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Roanoke commission cites drops in shootings but rising firearm suicides, urges sustained funding
Summary
Police and the Gun Violence Prevention Commission told city leaders that homicides and nonfatal shootings fell in the latest two-year comparison but firearm suicides rose; commissioners urged council to sustain grant funding, create a victims-advocate role and expand gun-lock distribution through an ambassador program.
Roanoke’s Gun Violence Prevention Commission and police department reported declines in homicides and nonfatal shootings over a recent two‑year span but warned that firearm suicides have increased, and they urged continued funding for prevention and victim services.
Deputy Chief WJ Puckett opened the session and the police presentation showed the comparison that officials highlighted as evidence of progress: “if you look, at your homicides comparison, we had 39 for the 2 years of 2022 and '23 compared to 19 for '24 and '25,” a presenter said, describing what the department characterized as roughly a 51% reduction in homicides and a 55% drop in nonfatal shootings over the same intervals.
The police presentation also listed a 72% overall clearance rate for the cases discussed and a 93% clearance ratio for homicides in the…
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