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Crime tends to rise in the summer. How Raleigh police plan to address it

Key Takeaways
Key Takeaways

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  • Raleigh police will increase summer patrols in nightlife and transit areas.
  • School officers will shift to parks as part of youth-focused crime prevention.
  • Robberies rose 19% year-over-year, while gun assaults fell by 14%.

Raleigh residents can expect to see more of a police presence in certain parts of the city this summer.

Police Chief Rico Boyce unveiled his plan Tuesday to confront crime and increase enforcement throughout the summer months focused on nightlife areas, major city corridors and other areas.

“Our key objectives are obviously eliminating violent crime, removing dangerous illegal firearms and holding repeat offenders accountable for any actions, any criminal actions that they commit here in our capital city,” he told the Raleigh City Council on his 101st day in the role.

The plan came after Boyce spoke with other police chiefs about how to address crime throughout the summer months. A plan is needed, he said, because the city usually sees more visitors during the summer and juvenile crime goes up with schools out.

Boyce also highlighted crime statistics so far this year, compared to the same time period last year.

There have been 15 homicides in the first six months of the year, a statistic that has remained stagnant, he said. Robberies have increased while aggravated assaults with a firearm have decreased.

How police will address summer crime

Police officers will target particular areas through the end of August based on crime data.

“This is not a gotcha moment that we’re trying to surprise anybody,” Boyce said. “These are going to be our focus areas during the summer.”

Focus areas include:

  • Nightclub and event spaces
  • Transportation hubs
  • Public parks and greenways
  • Hospitality and nightlife corridors.

Emphasis will be placed on hospitality districts, including Glenwood South and Fayetteville Street, the transit hub downtown and Moore Square because it’s “where we are seeing a lot of gun recoveries here in the city,” Boyce said.

There will also be increased traffic enforcement on Capital Boulevard, Saunders Street, Glenwood Avenue and New Bern Avenue.

“I want that to be very clear that we use intelligence-led policing to place our resources throughout the city,” Boyce said. “I don’t want anybody to say that we’re overpolicing anywhere. We are going where we’re seeing the crime occurring and trying to deter crime from continuing to occur.”

School resource officers will be reassigned this summer to patrol parks and greenways.

The Police Department is also continuing its “cops on the block” campaign of bringing officers to meet with residents in neighborhoods, and adding to its summer camps to help keep young people out of trouble, Boyce said.

Raleigh crime statistics

The Police Department began releasing crime statistics on a quarterly basis.

The most recent report is for crime from Jan. 1 to June 9.

  • Homicides have remained stagnant. Fourteen out of 15 homicides have been cleared and the parties knew each other. The homicides were “not random violence,” Boyce said.
  • Robberies increased 19% from the same time last year.
  • Aggravated assaults are down 7%. Aggravated assaults with a firearm are down 14%.
  • Child abuse cases have decreased 31%.
  • Motor vehicle thefts have decreased 16%. There have been 793 vehicles stolen this year compared to 946 over the same time period in 2024. Officers have recovered 676 stolen vehicles this year.

This story was originally published June 10, 2025 at 8:24 PM.

Anna Roman
The News & Observer
Anna Roman is a service journalism reporter for the News & Observer. She has previously covered city government, crime and business for newspapers across North Carolina and received many North Carolina Press Association awards, including first place for investigative reporting. 
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