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Houston's new top cop takes reins as homicides still rising

Houston’s newest police chief has been sworn in during a ceremony in which he asked residents in the nation’s fourth-largest city for their help in bringing down rising crime, including a 37% increase in homicides

Via AP news wire
Monday 05 April 2021 16:36 EDT
Houston Police Chief
Houston Police Chief (© 2021 Houston Chronicle)

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Houston s newest police chief was sworn in during a ceremony Monday in which he asked residents in the nation's fourth-largest city for their help in bringing down rising crime, including a 37% increase in homicides.

Troy Finner succeeds Art Acevedo who earlier Monday was sworn in as chief of the smaller Miami police force.

Finner, who was executive assistant chief under Acevedo, takes the reins of a 5,300-officer department that like others across the U.S. has seen a rise in violent crime over the past year during the pandemic. Finner said as the Houston Police Department moves forward, “We are going to need everybody."

“I’m excited. Yes, a lot of crime out there right now. But you know what, I’ve never walked away from a challenge,” Finner said during a ceremony attended by his family, including his parents and his 10-year-old son, Wyatt, who pinned the chief's official badge on his father's uniform.

Last year, Houston had 403 homicides, up from 281 in 2019. It was the most homicides since 1993, when the city recorded 446. Other violent crime, including aggravated assault, also went up in 2020.

The increase is continuing in 2021. Houston has had 103 homicides as of Monday, compared with 75 during the same period in 2020, a jump of 37%.

“We cannot sit back and wait for the upward trend in crime to change on its own. I have given the department many of the resources it needs and will give them more. But over the next several months, HPD along with the community must be very focused in reducing crime across the board,” said Mayor Sylvester Turner

Finner, a Houston native, began with the city's police force in 1990.

Finner takes over as the department is still dealing with fallout from a deadly raid on a “no-knock” warrant in 2019 that resulted in the fatal shooting of a couple and led to the indictment of a dozen current and former officers tied to a narcotics unit. The department also faced scrutiny after officers in April 2020 fired their weapons 21 times at a man experiencing a mental health crisis, killing him.

Community activists have been critical of what they see as the slow implementation of recommendations on how to improve the department that were made by a task force appointed during last summer's nationwide protests against police brutality and racial injustice.

“I know Chief Finner will adhere and agree and will move forward to implement many of the reforms," Turner said.

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Follow Juan A. Lozano on Twitter: https://twitter.com/juanlozano70

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