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Josiah Bates
Josiah Bates is a reporter for TIME based in New York City
Recent Articles
Police Are Turning to an Old Tactic to Fight the Surge in Violence
Hotspot policing has been criticized as also opening the door to police abuse.
By Josiah Bates
November 2, 2022
These Cities Reported the Highest Homicide Rates in 2021
The FBI's 2021 crime stats offer a window into the level of violence in some of America's biggest cities. Here's what the data says.
By Josiah Bates
October 19, 2022
Milwaukee's Homicide Rate Renews Debate Over Cash Bail
As Milwaukee sees one of the highest homicide rate spikes in the U.S., police and some activists blame Wisconsin's restrictive bail laws.
By Josiah Bates
October 7, 2022
Homicides Continued to Increase in 2021, According to the FBI's Flawed Crime Report
The estimated 22,900 murders and other killings last year would bring the nation's homicide rate to 6.9 per 100,000—the highest in almost 25 years.
By Josiah Bates
October 5, 2022
Curfews Don't Reduce Crime, but Cities Still Enforce Them
In Philadelphia, Chicago, and Maryland, local leaders and police are turning to curfews for teenagers. Researchers say that there is no evidence that curfews reduce crime
By Josiah Bates
September 22, 2022
Police Raided Breonna Taylor's Apartment After 'Gut Feeling': Plea
The affidavit from former Louisville Metro Police Department (LMPD) Detective Kelly Goodlett pulls back the curtain on the investigation that led to the botched "no knock" police raid
By Josiah Bates
September 14, 2022
A Judge Paused a Local Assault-Weapons Ban
Experts say it could show the impact of a recent Supreme Court decision that expanded gun rights
By Josiah Bates
September 2, 2022
Guilty Plea in Breonna Taylor Case Raises Questions About Possible Cooperation
Former Louisville Det. Kelly Goodlett is the first to plead guilty to federal charges in the killing of Breonna Taylor
By Josiah Bates
August 29, 2022
For Breonna Taylor's Supporters, Justice Finally Came
Four officers involved in the police raid that killed Breonna Taylor were arrested on federal charges more than two years after her death.
By Josiah Bates
August 4, 2022
Small-Town Cops Are Quitting en Masse
When all five full-time police officers in tiny Kenly, N.C. handed in their resignations last week, citing conflicts with the new town manager, it made national news
By Josiah Bates
July 28, 2022
U.S. Crime Rate Still Higher Than Pre-Pandemic
Homicides decreased by 2% in the first half of 2022—but still remain 39% higher than the same period in 2019
By Josiah Bates
July 28, 2022
'I Don't Want It to Happen Again.' Brave 11-Year-Old Who Survived Uvalde Shooting Testifies Before Congress
"He told my teacher 'Goodnight' and shot her in the head," Miah Cerrillo told lawmakers. "Then he shot some of my classmates."
By Josiah Bates
June 8, 2022
Mass Shootings: Gun Violence Across U.S. Likely to Get Worse
So far, there have been 247 mass shootings this year, and 13 in the first weekend of June. There have been nearly 19,000 deaths as a result of firearms in the U.S., which includes more than 8,300 homicides as of June 6.
By Josiah Bates
June 8, 2022
Mass Shootings Are Only 1% of Child Gun Deaths in the U.S.
Every year, more than 3,500 children and teens—defined as infants through age 19—are shot and killed in the U.S. About 35 children die as result of mass shootings each year.
By Josiah Bates
June 3, 2022
George Floyd Square's Uncertain Future
The intersection remains the subject of an ongoing debate over how to memorialize a man whose death jolted the nation out of complacency
By Janell Ross and Josiah Bates
May 25, 2022
Beto O'Rourke Confronts Greg Abbott During Uvalde Press Conference
O’Rourke is challenging Abbott in a long-shot bid for the Texas governor's mansion
By Josiah Bates
May 25, 2022
These Are the Victims of the Uvalde, Texas, School Shooting
The Uvalde elementary school shooting is now the third deadliest school shooting in U.S. history, with 21 victims
By Josiah Bates
May 25, 2022
Minneapolis' Struggle to Reform Police After George Floyd
"We can’t put our trust in a government system where, when they make a mistake, they can choose when they want to protect us and choose when they don’t want to protect us.”
By Josiah Bates and Janell Ross
May 25, 2022
Bill Cosby Is Facing Another Trial. Here's What to Know About the Judy Huth Case
Judy Huth, the plaintiff in the case, alleges that Cosby groped her while at the Playboy Mansion in Los Angeles 50 years ago
By Josiah Bates
May 20, 2022
What the Buffalo Shooting Says About Black America’s Fraught Relationship With Guns
The Buffalo community in upstate New York is still mourning the senseless massacre that occurred on May 15, when a gunman entered a local grocery store and killed 10 people in a racially motivated attack.On...
By Josiah Bates
May 18, 2022
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