BCA: Twin Cities violent crime up 1% in 2024
The Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension reports violent crime in the Twin Cities rose 1% in 2024, even as statewide data show murders and assaults continued to decline, extending a post‑pandemic downward trend. The BCA framed 2024 as a continuation of post‑pandemic normalization in key violent‑crime categories.
Public Safety
Local Government
📌 Key Facts
- The BCA reported Twin Cities violent crime rose 1% in 2024.
- Statewide, murders and assaults continued to decline in 2024, extending the post‑pandemic downward trend.
- The Twincities report expanded beyond metro-focused coverage to provide category-specific details on assaults across the state.
- The BCA framed 2024 as a continuation of post‑pandemic normalization in key violent‑crime categories, including in agency quotes used in coverage.
- The coverage highlights contrasting trends: a small increase in Twin Cities violent crime alongside broader statewide decreases in murders and assaults.
- Twincities used BCA data and quotes to place metro figures within the wider statewide context.
📚 Contextual Background
- Minnesota law classifies investigative data collected or created by a law enforcement agency to prepare a case as confidential or protected nonpublic while the investigation is active.
- At that news conference, Minnesota doctors called for a statewide ban on assault-style weapons, a statewide ban on high-capacity magazines, a statewide requirement that firearms be stored locked and unloaded and separate from ammunition, and the removal of the current prohibition on local municipalities enacting firearm regulations stricter than the state.
- Minnesota House Republican leaders Speaker Lisa Demuth (R–Cold Spring) and House Floor Leader Representative Harry Niska (R–Ramsey) said their party would favorably consider, during a special legislative session, bills related to improving school and student safety, improving mental-health access and funding, and improving public safety, without proposing additional statewide gun restrictions.
đź“° Sources (2)
Minnesota murders and assaults continued post-pandemic decrease in 2024, BCA report says
New information:
- Adds statewide context that murders and assaults continued to decline in 2024, extending the post‑pandemic downward trend.
- Highlights category specifics on assaults beyond prior metro-focused coverage, providing a broader statewide picture from the BCA report.
- Includes BCA framing/quotes that characterize 2024 as a continuation of post‑pandemic normalization in key violent-crime categories.