BOSTON — Nearly a year after Aice Jackman was gunned down in the street, his mother and 5-year-old brother walked into a Dunkin’ Donuts, where the boy spotted a pit bull puppy and dashed over to pet it.
Kaiesha Skinner’s gaze followed her young son and then settled on the man holding the leash. Their eyes met. She froze: It was the same man who she believes killed Jackman.
She grabbed her youngest son’s hand, yanking him away from the man and back to their car.
“We all know who shot my son,” Skinner said later. “They just haven’t arrested him.”
In the past decade, police in 52 of the nation’s largest cities have failed to make an arrest in nearly 26,000 killings, according to a Washington Post analysis of homicide arrest data. In more than 18,600 of those cases, the victim, like Jackman, was black.
Black victims, who accounted for the majority of homicides, were the least likely of any racial group to have their killings result in an arrest, The Post found. While police arrested someone in 63 percent of the killings of white victims, they did so in just 47 percent of those with black victims.
The failure to solve black homicides fuels a vicious cycle: It deepens distrust of police among black residents, making them less likely to cooperate in investigations, leading to fewer arrests. As a result, criminals are emboldened and residents’ fears are compounded.
In almost every city surveyed, arrests were made in killings of black victims at lower rates than homicides involving white victims.
Four cities — Chicago, Baltimore, Detroit and Philadelphia — accounted for more than 7,300 of the black murders with no arrests. But even smaller majority-white cities have amassed large rosters of these cases during the past decade: 422 in Columbus, Ohio; 277 in Buffalo; 183 in Nashville; and 144 in Omaha.
In interviews with The Post, more than two dozen police chiefs and homicide commanders said they work just as hard to solve black murders but that those investigations are often hampered by reluctant witnesses.
No major U.S. city had a wider gap in arrest rates for white and black victims than Boston, where Jackman was killed last summer and where the killings of white residents are solved at twice the rate of black victims.
Police in several cities said that some types of killings are easier to solve than others. Domestic-violence cases and bar fights may present fewer hurdles to making an arrest, while gang-related shootings and drug-related killings, which are believed to account for the majority of unsolved cases, are more complicated, police said.
“Let’s face it, when you talk about murder in our urban communities — black and brown, where gang and group violence is prevalent — you got that retaliation piece,” said Detroit Police Chief James Craig, whose department had an arrest rate 12 percentage points higher for white victims than for black victims. “And those are the most challenging kind of homicides to investigate.”
But residents and community leaders in many cities remain skeptical that police are doing all they can to solve black homicides.
“Black life is seen as not as important,” said the Rev. William Barber, a national civil rights leader, who called the failure by police to solve black homicides a civil rights crisis on par with questionable police shootings of minorities and wrongful convictions of black men.
“The black community gets cut by both edges of the sword,” said Barber, who until last year led the North Carolina chapter of the NAACP. “There’s no big rush to solve a case when it’s considered ‘black on black.’ But if it is a black-on-white killing, then everything is done to make an arrest.”
White homicide victims with:
arrests
no arrests
Black homicide victims with:
arrests
no arrests
% OF POPULATION
% of HOMICIDES
0%
20%
40%
60%
60%
40%
20%
White
37%
8%
5%
Black
24%
36%
32%
52 cities
Black Americans are almost a quarter of the population in 52 of the nation’s largest cities but account for 68 percent of all homicide victims.
Omaha police make the same share of arrests for black and white murders yet black victims represent more than half of all murders in the city.
% OF POPULATION
% of HOMICIDES
0%
20%
40%
60%
60%
40%
20%
67
4
25
13
25
35
Omaha
Boston has the widest gap in arrests for white and black victims.
% OF POPULATION
% of HOMICIDES
60%
60%
40%
20%
0%
20%
40%
8
1
45
23
29
41
Boston
In four cities, including Fort Worth and Tampa, arrests for black victims were made just as or slightly more often than the murder of white victims.
% OF POPULATION
% of HOMICIDES
0%
20%
40%
60%
60%
40%
20%
11
41
13
26
20
19
Fort Worth
% OF POPULATION
% of HOMICIDES
0%
20%
40%
60%
60%
40%
20%
46
13
12
23
38
28
Tampa
White homicide victims with:
arrests
no arrests
Black homicide victims with:
arrests
no arrests
% OF POPULATION
% OF HOMICIDES
0%
20%
40%
60%
60%
40%
20%
White
37%
8%
5%
Black
24%
32%
36%
52 cities
Black Americans are almost a quarter of the population in 52 of the nation’s largest cities...
...but account for 68 percent of all homicide victims.
White homicide victims with:
arrests
no arrests
Black homicide victims with:
arrests
no arrests
% OF POPULATION
% of HOMICIDES
% OF POPULATION
% of HOMICIDES
60%
0%
20%
40%
60%
60%
40%
20%
0%
20%
40%
60%
40%
20%
67
25
4
45
8
1
13
25
35
23
29
41
Omaha
Boston
Omaha police make the same share of arrests for black and white murders yet black victims represent more than half of all murders in the city.
Boston has the widest gap in arrests for white and black victims.
In four cities, including Fort Worth and Tampa, arrests for black victims were made just as or slightly more often than the murder of white victims.
White homicide victims with:
arrests
no arrests
Black homicide victims with:
arrests
no arrests
% OF POPULATION
% of HOMICIDES
% OF POPULATION
% of HOMICIDES
0%
20%
40%
60%
60%
40%
20%
0%
20%
40%
60%
60%
40%
20%
41
13
11
46
13
12
19
26
20
23
38
28
Tampa
Fort Worth
The survey identified four cities where the killings of black victims led to an arrest just as often or slightly more often than the slayings of white victims: Birmingham, Ala.; Durham, N.C.; Fort Worth and Tampa.
“We treat every homicide the same, regardless of where it occurs or who the victims are,” said Fort Worth police Capt. Devin Pitt, who noted the department’s high arrest rates for murder in Latino neighborhoods on the city’s north side and black neighborhoods on the city’s east side.
“Our neighborhoods still have enough trust in the police department to help us solve these cases,” he said.