Despite a dramatic reduction in homicides in 2024, eight homicides occurred in the first 24 days of the new year in the City of Fayetteville.
The crimes were not “random acts of violence,” according to Fayetteville Police Chief Kemberle Braden, who addressed concerns about the recent murders at the Fayetteville City Council meeting on Monday. The violent start to the year, Braden said, does not mean that violent crime in the city — which was expected to be lowest in the decade by the end of last year — is increasing again.
“Like anything else, there’s going to be the ebbs and flows of what happens within our community,” Braden said. “We just have to be ready and prepared to adjust the way we handle those things.” Braden said police have already solved seven of the eight murders, while detectives are still working on investigating the latest homicide, which occurred during the snowstorm on Jan. 22.
“In each of those cases, the suspect and victims were known to one another,” Braden said of the solved cases.
Of the eight homicides, Braden said detectives have confirmed that:
• Two were “crimes of passion with no history of domestic violence”
• Two involved “negligible handling of firearms”
• Two were “lifestyle related incidents”
• One was a result of a “mental health crisis”
No juveniles have been involved in the crimes, Braden said. He emphasized that the homicides were also not examples of “retaliatory violence,” or primarily gang-related violence that involves taking revenge and often includes youth offenders.
“These incidents are a contrast to the domestic violence and retaliation-style violence we experienced in 2023 when we had a total of 52 homicides that we investigated,” Braden said.
“Again, if you remember, we talked about some of the retaliatory stuff from our youth, the gangs and things of that nature. These don’t fit that bill and we’re dealing with something totally different.”
City council members congratulated Braden for maintaining the high clearance rates that have characterized his tenure as chief with the recent cases.
“Although it was eight homicides, seven arrests were made,” Council Member Courtney Banks-McLaughlin said. “So that’s seven individuals that are off the streets, so I just want to commend you and your department for your efforts.”
Responding to questions from city council members, Braden said the police department is continuing to take proactive steps to reduce gun violence in the city, including gun safety education initiatives, violence prevention programs and partnering with the Phoenix Center, Fayetteville’s rape crisis center, to reduce domestic violence homicides.
(Photo: Police Chief Kemberle Braden addressed concerns about the homicide rate in Fayetteville throughout January. Photo courtesy of Fayettevillenc.gov)