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One Year 1986: No Crime Day

Slate News

Slate Podcasts

News, News Commentary, Politics

4.66K Ratings

🗓️ 27 August 2022

⏱️ 52 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Basketball star Isiah Thomas had an audacious plan to transform Detroit: asking criminals to stay on the good side of the law for 24 hours. Would “No Crime Day” set the city on a new path, or was it a recipe for failure? One Year is produced by Evan Chung, Sophie Summergrad, Sam Kim, Madeline Ducharme, and Josh Levin. Derek John is Sr. Supervising Producer of Narrative Podcasts and Merritt Jacob is Sr. Technical Director. Slate Plus members get to hear more about the making of One Year. Get access to extra episodes, listen to the show without any ads, and support One Year by signing up for Slate Plus for just $15 for your first three months. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

In 1986, there were more violent crimes in the U.S. than had ever been recorded in a calendar

0:07.8

year.

0:09.3

The murder rates in Chicago, New York, Washington, D.C., and a bunch more places all spiked

0:15.9

by double digits.

0:17.8

But in the papers and on the TV news, it was Detroit that got branded the worst of the

0:23.4

worst.

0:24.4

There are some who called Detroit the murder capital of the nation.

0:27.8

The summer has been especially violent, with more than 500 shootings reported in two months.

0:32.9

You better look behind your back, as you'll know when somebody comes out and you'll try

0:36.3

to shoot or kill you anything.

0:38.8

Detroit had 648 homicides in 1986, the highest per capita murder rate of any major American

0:46.4

city.

0:47.4

It seemed like every time you turn around someone was getting killed.

0:53.0

What's Fred Bell is a patrol officer on Detroit's northwest side.

0:57.5

He saw deep poverty and the destruction brought by heroin and crack cocaine.

1:02.6

They had teenagers, young kids, 14 and below, selling drugs.

1:11.3

If they can't go home to a meal, they're going to do what they have to do.

1:16.1

If you've never lived it, it's sort of hard to understand it.

1:20.8

People getting beat up, home invasions, and the murders.

1:26.0

George L. Murehead was Detroit's director of public information.

1:29.9

It was her job to build up the city when so many others were tearing it down.

1:34.7

She thought the press sensationalized violence in Detroit and pathologized its majority

...

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