Murders plummet 31% as major crime hits record lows

The Bahamas has witnessed a dramatic downturn in criminal activity during 2025, marking one of the most significant nationwide crime reductions in decades. Police Commissioner Shanta Knowles unveiled these transformative results during the Royal Bahamas Police Force’s annual crime briefing, revealing substantial declines across multiple major offense categories.

Preliminary statistical analysis indicates an overall 15 percent reduction in major crimes, decreasing from 2,825 incidents in 2024 to 2,409 cases in 2025. This positive trend manifested across all regions, with New Providence leading at 16 percent reduction, followed by the Family Islands at 13 percent, and Grand Bahama with the Northern Bahamas region at 8 percent.

Violent crimes against persons demonstrated particularly impressive improvement, plunging by 27 percent from 696 to 509 reported cases. The most striking development emerged in homicide statistics, which recorded an unprecedented 31 percent decline—from 120 murders in 2024 to 83 in 2025. Commissioner Knowles emphasized this represents both the largest percentage decrease since national crime tracking began in 1963 and the lowest homicide count in a comparable policing environment since 2008.

Geographic distribution of homicides showed New Providence accounting for 76 killings, while the Family Islands and Grand Bahama recorded 4 and 3 respectively. Demographic analysis revealed 83 percent of victims were aged 18-45, with males comprising 93 percent of homicide casualties. Retaliation, gang activity, and personal conflicts motivated 43 percent of these incidents, with firearms used in 64 cases.

Property crimes similarly exhibited substantial improvement. Armed robberies plummeted by 39 percent (265 to 162 cases), while non-armed robberies decreased by 22 percent (59 to 46 cases). Residential break-ins nearly halved, dropping from 331 to 170 incidents, and commercial burglaries declined by 13 percent to 273 cases. Although vehicle thefts saw a slight 2 percent increase to 398 cases, law enforcement recovered 59 percent of stolen vehicles.

Law enforcement achievements included the seizure of 366 illegal firearms and over 11,200 rounds of ammunition, resulting in 828 arrests and 292 criminal charges. Advanced ShotSpotter technology documented 970 gunshot incidents throughout the year. Collaborative operations with Customs and Immigration authorities yielded an additional 37 firearms and more than 5,400 ammunition rounds.

Commissioner Knowles attributed these remarkable improvements to strategic initiatives including intelligence-led policing methodologies, enhanced officer visibility, targeted operational deployments, and strengthened community partnerships. The 2026 Policing Plan will build upon these successes with continued focus on disrupting firearms and drug trafficking networks, further reducing property crimes, and intensifying youth and community engagement programs.

“The progress achieved in 2025 conclusively demonstrates that strategic, intelligence-led policing produces measurable results,” Commissioner Knowles stated. “Through unified effort and continued collaboration, we will further advance toward a safer and more secure Bahamas.”