Facts, Fear, and Safety:
Understanding Crime Trends and Perceptions
Wednesday, July 30th, 2025 at 1:00 PM ET
Watch our July webinar, Facts, Fear, and Safety: Understanding Crime Trends & Perceptions. Too often, discussion of crime is divorced from facts and data, which can mean that prosecutors can lack important context in understanding crime and public safety. Our discussion looks at recent crime data to explore crime trends and changes, and explores what has driven these trends.
Our expert panelists discuss the disconnect between public perception of crime and what the data tells us. How does the media–including social media–impact perceptions of public safety? How should prosecutors think about the disparities between how people feel and what the data reflects? Our panelists include:
Kim Foxx, Cook County State’s Attorney, IL (2016-2024);
Laura Bennett, Director, The Center for Just Journalism;
Ernesto Lopez, Senior Research Specialist, Council on Criminal Justice (CCJ); and
Kim Smith, Director of National Programs, University of Chicago Crime Lab and Education Lab
Our panel lays out the most up-to-date facts about crime trends across the country, takes a detailed look at the complexities across misdemeanor and felony data, and discusses how stakeholders can craft effective public safety responses based on facts rather than fear.
Laura Bennett
Director, The Center for Just Journalism
Laura Bennett is the founder and director of The Center for Just Journalism, an organization dedicated to fostering a media environment that equips people with the information they need to build safer communities. The Center connects journalists with reliable information on critical public safety and criminal legal issues and helps reporters, editors, and educators identify and implement practice changes that foster rigor, curiosity, and nuance, rather than sensationalism and anecdotes. Since its founding in 2022, the Center's work has directly resulted in impactful journalism and enduring practice change at news outlets across the country. Prior to founding the Center, she worked at FWD.us and The Pew Charitable Trusts where she led major policy and research projects in states across the country, including successful legislative reforms to reduce jail and prison populations in Louisiana, Mississippi, and New York.
Senior Research Specialist, Council on Criminal Justice (CCJ)
Ernesto Lopez
Ernesto Lopez is a Senior Research Specialist with the Council on Criminal Justice (CCJ). He joined CCJ after serving as a research consultant analyzing crime trends for CCJ’s National Commission on COVID-19 and Criminal Justice. He continues to focus on crime trends and has authored over a dozen reports on crime patterns in large U.S. cities. He has also conducted in-depth analyses of specific issues such as homicide, shoplifting, carjacking, and more. During his time at the Council, Ernesto has played a key role in supporting several major initiatives, including the Violent Crime Working Group, Task Force on Long Sentences, Crime Trends Working Group, and Pushing Toward Parity. He holds a Master’s in Public Administration and is currently a doctoral candidate in the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice at the University of Missouri – St. Louis.
Director of National Programs, University of Chicago Crime Lab and Education Lab
Kim Smith
Kim Smith is the Director of National Programs at the University of Chicago Crime Lab and Education Lab where she works across a portfolio of research projects in close partnership with government agencies and local nonprofits and on the Crime Lab’s efforts to make data more accessible to the public. Prior to joining the Crime Lab, she worked at Innovations for Poverty Action, a research organization dedicated to discovering and advancing what works to improve the lives of people living in poverty. Kim was one of Crain’s Chicago Business’ 40 Under 40 in 2022, and a fellow in the 2023 class of Leadership Greater Chicago. Kim holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in Economics from McGill University.
Kim Foxx
Cook County State’s Attorney, IL (2016-2024)
Kimberly M. Foxx served as the first Black woman to lead the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office – the second-largest prosecutor’s office in the country. Kim took office on December 1, 2016, with a vision for transforming the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office into a fairer, more forward-thinking agency focused on rebuilding public trust, promoting transparency, and being proactive in making all communities safe. She was elected to a second term in 2020.
As Cook County State’s Attorney, Kim has undertaken substantial criminal justice reforms focused on public safety and equity. She has revamped the office’s Conviction Integrity Unit, resulting in overturned convictions in over 230 cases, including the first-ever mass exoneration in Cook County for 15 men whose convictions stemmed from misconduct by a Chicago Police Officer.
Kim played a pivotal role in the crafting of the 2020 Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act to ensure that this historic legislation provides the most extensive, equitable form of conviction relief possible and requires the expungement of low-level cannabis offenses. Under her leadership, the office has expunged over 15,000 cannabis convictions. Providing this relief was not only a critical part of righting the wrongs of the failed war on drugs that disproportionately harmed communities of color; it is also a statement of her values and commitment to justice for all.
Understanding that cash bail can devastate those with limited financial resources, Kim has been a leader in bond reform, instructing prosecutors to agree to recognizance bonds where appropriate and reviewing bond decisions in cases where people are detained because they cannot afford bonds of $1,000 or less. Kim’s efforts on bail reform culminated with the passage of the Pretrial Fairness ACT in 2021, legislation that made Illinois the first state in the nation to abolish cash bail altogether. Recognizing the need for the office to focus the office’s resources on rising violent crime, she raised the threshold on felony retail theft to $1,000 in alignment with other major jurisdictions in the country, and the office no longer prosecutes misdemeanor traffic offenses for failure to pay tickets and fines.
With the goal of making Cook County the most transparent prosecutor’s office in the country, in 2018, Kim became the first and only prosecutor in the country to make felony case-level data available to the public. The open data portal provides unprecedented access and transparency into the work of a prosecutor’s office, work that is grounded in data and evidence.
A noted and national speaker on social justice issues, Kim has served on various panels, including the Illinois Judicial Council, Cook County’s COVID Reopening Task Force, and banning together with other elected prosecutors to stand against the criminalization of abortions following the overturned Roe v. Wade.
Considered a national leader in criminal justice reforms, Kim has been published in two anthologies, Progressive Prosecution: Race and Reform in Criminal Justice, Change from Within; Reimagining the 21st Century Prosecutor, where she discusses the inequities in the criminal justice system and the role that prosecutors offices can affect change and outcomes for offenders. Kim is also a sought-after keynote, speaker and lecturer, participating in panels across the country including, serving as the keynote for the University of San Francisco- USF Law Review Symposium on Race, Justice, and the Role of the Prosecutor in a Post George Floyd Era, January 2023; panelist for the DAs on the Frontier of Change: In Conversation with Melina Abdullah, May 2022; and as a panelist for the Google Zeitgeist Conference and as a guest speaker for the Makers Women’s Conference in 2018.
Kim served as an Assistant State’s Attorney for 12 years and was also a guardian ad litem, where she worked as an attorney advocating for children navigating the child welfare system. Prior to being elected State’s Attorney, Kim served as Chief of Staff for the Cook County Board President, where she was the lead architect of the county’s criminal justice reform agenda to address racial disparities in the criminal and juvenile justice systems.
Born and raised in Cabrini Green on Chicago’s Near North Side, Kim is a graduate of Southern Illinois University, where she earned a B.A. in Political Science and a J.D. from the SIU School of Law.