Study Title: Effects of Gun Seizures on Gun Violence: "Hot Spots" Patrol in Kansas City (which is associated with Outcome 1 and Outcome 2)
Sherman and Rogan (1995) used a quasi-experimental design to study the effectiveness of the Kansas City (Mo.) Gun Experiment. The treatment area, beat 144 (described above in Program Description), had high rates of violent crime, including driveby shootings and homicides. The comparison area, patrol beat 242 in the Metro Patrol District, was selected because of the almost-identical number of driveby shootings. The treatment area had a population of 4,528 persons, who were 53 percent female, were 92 percent nonwhite, and had a median age of 32 years. The comparison area had a population of 8,142 persons, who were 56 percent female, were 85 percent nonwhite, and had a median age of 31 years. The comparison area was slightly different from the treatment area. Aside from the higher population, the comparison area had three times the land area and had slightly higher housing prices.
Extra patrol attention on gun crime “hot spots” was provided by the Kansas City Police Department from July 7, 1992, through Jan. 27, 1993. The hot spots locations were identified by computer analysis of all gun crimes in the area. Gun crime was defined as any offense report in which the use of a gun by the person committing the crime is mentioned. Officers in the treatment area worked a total of 200 nights, 4,512 officer-hours, and 2,256 patrol car-hours. In the comparison area, no special efforts were made to limit police activities, but there were no funds available for extra patrol time.
The primary measure of interest was gun crime. The extra patrol hours were federally funded; therefore, separate booking was required to document the time. In addition, evaluators accompanied the officers on 300 hours of hot spots patrol and coded every shift activity narrative for patrol time and enforcement inside and outside of the area. Property room data on guns seized, crime reports, data on calls for service, and arrest records were all analyzed for the treatment and comparison areas. Gun crimes were counted according to offense records showing that a gun had been used in the crime.
The data were analyzed using four different models. The primary analyses assumed that the gun crime counts were independently sampled from the patrol beats examined before and after the intervention. This model treated the before–during different in the mean weekly rates of gun crime as an estimate of the magnitude of the effect of the hot spots patrols, and assessed the statistical significance of the differences with the standard two-tailed t–tests. A second model assumed that the weekly gun crime data points were not independent but were correlated serially, and thus required a Box–Jenkins ARIM (autoregressive integrated moving average) test of the effect of an abrupt intervention in a time series. A third model examined rate events (homicide and driveby shootings) aggregated in 6-month totals on the assumption that those counts were independent, using one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) tests. A fourth model also assumed independence of observations, and compared the treatment with the control beat in a before–during chi-square test.
The
t
–tests compared weekly gun crimes for all 29 weeks of the phase 1 patrol program (July 7, 1992, through Jan. 25, 1993) with the 29 weeks preceding phase 1, using difference-of-means tests. The ARIM models extended the weekly counts to a full 52 weeks before and after the beginning of phase 1. The ANOVA model added another year before phase 1 (all of 1991) as well as 1993, the year after phase 1. Additional analyses were conducted to examine the displacement of crime in seven patrol beats surrounding the treatment area.
Citation:
Sherman, Lawrence W., and Dennis P. Rogan. 1995. “The Effects of Gun Seizures on Gun Violence: ‘Hot Spots’ Patrol in Kansas City.” Justice Quarterly 12(4):673–93.