City of Gainesville attributes significant reduction in homicides to gun violence prevention programs; State Attorney and Sheriff point to the number of people arrested, held without bail, and prosecuted
BY JENNIFER CABRERA
GAINESVILLE, Fla. – The City of Gainesville is giving credit to its gun violence prevention programs for a significant reduction in homicides over the past six months, but State Attorney Brian Kramer and Sheriff Emery Gainey, while supporting these efforts, say the main reason for the decrease lies in arresting violent offenders, holding them without bail, and prosecuting them.
A recent press release from the City of Gainesville highlighted the fact that there have been no gun-related homicides reported in the city since May; Alachua County Sheriff Emery Gainey told Alachua Chronicle that no gun-related homicides have been incorporated in his agency’s service area since March.
As good as the news is on homicides, 25 people were shot in Gainesville between April and November, including a 17-year-old Buchholz student who was permanently paralyzed after being shot in October.
The City credits their wide array of gun violence prevention policies. “The City of Gainesville is always working with our community partners and challenging every department to think outside the box and substantially lower the violent crime rate,” said Mayor Harvey L. Ward. “We’ve taken a kitchen sink approach to saving lives in this community, and it’s gratifying to share that all of the steps we’ve taken along the way are having an impact. It’s a long road and many steps remain, but we are developing the solutions needed to create positive change as we work collaboratively with our partners across the county.”
The City listed the August 2023 Gun Violence Prevention Summit, the Community Gun Violence Prevention Alliance, the GPD Gun Violence Unit, and IMPACT GNV as efforts that have led to the reduction in homicides under the leadership of City Manager Cynthia Curry.
“IMPACT GNV is how we connect neighbors with resources that can help,” said City of Gainesville Gun Violence Intervention Program Manager Brittany Coleman. “We’ve teamed with B.O.L.D. to build and to strengthen prevention and intervention methods. We work closely with a violence interrupter team to reach into neighborhoods. We also have our Community Care Callouts, where agencies come together when trauma-informed outreach is needed following acts of gun violence.”
Local governmental entities, including the City of Gainesville, Alachua County, and the Children’s Trust of Alachua County, have invested considerable funding to create these programs, and Santa Fe College is hosting the Community Gun Violence Prevention Alliance.
According to the City’s press release, Gainesville Police Chief Nelson Moya feels this multi-pronged approach is essential to the City’s progress. “When I came to the organization, we were in the middle of a wave of violence, but there were some opportunities. The City was recognizing the problem and was already allocating resources centered on prevention, intervention, and enforcement,” he said.
In mid-2023, Moya helped the Gainesville Police Department (GPD) establish the Gun Violence Unit, a temporary effort that later evolved into a full-time unit targeting gun crime. Comprising one sergeant and four officers with the sole focus of reducing gun violence, the unit works with partner agencies, including the Alachua County Sheriff’s Office (ASO), to cross jurisdictional lines and share resources. To date, GPD’s Gun Violence Unit has worked 11,800 hours at an estimated cost of $560,000.
Gun Violence Task Force
The Gun Violence Task Force, a local law enforcement joint task force that is separate from the Gun Violence Prevention Alliance, has been focused on bringing violent offenders to justice; the task force includes representatives from the Alachua County Sheriff’s Office; the Gainesville Police Department; the University of Florida Police Department; the 8th Judicial Circuit State Attorney’s Office; the Florida Department of Law Enforcement; the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives; the FBI; the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration; Florida’s state-wide prosecutor; and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Florida.
Sheriff Gainey told Alachua Chronicle that the Gun Violence Task Force created a list of 135 individuals who were identified in investigations of violent crimes, and 61 defendants from that list have been arrested since March 2024, with 34 currently in the Alachua County Jail, seven in federal custody, and 20 in the Florida Department of Corrections. Seventy-one suspects on the list are currently not in custody, and three have passed away since the list was made. According to Gainey, the majority of suspects on the list are between 18 and 22 years old.
Gainey said that 73 individuals are currently in the Alachua County Jail on some form of a homicide charge.
Many on the list were previously identified as gang members
Sheriff Gainey said, “Based upon the number of shootings, most involving 18-24-year-olds, I put together a task force made up of our deputies, Gainesville Police Department, University Police, Florida Department of Law Enforcement, Drug Enforcement Administration, Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Statewide Prosecutor’s Office, U.S. Attorney’s Office, and our local State Attorney Brian Kramer. The goal has been to identify, arrest ,and prosecute those that choose to commit gun crimes. Many of these individuals had been previously identified as gang members and others who had committed crimes involving firearms and other violent crimes in Alachua County. The Joint Task Force has identified 135 individuals so far that have involvement in these activities. The operation will continue as we locate and arrest those using firearms to commit crimes.”
Increased use of pre-trial detention without bail
However, the biggest factor may be the increased use of pre-trial detention in the 8th Judicial Circuit. The change began earlier this year with the case of Daniel Dominguez, who has now been sentenced to three years in state prison for threatening to shoot up a middle school. Dominguez was arrested in October 2023 after posting an Instagram video in which he said he wanted to shoot up a middle school on a weekend so police would kill him, and Judge Thomas Jaworski set bail at $1 million on each of the two original counts – terrorism and making a threat to commit an act of terrorism.
Dominguez’s attorney argued that Dominguez could not afford the bail and that it was unlawful for him to be held on an unaffordable bond unless the prosecution filed a motion for pre-trial detention without bail. Dominguez appealed the bond amount to the First District Court of Appeals (1st DCA), which ruled on January 31, 2024, that he was being illegally detained and would need to be released on February 5 “unless the trial court enters an order setting reasonable conditions of pre-trial release or conducts further proceedings and enters an order under section 907.041(5)(c) of the Florida Statutes.”
The State Attorney’s office quickly followed up with a motion for pre-trial detention, and on February 5, Judge David Kreider ordered that Dominguez be held without bail, concluding, “[T]here are no conditions of release reasonable sufficient to protect the community.”
State Attorney now requests pre-trial detention in qualifying cases
Since that decision from the 1st DCA, Kramer’s office has filed motions to hold defendants without bail until trial (known as “pre-trial detention”) in cases that fall under Florida’s “dangerous crimes” statute.
Kramer told us in April, “The law sets out when the motion for pre-trial detention is mandatory and when it is discretionary. We file the motion in every case where it is mandatory. For discretionary cases, we file in cases involving a sexual allegation or significant violence.”
Because of this policy of requesting pre-trial detention instead of releasing suspects on bail, the jail population has grown significantly. Sheriff Gainey told us the number of jail inmates was in the low 800s when he took office in October 2023, and there were 945 inmates on a recent day.
Kramer: “Hopefully, with these offenders taken out of the community, this trend in decreasing gun violence will continue.”
Kramer said, “While I applaud and encourage the City of Gainesville and Alachua County for all of their gun violence prevention efforts, it is clear that the most effective tool to combat gun violence is the incapacitation of the most prolific offenders through arrest and prosecution. The multiagency task force has focused on identifying and apprehending these offenders. Well over 50 of these individuals have been arrested and are, or have been, prosecuted. Once caught, the State Attorney’s office identifies these offenders and petitions the Courts to keep these offenders off the street and in the jail through the use of Pre-Trial Detention. We vigorously prosecute these cases by dedicating resources and highly trained and specialized prosecutors to handle these offenders’ cases. Hopefully, with these offenders taken out of the community, this trend in decreasing gun violence will continue.”
“but.”
What a difference one word can make with respect to a conversation.
Things aren’t always as they appear and are rarely what people would have you believe.
Voters should pay attention to that last sentence.
Arrest, no bail, & prosecute…now pay me $4,000,000 for my violence reduction program…
We got a problem…
But plea deals still count as “prosecution”. ALL REPEAT offenders should be sent to prison automatically, whether violent or not. Get them off the streets if you want to save Gainesville, especially downtown.
FIRE ALL ACLUSPLCDNC member public lawyers, as well. 👿💩👺👹🤡
Kramer said: “Hopefully, with these offenders taken out of the community, this trend in decreasing gun violence will continue.”
“Hopefully”? Really? Isn’t that your job?
We need a bigger jail…”build it and they will come”.
Good debate when it is about the reason for success.
However, in the big picture, the US leads the developed world in both gun deaths and incarcerated citizens, and in both categories, by a lot. If that was the answer we’d all be living in Mr Roger’s Neighborhood.
Not strictly correct but we certainly are higher than we should be.
I also agree that we don’t really know the best way to get the numbers down. In broad pictures, I would think it needs a combination of a) reducing pressures that drive people to crime, b) increased threat of capture and prosecution when a crime is committed, and c) exploring alternatives to expensive incarceration if it’s not an effective deterrent (e.g. deportation).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_incarceration_rate
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_firearm-related_homicide_rates
I wrote: “…the US leads the developed world…”
and that is correct.
You left out making it more difficult to get firearms. We also lead the developed world in the number of guns in the population.
Considering the firearm homicide rate for blacks (70.61 per 100,000 young males) is about 25 times that of whites (2.71 per 100,000 young males), we don’t have a gun problem.
https://www.statista.com/statistics/1466060/gun-homicide-rate-by-race-and-age-us/
We need more people in prison, not fewer. The liberal pipe dreams espoused here are beyond belief sometimes. The elephant in the room is growing.
Given we are all citizens, including the victims of all races, and poverty and crime track closely, your point solves nothing and the the data proves prison isn’t the answer or we’d be living Mayberry. WE have a gun problem and it could not be more obvious.
We don’t have a gun problem, we have a thug culture problem.
No, incarceration doesn’t work. Look at the facts for a change.
The US leads the developed world in both gun deaths and murders and in incarcerating it’s citizens, and in both categories by a lot.
https://www.healthdata.org/sites/default/files/styles/responsive_1200w/public/2024-07/firearm_hiwb_0.png.webp?itok=Eg_lX4Po
Top 10 Countries with the most people in prison
United States 1,767,200
China 1,690,000
Brazil 839,672
India 573,220
Russia 433,006
Turkey 341,497
Indonesia 266,512
Thailand 262,319
Mexico 231,906
Iran 189,000
Top 10 Countries with the highest rate of incarceration
El Salvador 1,086
Cuba 794
Rwanda 637
Turkmenistan 576
American Samoa 538
United States 531
Panama 499
Guam 475
Palau 428
Uruguay 424
Mr. Robinson’s Neighborhood is where the trouble lies. Not Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood. Those other counties will see their crime rates rise according to the number of immigrants they let in and where they came from. How about that Saudi man who drove through another Christmas market in Germany yesterday? I guess that would be Mr. Mohammed’s Neighborhood (not desirable either).
Mr Robinson’s neighborhood is in America, our country, and the problems there are our problems, partly from 400 years of slavery, segregation, discrimination, and disenfranchisement. Anyone who thinks we get out of that cheap and easy after 1 or 2 generations of equal rights before the law, but unequal community wealth is an idiot.
What’s the “other” part?
We’ll see whether you’re any more willing to recognize and acknowledge it than some of our elected leaders.
City leaders would be wise not to send out press releases touting results they had nothing do with. When crime goes up, and often does in waves, will they send out a press release taking credit for the spike? It’s a two-way street.
“touting results they had nothing do with” is the half the job of a politician (along with “blaming others for things they DID have something to do with”). 🙂
There is no clear answer to the good news anonymous, yet you choose to claim there is, if even when one factor claimed is trying to reach the hearts and minds of young people, something anyone should support.
And no doubt we’ll hear about that from you Bob, yet you can’t accept good news when there is some.
Anyone attempting to draw any inferences from such a small sample size and time period is demonstrating only that they know nothing about statistical analysis.
Agree and I think the city knows this and thinks we’re too dumb to notice. Once again, the city thinks PR will save them. They think they can use marketing tactics to save face postmortem
hen that cuts both ways and throw out the self serving claims of both authorities, not just the one you – for unknown reasons – don’t like.
No surprise there.
They aren’t buying guns they are stealing them. Take them out of your cars and they can’t steal them.
JW, you can’t have the world’s largest collection of guns by any nation and pretend you can control them, especially when politicians refuse to even try.
>>State Attorney now requests pre-trial detention in qualifying cases
Better late than never, but what the hell took so long? Did they just not realize it was an option? It boggles the mind.
After years of near-daily headlines involving a “man on pretrial diversion” immediately committing another violent crime, you’d hope that the State Attorney’s office would have made the connection that these programs don’t work.
Once again demtards like Jazzman are crying about needing more useless gun laws and in tge next breath saying that convicted people in prisons is not helping and doesn’t work. The quick solution is to keep people convicted of violent crimes in prison for 25 years to start. Second offense is 50 years. Gun theft and gun posessed by convicted felons need to follow the same guidelines. I am happy to pay more taxes to keep people in prison to protect society vs useless gun summits.