Baltimore Homicides Fall Sharply as Prosecutor Targets Repeat Violent Offenders
Baltimore’s homicide count dropped to roughly 133–134 in 2025, down from 202 in 2024 and 334 in 2022, a nearly 60% decline over three years that State’s Attorney Ivan Bates credits to aggressively prosecuting repeat violent offenders and enforcing Maryland’s five‑year, no‑parole gun mandatory minimums. Bates, who took office in January 2023 after eight straight years over 300 murders, says his office has more than doubled the share of repeat violent offenders who receive prison time—from about 31% in 2022 to 65% in 2025—removing what he calls a small group driving most shootings and killings. State data show police arrests of repeat gun offenders are falling at the same time that the percentage of those convicted and sentenced is rising, which Bates argues reflects fewer chronic offenders left on the streets rather than softer policing. He also points to deeper cooperation with federal agencies like the FBI, DEA and ATF, and renewed capacity in a once‑understaffed State’s Attorney’s Office, as factors behind the Group Violence Reduction Strategy and recent takedowns of large drug organizations. The turnaround comes as national studies show homicides dropping in many big U.S. cities, and Baltimore’s experience is already being cited in online policy debates over whether focused deterrence, tougher sentencing, or broader social programs deserve credit for reversing pandemic‑era violence.
📌 Key Facts
- Baltimore homicides declined from 334 in 2022 to 263 in 2023, 202 in 2024 and about 133–134 in 2025, the lowest level in nearly 50 years.
- Under prior leadership, only 31% of convicted repeat violent offenders received prison sentences in 2022; under Ivan Bates that rose to 58% in 2023, 69% in 2024 and 65% in 2025.
- Maryland law allows a five‑year mandatory, no‑parole sentence for repeat offenders illegally possessing firearms, a statute Bates says his office is now enforcing consistently.
- Police arrests of repeat gun offenders fell from 1,577 in 2022 to 1,294 in 2023, 1,246 in 2024 and 1,160 in 2025, even as a higher share of those convicted are incarcerated.
📰 Source Timeline (1)
Follow how coverage of this story developed over time