Traffic Safety Incidents A Top Concern For Manassas Police, Chief Shares
Manassas, VA Patch·2025-07-29 17:42

Core Viewpoint - The Manassas Police Chief Doug Keen provided an update on crime trends and traffic safety, addressing community concerns about rising crime perceptions while presenting data indicating a mixed crime rate in the city [3][4][5]. Crime Trends - Part I crimes showed a mix of increases and decreases in the first half of 2025 compared to the same period in 2024, with no murders or manslaughters reported [6][7]. - Aggravated assaults decreased from 18 to 5, larcenies declined from 362 to 270, and forcible rapes dropped from 6 to 0. However, robberies increased from 8 to 10, burglaries rose from 19 to 28, and vehicle thefts went up from 51 to 62 [6][7]. - Overall, the combined Part I crimes resulted in a slight decline in the first half of 2025 compared to the first half of 2024, although small numbers can lead to significant percentage changes [7][8]. Domestic and Mental Health Incidents - Violent domestic reports increased from 123 to 138, while non-violent domestic calls decreased from 175 to 146. Domestic violence arrests surged from 43 to 76 [10]. - Non-fatal overdoses rose from 9 to 15, with fatal overdoses remaining constant at 2 for both years. Mental health reports fell from 83 to 29, but reports of mental subjects spiked from 13 to 60 [11][12]. Traffic Safety Concerns - Traffic crashes and enforcement are trending upward, with property damage-only crashes increasing from 251 to 448 and injury crashes rising from 99 to 112 [16]. - Traffic stops increased from 2,863 to 3,293, and traffic enforcement actions rose from 1,499 to 1,703. Citations also increased from 3,017 in 2024 to 3,269 in 2025 [17]. - The police department added a new traffic enforcement position funded by red light camera revenue to address community concerns about traffic safety [15][16]. Legislative Changes - A recent change in state law increased the minimum damage or injury threshold for reportable crashes from $1,500 to $3,000, which may affect future crash data reporting [24][25].