Can a bold effort to solve crime at its roots restore peace in some of Indianapolis' most distressed neighborhoods?

Episode List

Chapter 10: Getting Involved in the Crime Life

May 17th, 2016 3:34 PM

To calm a rising homicide rate, Indianapolis public safety has been trying a big social experiment: reaching deeper into the city’s most distressed neighborhoods with services like mental health care, food giveaways and school mentoring. Will that strategy reach everyone in those neighborhoods or will some still fall through the cracks?

Chapter 9: 10-96

May 9th, 2016 4:21 PM

Two stories about mental health, from two different sides. Emergency services -- police, fire, paramedics -- have significantly more interactions with people suffering a mental illness in Indianapolis’ most distressed neighborhoods than the city average. Stigma and economic circumstances play a role in lack of care and often those mental illnesses turn into substance abuse issues.

Chapter 8: Called to Serve And Protect

May 2nd, 2016 2:46 PM

Data-driven law enforcement replaced neighborhood policing a long time ago. Some in Indianapolis, like the mayor and chief of police, want to go back. They want officers to know their beats, and for the communities to know the officers. But in some neighborhoods, community policing is already making a comeback. We spent time with one officer already doing that as he drove the streets of a struggling Indy neighborhood.

Chapter 7: As Early As Possible

Apr 24th, 2016 6:39 PM

In Indianapolis, the number of perpetrators and victims of homicide under the age of 18 has doubled in the past three years. Community leaders point to a disregard for life among youth, driven by a lack of caring adults in their lives. There’s a struggle between mentors and gang members for who will raise those children.

Chapter 6: Not Thinking About Going Back

Apr 6th, 2016 2:07 PM

About 9,000 people will leave a state prison this year and return to life in Indianapolis. But more than half of them will commit another crime and return to prison. They’ll fail to find work and revert to stealing, or take up the same drugs that took them down the dark road to begin with. Sometimes, that cycle ends with homicide. So stopping that cycle of reoffending is critical. But it’s not easy.

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