WeHo Ranks No. 4 in Serious Crimes Among Areas Patrolled by the L.A. Sheriff’s Department

ADVERTISEMENT


The City of West Hollywood ranks No. 4 in serious crimes reported in the first eight months of this year according to a comparison of data from the 65 areas served by the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department’s 23 stations.

According to the data, which is part of the Sheriff’s Department’s quarterly report, West Hollywood experienced 347.43 Part I crimes per 10,000 residents. The unincorporated area of Paramount / Universal City, also served by the WeHo Sheriff’s Station, ranked No. 2 with 2,553.5 per 10,000 residents.

Calculating crimes as a percentage of residents can be somewhat misleading because of the large number of visitors to West Hollywood, a city popular because of its nightlife scene and major events such as L.A. Pride and Halloween Carnaval. That’s also true of Universal City, which is home to few people but has a popular theme park and the Universal CityWalk shopping and entertainment center.

However the percentage does reflect the degree of safety in West Hollywood, which the city traditionally describes as one of the safest places to life, work and play. The data does not distinguish between the number of crimes perpetrated by WeHo residents or on WeHo residents and those committed by or on visitors.

West Hollywood’s serious crime rate in the first eight months of this year is down 15.1% from 2012 and down 3.3% over that period in 2016 according to the L.A. Sheriff’s Department data.

West Hollywood’s highest rate of crime was in larceny / theft, which is defined as stealing someone else’s property and includes car break-ins, which are common in WeHo. West Hollywood ranked No. 4 in that category. The city  had 235 incldents per 10,000 residents. Given that the city’s population is roughly 36,000 people, that would mean 846 actual incidents of larceny/theft.

ADVERTISEMENT

The local Sheriff’s Station’s six-month report on crime in WeHo called out the problem with car break-ins, noting that this year vehicle burglaries were up 83% over the first six months of last year.

“Vehicle Burglary … was the only category with a significant increase, and the total number of incidents off-set solid reductions in all the other categories of Part 1 crime,” the report said.

“The Gateway area in the East District, Sunset Boulevard and Melrose Avenue/Robertson Boulevard in the West District were hit especially hard. There were 227 vehicle burglaries citywide and 153 (67%) of those were window smashes.

“Smashing windows is the preferred method of entry for criminals to use when a vehicle is locked because breaking a window will not set off the alarm system. Almost without exception, window smash vehicle burglaries occur when property is clearly visible inside the vehicle. A crime suppression and community outreach plan has been developed to better address these issues, including more public outreach via Nixie and social media, increased foot patrols, and training more deputies for bike patrol. “

While WeHo ranked No. 4 in larceny/theft  the City of Industry ranked No. 1. Industry, an industrial area with a population of roughly 200, had a rate of 16,147 incidents per 10,000 residents. That suggests most of those crimes were committed on people who come to Industry to work.

Another area where West Hollywood stood out (and where the rate likely is influenced by the city’s large number of visitors), is forcible rape, with 4.95 incidents per 10,000 residents. Areas with higher rates include Industry (173.16), Paramount / Universal City (28.53), Avalon (7.79) and the unincorporated area served by the Lomita Sheriff’s Station (4.97)

West Hollywood ranked No. 7 in robberies, with 22.08 incidents per 10,000 residents; No. 9 in burglaries, with 44.98 incidents per 10.000; No. 16 in aggravated assault, with 19.87 per 10,000, and No. 30 in grand theft, with 19.59 incidents per 10,000. The city had negligible rates of criminal homicide (0.28 per 10,000 residents) and arson (0.55 per 10,000 residents. Burglary is defined as entering a home or business without permission to steal something or commit a felony. Aggravated assault is defined as an action that is intended to hurt someone, and grand theft is theft of an item or items worth more than $950.

0 0 votes
Article Rating
ADVERTISEMENT

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

9 Comments
Newest
Oldest
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
J Simmons
J Simmons
7 years ago

@BEN Be Careful. A lot of times movers raise price, mid way, holding all your stuff And often steal
WORST PART … If it happens to you or anyone in weho, YOU CAN ONLY FILE POLICE REPORT UN WEHO, where crime (not all movers are bad, but a lot out there) THEN UPTO WEHO SHERIFF TO INVESTIGATE .. I MEAN REAL WORK TO HELP A (then no longer a weho resident after move) THINK THEY WOULD DO ANYTHING???

J Simmons
J Simmons
7 years ago

note: That is ONLY for the West side of weho From Official Crime Mapping. I think City Hall online has the link, else Sheriff’s website for weho station.

J Simmons
J Simmons
7 years ago

OMG!What a surprise!WeHo Deserves a Bronze for THIRD PLACE. SUBSCRIBED to daily crime mapping,19 In one recent day with RAPE. Then 21 (of crimes REPORTED & Crimes where weho Sheriff WON’T even take a report. FIRST HAND with 3 attempted home invasion, and several patio/My Home having $2,500 worth of Outdoor Living ALL ON SECURITY CAM )FOOTAGE

fine7760
7 years ago

A big problem I see is the attraction of low lifes to our community by certain businesses. On Monday nights the La Peer side of the old Studio One has two to four deputies monitoring the clientele I’m guessing only when they leave but it could be the entire night. One never sees the West Hollywood security that are out of front of the gay clubs on Santa Monica Bl. and the Abby one block away on Robertson. At the same time I have observed people riding around on bikes very slowly weaving across the street on Melrose between Robertson… Read more »

ben
ben
7 years ago

This is why I’ve got the moving trucks coming Thursday…

Ellie
Ellie
7 years ago

That’s the most telling thing — these criminals don’t commit a crime then run, they stay around and commit a few more on nearby streets before leaving. They’re not in a rush and obviously not concerned about getting caught, even after the first crime is reported (you see this even with street robberies, where most are reported pretty quickly — the crime reports will note if there has been a delay in reporting them). The crime reports also report when the suspect has been arrested, and you can see that with strong arm or armed robberies on the street, the… Read more »

carleton cronin
carleton cronin
7 years ago

Our town has long been regarded as a candy store for small-time crooks, the ones who steal only what they can carry, usually from house or car break-ins. Before we were a city my house was burglarized twice and our car once. Nearly every house on my block went through similar incidents. In the early days of city-hood, we saw many more patrolling deputies and welcomed especially the COPS teams on bikes. Kristin Cook has told us there will be a full time WATCH coordinator in her department. Now, there is no excuse for any resident’s association or concerned residents… Read more »

Allan Wilion
Allan Wilion
7 years ago

We need wall

Harsh Reality
Harsh Reality
7 years ago

If vehicle burglaries were up a whopping 83% in only six months, it seems likely this is the work of a crew, or word of mouth among a wider group who’ve learned there are no sheriffs anywhere, and Weho is easy pickings. Read the crime reports- it’s obvious car window smash-and-grabs are a few blocks and a few minutes apart. Want some cash, sunglasses, and computers? Just walk down any side street with a hammer! Easy! Tell your friends! Would having our own police department really be that expensive? Contracted LA sheriffs don’t seem to care about being pro-active with… Read more »