Special Report
20 Biggest Crimes of the Year
Published:
Last Updated:
As 2019 fades into history, America ruefully looks back on another year of mass murders, bias-inspired crimes, child and sex abuse cases, fraud involving the privileged class, and other misdeeds.
Using media sources such as The New York Times, National Public Radio, and The Associated Press, 24/7 Wall St. reviewed hundreds of popular news stories to create a list of the year’s biggest crime stories. We selected stories that stood out for how many lives they impacted, for being in some respects unprecedented, and for involving people or institutions of great importance to the public. We also aimed for a variety of subjects to cover the wide range of notable 2019 crime stories.
America was shaken by two mass-shooting events in a 24 hour period this past August, renewing the debate over gun control in Washington, D.C. as well as in living rooms and workplaces across the nation. These are the deadliest mass shootings in our nation’s history.
Crimes such as a shooting in a California synagogue and church burnings in Louisiana reminded us that bias and hate remain an intractable problems in the United States.
Other crimes involved the entitled elite, such as the college admissions scandal in which affluent and well-connected people used their status to gain an unfair advantage for their children to get into America’s most exclusive universities. It was a reminder that in a nation that prides itself on merit, the playing field is not level. Here are the worst scandals that shocked Hollywood.
Click here to see the 20 biggest crimes of the year
169 arrests in sex trafficking sting ahead of Super Bowl
> Date: Jan. 31
A joint effort between local, state, and federal law enforcement agencies resulted in the arrest of 169 people on sex trafficking charges. The arrests were made in Atlanta during the days leading up to the Super Bowl and included 26 alleged traffickers and 34 people accused of trying to have sex with minors. Several sex trafficking victims were rescued as a part of the police effort.
Drug lord El Chapo convicted
> Date: Feb. 12
In a New York federal district court, Mexican drug lord Joaquín Guzmán — commonly known as El Chapo — was found guilty of 10 counts including engaging in a continuing criminal enterprise, conspiracy to launder money from drug sales, international distribution of cocaine, heroin, marijuana and other drugs, and use of firearms.
Guzman has been involved in the drug trade for decades, becoming the leader of the Sinaloa Pacific Cartel in the 1980s. Though he has been held in maximum security prisons before, he has escaped each time. Guzman claims to have killed between 2,000 and 3,000 people. He now faces a life sentence without the possibility of parole.
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College admissions scandal
> Date: March 12
On March 12, the Justice Department announced charges in the biggest college-admission scam in the history of the nation. The scandal exposed how far wealthy and well-connected parents are willing to go to get their children into the nation’s most prestigious universities.
Among those caught up in the scandal were actresses Lori Loughlin as well as Felicity Huffman and her husband, fashion mogul Mossimo Giannulli, who pleaded not guilty to bribery charges for allegedly paying an admissions consultant $500,000 to create a bogus sports profile for their daughter to help her get into USC. Huffman was sentenced to 14 days in prison for paying thousands of dollars to have her daughter’s SAT scores falsely boosted.
Mother and YouTube star charged with child abuse
> Date: March 20
An Arizona woman was accused of neglecting and physically abusing her seven adopted children who appeared in videos on YouTube. The children appeared on a family comedy called “Fantastic Adventures” that received 242 million views and had 800,000 subscribers. YouTube shut down the series amid child abuse allegations.
The incident raised concerns about the lack of oversight in using underage children on the video-sharing platform. Machelle Hobson allegedly denied the children food and water, limited their bathroom visits, and pepper-sprayed them if they did not perform to her standards.
Child actors are protected by legal safeguards with strict rules regarding the number of hours they work in the television and motion picture industry, but the standards have not been outlined for newer media platforms like YouTube. Hobson, who was charged with child abuse, died of natural causes in early November.
Three historically black churches burned in 10 days
> Date: March 26, April 2 and April 4
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Robert Mueller investigation
> Date: April 18
Special counsel Robert Mueller was tasked with finding if any connections existed between the Trump campaign and Russia’s interference in the 2016 election. After two years of investigation and 2,800 subpoenas, Mueller found there was no conspiracy and could not conclude that President Donald Trump had obstructed justice.Mueller also concluded that, though the investigation found links between the Russian government and individuals in the Trump campaign, “the evidence was not sufficient to support criminal charges” of a conspiracy with Russia. Though the report did not allege criminal wrongdoing, it was perhaps the highest profile criminal investigation in the United States in recent memory.
Poway synagogue shooting
> Date: April 27
On the last day of the Jewish holiday of Passover on April 27, a gunman shouting anti-Semitic slurs went into a synagogue in Southern California and opened fire with an assault-style weapon, killing one person and wounding two others. The attack occurred in Poway, a town located 25 miles north of San Diego.The incident at the synagogue followed a series of religiously influenced assaults, including a mass shooting at a New Zealand mosque the previous month and a church bombing in Sri Lanka on Easter Sunday a week earlier. The California synagogue attack happened six months after a synagogue in Pittsburgh was attacked in an incident that left 11 dead in one of the worst anti-Semitic acts in American history.
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Connecticut mom missing
> Date: May 24
Jennifer Dulos has been missing since she dropped her children off at school on May 24 — and her husband, Fotis Dulos, is a prime suspect in her disappearance. Prosecutors think Dulos carried out a violent attack on his wife in the garage in their New Canaan home. His wife’s blood was detected on items there, but her body has not been found.The case took a strange turn on Dec. 4. Fotis Dulos appeared in civil court because his estranged wife’s family is suing him for failing to repay $2 million in loans from his wife’s family for Dulos’ homebuilding business. Outside the courtroom, Dulos told reporters he wished his wife and her family happy holidays and that “I just pray that they give my kids my love and my best wishes.”
Virginia Beach shooting
> Date: May 31
Navy SEAL chief accused of war crimes found not guilty of murder
> Date: July 2
Navy SEAL Edward Gallagher stood trial this summer for war crimes committed in 2017. He was charged with stabbing and killing a young Iraqi boy and posing for a photo with the boy’s body, as well as killing a young girl and an elderly man. Somewhat unexpectedly, Gallagher was found not guilty.The national news spotlight the case received was partially the result of President Donald Trump’s interest in it. The president had indicated before the trial that he would pardon Gallagher, and Trump Organization lawyer Marc Mukasey was among the high profile defense attorneys assigned to the case. Gallagher was allowed to retire from the SEALs after Trump reversed a Navy decision to have his status as a SEAL revoked.
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Sexual abuse cases against Jeffrey Epstein
> Date: July 8
El Paso, TX, Walmart shooting
> Date: Aug. 3
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Shooting in Dayton, OH
> Date: Aug. 4
The nation was staggered by a second mass shooting within 24 hours of the shooting tragedy in Texas when a gunman shot and killed nine people and injured 27 others in downtown Dayton, Ohio, at around 1 a.m. on Sunday morning. The gunman, Connor Betts, was shot and killed by police. Betts, wearing a mask and bulletproof vest and brandishing a .223-caliber high-capacity rifle, targeted victims in a district known for its nightlife. His sister was among his victims.Betts’ social media and comments from friends paints a picture of someone obsessed with violence and guns. While questions remain about his motivations, some officials have speculated that the shooter was also motivated by his hatred of women.
Drive-by shooting in Odessa and Midland, TX
> Date: Aug. 31
Serial killer Robert Hayes captured
> Date: Sept. 15
In September 2019, authorities in Florida placed suspected serial killer Robert Hayes under arrest. Hayes was officially charged with the 2016 murder of a woman whose body was discovered on the side of the road in West Palm Beach, Florida. He is also the leading suspect in three other murders dating back to 2005. Police linked Hayes to the killings with DNA evidence.
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Police officer who killed unarmed black man convicted of murder
> Date: Oct. 1
337 arrested in takedown of largest darknet child pornography website
> Date: Oct. 16
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Saugus High School shooting
> Date: Nov. 14
Former CIA agent sentenced to 19 years for China espionage
> Date: Nov. 22
Federal prosecutors open criminal probe of opioid makers
> Date: Nov. 26
Six pharmaceutical companies are under federal investigation and face potential criminal charges for their role in the opioid crisis. Federal prosecutors are working to determine what, if any, laws were broken in connection with shipments of mass quantities of opioid painkillers.The companies include Teva Pharmaceutical Industries, Mallinckrodt, Johnson & Johnson, Amneal Pharmaceuticals, and distributor McKesson Corp. One company, Ohio based Miami-Luken Inc, shipped 3.7 million hydrocodone pills between 2008 and 2011 to a pharmacy in a small West Virginia town of only about 400 people.
According to the most recent data for the Center for Disease Control and Prevention, of the more than 70,000 drug overdose deaths in 2017, more than two-thirds involved an opioid. Such drug-related deaths were six times more common in 2017 than in 1999, according to the CDC.
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Pensacola Navy base shooting
> Date: Dec. 6
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