Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
Watch Live

Politics

Duf Sundheim Wrongly Says California's Violent Crime Rate Is Up 34 Percent

Duf Sundheim at a U.S. Senate debate at KPBS in San Diego, May 10, 2016. Milan Kovacevic / KPBS.
Milan Kovacevic / KPBS
Duf Sundheim at a U.S. Senate debate at KPBS in San Diego, May 10, 2016. Milan Kovacevic / KPBS.

Republican Duf Sundheim started on the attack at Tuesday’s debate at KPBS among five candidates vying to be California’s next U.S. senator.

But the GOP hopeful missed hard on a fact about the state’s violent crime rate. He used his opening remarks to criticize the race’s frontrunner, Democratic California Attorney General Kamala Harris.

"The PPIC (Public Policy Institute of California) recently reported that Kamala is failing to keep us safe," Sundheim said. "There is a 34 percent increase in violent crime in the state of California. … And that’s just within the last year."

Advertisement

The PPIC, a nonpartisan think tank, reported no such thing.

What the PPIC said

The PPIC report cited by Sundheim doesn’t include final statewide violent crime data for 2015. It has preliminary statistics for January to June 2015 for 66 California cities covering about half of the state’s population.

Brandon Martin, the co-author of the report and a research associate at the policy institute, told PolitiFact California that statewide crime statistics for 2015 won’t be available until this summer.

Moreoever, Sundheim misstated the preliminary data that the PPIC did have.

Advertisement

The authors of the report said 34 of the 66 California cities saw a double-digit percentage increase in violent crimes.

They never claimed that the state, or even the sample of cities, saw a 34 percent increase in violent crime.

"I have not seen any data showing a 34 percent increase in crime in California in 2015. He made a mistake," Magnus Lofstrum, the study’s author and a senior fellow at PPIC, told PolitiFact California.

The most recent full-year crime stats, from 2014, put the state’s violent crime rate at a 47-year low, according to the PPIC.

A spokeswoman for Sundheim’s campaign said, "Looking at the study, the wording is vague and our researchers believed that the '34' was in reference to the percent rise in violent crime."

Our ruling

Sundheim said California’s violent crime rate increased 34 percent over the past year, citing a recent report.

Sundheim misread the report in question, it’s authors said.

We rate his claim False.