Fox News has been airing segments about assaults, muggings, and shootings to claim that crime is exploding as a “crisis” under Democratic leadership, despite very little data to back that up. In addition to covering weekly gun violence in places like New York City, Philadelphia, Chicago, and Washington, D.C., Fox has spent several segments focused on seemingly random street crime to fearmonger about progressive efforts to reform the criminal justice system.
On July 23, an off-duty firefighter was allegedly attacked by “at least 100 kids” in New York City after confronting them about setting off fireworks nearby. Three days later, on July 26, the New York City Police Department released surveillance footage that appears to show the assault and mugging of a 68-year-old man in Brooklyn. Later that same day, former Sen. Barbara Boxer released a statement that she had been mugged in California.
Networks can and should report on the reality of violent crime in this country. But such coverage should include putting the numbers in context and accurately explaining where the violence is coming from, rather than focusing on sensational reporting and partisan fearmongering.
The reality is that nonviolent crime actually decreased in U.S. cities last year, while preliminary data suggests that violent crime has increased by about 3% -- the bulk of which was driven by a rise in gun homicides.
However, Fox News has repeatedly cited instances of assaults and robberies in the news and hyped the number of gun felonies and homicides in major cities to argue that crime is rising due to Democratic policies, and “the American people want safety back”:
- During the July 27 edition of America’s Newsroom, co-anchors Bill Hemmer and Dana Perino covered the Brooklyn attack and the mugging of former Sen. Boxer as examples of a “coast-to-coast crime crisis,” before claiming that “violent crime in Oakland is on the rise, including robberies, carjackings and homicides.” The program then played a clip of the Chicago police superintendent blaming relaxed prosecution for this “environment of lawlessness,” which Perino said was occurring in cities like Philadelphia and Los Angeles.