports Threats smiled and shook his head during the hearing as Darci Driggs, the child’s mother, called him a monster and sociopath.
Defense attorney Richard Hillary has said Threats was targeted by investigators because of his prior convictions for domestic violence.
• • •
DETROIT
Ex-Wayne County official gets 7 1/2 years for fraud
DETROIT (AP) — A former top Wayne County official has received a 7 1/2-year prison sentence for his role in what federal prosecutors say was a $400,000 health care fraud scheme.
Forty-two-year-old Michael Grundy was sentenced Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Detroit after pleading guilty in June 2013.
The U.S. attorney’s office says that Grundy had a contractor inflate invoices and pass him the cash.
In his guilty plea, Grundy admits that he had the accountant of the health insurer HealthChoice of Michigan fraudulently transfer $400,000 to another company. Grundy was an assistant county executive and was executive director of HealthChoice of Michigan.
Co-conspirator Keith Griffin of Carmel, Indiana, also has pleaded guilty.
- Posted July 03, 2014
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
State Roundup ...
headlines Detroit
headlines National
- ABA Legislative Priorities Survey helps members set the agenda
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- Judge gave ‘reasonable impression’ she was letting immigrant evade ICE, ethics charges say
- 2 federal judges have changed their minds about senior status; will 2 appeals judges follow suit?
- Biden should pardon Trump, as well as Trump’s enemies, says Watergate figure John Dean
- Horse-loving lawyer left the law to help run a Colorado ranch