WATCH: PragerU Explains ‘How To Make Our Cities Safer’

Crime rates across the U.S. have steadily risen since the start of the 2020s, in stark contrast to the steady decline seen since the 1990s. Former federal prosecutor Tom Hogan sat down with PragerU to break down four policy changes that could rapidly reverse that trend.

Target the “power few” Go after the drug dealers and gun toting felons Unite cops and prosecutors Keep the bad actors in jail

“None of these solutions are theoretical: they’re street tested and backed by rigorous studies,” Hogan said. “They’re constitutional, and cost effective. While each one will reduce crime on its own, taken together, they can transform a city, not in decades, but within a year or two.”

Hogan first notes that violence follows predictable patterns — it usually takes place in a handful of “crime hot spots,” disproportionately on nights and weekends and during the summer. Furthermore, a very small share of offenders commit the majority of violent crimes.

“In any given city, just 5% of criminals are responsible for 50% of all violent crimes,” Hogan said. “I want to make this abundantly clear: it’s not 5% of the total population of the city … it’s 5% of the criminals.”

By focusing on these “hot spots” and getting a relative handful of serial offenders off the streets, police can have an outsized impact on violent crime.

Similarly, drug dealers and felons with illegally acquired firearms are valuable targets — not only are they career criminals themselves, but they’re also intimately connected to criminal networks that smuggle illicit goods across the country and have witnessed far more crimes than they have perpetrated. When faced with harsh sentences, they will often flip and provide valuable information on other cases in exchange for leniency.

Hogan also stresses the need for police and prosecutors to collaborate throughout the process to avoid legal slip ups or sloppy presentation of evidence. Hogan bemoans the current state of affairs, where police departments and prosecutors are often at each other’s throats, arguing that poor cooperation only helps criminals.

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Finally, Hogan stresses the need for longer sentencing, citing two studies by the U.S. Sentencing Commission, which found that sentences in excess of five years were correlated with lower rates of recidivism.

While the intuitive understanding that the threat of longer sentences disincentivize crime is applicable, Hogan also cites the age-crime curve, a widely observed statistical phenomenon that shows that criminal aggression in males peaks in late adolescence.

“Most violent criminals commit the majority of their crimes from their late teens into their 20s,” Hogan noted.

This is the age range where testosterone levels are at their highest — testosterone is correlated with aggression and impulsive behavior. The prefrontal cortex, which handles complex reasoning and long term decision making, does not fully develop until around age 25, which, coincidentally, is when the likelihood that a given male will violently offend begins to drop precipitously.

“Prison sentences of over five years simply take these violent criminals out of circulation when they’re at their most dangerous.”

WATCH:

Harlem Globetrotters Go Viral After Interaction With Kid In A Wheelchair

The Harlem Globetrotters have gone viral after a clip surfaced showing one of the players on the team showing a kid in a wheelchair how to hold a spinning basketball with one finger.

In a video posted to Twitter on Sunday by Chief Digital Evangelist Vala Afshar, viewers see a Globetrotter with the number 7 on his jersey spinning a basketball on top of one finger, then handing it over to the young child who’s holding up his finger.

The member of the exhibition basketball team then places the ball on the young child’s finger as it keeps on spinning. The ball soon comes down and the young boy — who appears reliant on some kind of oxygen machine — catches it. He gives the man wearing the #7 jersey a high five and is all smiles after the exchange.

WATCH:

“The most beautiful thing in the world is a child's smile.

The next best thing? Knowing that you are the reason behind it.” pic.twitter.com/iNwFy6uqjW

— Vala Afshar (@ValaAfshar) March 19, 2023

At the time of this publication, the clip had been viewed more than six million times and counting.

Doing a search on social media, it appears that the video first surfaced on Twitter on January 30. It was shared by the outlet Overtime, and that clip has been viewed 4.4 million times as of publication.

There was no further information shared about where the meet-up between the two took place or when. The only thing included with the post was a message that read, “That smile means everything.”

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The post also shared a handle that credited the Globetrotter as being Lucius “TOO TALL” Winston, who also shared the clip on his Instagram recently.

Reading through the comments attached to Afshar’s post, many people said it made them hopeful and that it touched their heart.

“This is so beautiful. This just comes to show humanity isn’t over yet,” one person wrote.

Another wrote, “Pure joy. My happy childhood memory was seeing the globetrotters 50 years ago. Amazing.”

While another tweeted, “So many years! I am in my 70’s and saw them when I was young. Took my daughter, various cancer kids I volunteered with through the years. And they are still the best present to give a child who loves basketball.”

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