Author
Amanda Hernandez
Amanda Hernández is a staff writer for Stateline. She has reported for both national and local outlets, including ABC News, USA Today and NBC4 Washington.
Crime is down, FBI says, but politicians still choose statistics to fit their narratives
By: Amanda Hernandez - October 7, 2024
Violent crime and property crime in the United States dropped in 2023, continuing a downward trend following higher rates of crime during the pandemic, according to the FBI’s latest national crime report. Murders and intentional manslaughter, known as non-negligent manslaughter, fell by 11.6% from 2022. Property crime dropped by 2.4%. Overall, FBI data shows that violent […]
Safe storage and minimum age gun laws would curb violence, study says
By: Amanda Hernandez - September 23, 2024
The deadliest school shooting in Georgia history occurred earlier this month when a 14-year-old gunman, armed with a military-style rifle, killed two students and two teachers and injured nine others at Apalachee High School in Winder, a city about an hour northeast of Atlanta. And on Sunday, former President Donald Trump was the target of […]
Despite what some politicians say, crime rates are decreasing
By: Amanda Hernandez - July 1, 2024
Violent crime in the United States dropped significantly in the first quarter of 2024 compared with the same period last year, according to the FBI’s Quarterly Uniform Crime Report released earlier this month. The FBI’s data, collected from nearly 12,000 law enforcement agencies representing about 77% of the country’s population, suggests violent crime dropped by […]
Crime victims may get fewer services as federal aid drops. States weigh how to help
By: Amanda Hernandez and Jennifer Shutt - May 23, 2024
Groups that assist crime victims across the United States are bracing for significant financial pain after the amount available from a major federal victim services fund plunged $700 million this year. Congress recently lowered spending to $1.2 billion from the fund, which provides grants to nonprofit and local programs across the country. This latest round […]
‘Transformative’: More college programs are slowly coming into prisons
By: Amanda Hernandez - May 13, 2024
When the U.S. Department of Education announced last summer that federal Pell Grants would become available to incarcerated college students, lawmakers and state corrections agencies scrambled to adjust statutes and step up potential partnerships with universities. But nearly a year later, colleges and agencies are recognizing the steep administrative challenge to winning approval from the […]
‘Tough-on-crime’ policies are back in some places that had reimagined criminal justice
By: Amanda Hernandez - March 25, 2024
Fueled by public outrage over the 2020 murder of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer and other high-profile incidents of police violence, a seismic shift swept across the United States shortly afterward, with a wave of initiatives aimed at reining in police powers and reimagining criminal-legal systems. Yet less than half a decade later, […]
Bail clampdowns don’t match what research says about suspects, experts say
By: Amanda Hernandez - February 22, 2024
Crime is shaping up as a potent election issue, and one of the key points of debate is over bail: Which suspects should be jailed before trial, and which ones should be released on bond — and for how much money? Some conservatives argue that lenient bail policies put suspects who are likely to commit […]
How many inmates return to prison? Inconsistent reporting makes it hard to tell
By: Amanda Hernandez - December 11, 2023
Several states this year have reported lower rates of recidivism, showing that fewer convicted criminals are being re-arrested after leaving prison. But those statistics hardly tell the full story. Recidivism rates across the country can vary greatly because of how they’re defined, how the data is collected and how it’s presented to the public. So […]
Cash bail policies are facing fresh scrutiny in multiple states
By: Amanda Hernandez - November 13, 2023
States can’t figure out what to do about cash bail. The system — in which an arrested suspect pays cash to avoid sitting in jail until their court date and gets the money back when they appear — is deeply entrenched in the nation’s history as a way to ensure defendants return to face justice. […]
AI bots are helping 911 dispatchers with their workload
By: Amanda Hernandez - October 16, 2023
In the middle of a storm, 911 call centers often find themselves inundated with reports of fallen trees, flooded roads and panicked residents. Every call matters, but with multiple reports of the same incident pouring in, the pressure on emergency services can become overwhelming. Amid the chaos, a technological ally has emerged: artificial intelligence. In […]
It’s hazing season on college campuses. State safeguards are uneven
By: Amanda Hernandez - October 2, 2023
Max Gruver spent the early morning hours of Sept. 14, 2017, heavily intoxicated and passed out on a couch inside the Phi Delta Theta chapter house at Louisiana State University. He had been forced to repeatedly chug 190-proof Diesel liquor in a hazing ritual called “Bible Study,” during which pledges are quizzed on fraternity facts. […]
Sexual assault survivors can now track their rape kits in most states
By: Amanda Hernandez - September 8, 2023
It can take hours for a sexual assault victim to undergo the multiple swabs, hair samples, blood and urine collections, and other invasive procedures of a sexual assault examination. And then it can take months, sometimes years, for investigators to process that evidence kit. But now, responding to demands from survivors and their advocates, more […]