How to Use crime wave in a Sentence

crime wave

noun
  • Yet much of the public still thinks the U.S. is in the midst of a crime wave.
    David Lauter, Los Angeles Times, 22 Mar. 2024
  • Rodney Alcala was only in the city a week before adding to the New York crime wave.
    Peter Van Sant, CBS News, 14 May 2024
  • New York just deployed National Guard troops to the street because of a migrant crime wave.
    CBS News, 10 Mar. 2024
  • There arguably is indeed a crime wave sweeping the nation.
    Prem Thakker, The New Republic, 21 Apr. 2023
  • For the last three years, shopkeepers across America have been up in arms about the alleged crime wave that has gripped the nation’s cities.
    Irina Ivanova, Fortune, 1 Nov. 2023
  • Whenever there’s a toxic dumping story, it’s not seen as part of a crime wave.
    Michael Hiltzik, Los Angeles Times, 19 Apr. 2023
  • Because before, kids are watching TV and then, much later, there is a crime wave, but it can’t be tightly linked to TV.
    David Remnick, The New Yorker, 20 Apr. 2024
  • Some of the arrests recently made in relation to the crime wave have been Venezuelan migrants.
    Antonio Maria Delgado, Miami Herald, 9 Apr. 2024
  • Dallas deserves credit for this attempt to protect its people from a new kind of crime wave.
    Dallas News, 23 Feb. 2023
  • And that’s going to catch serious heat right now, as D.C. is struggling with a crime wave fueled by a lot of young offenders.
    Petula Dvorak, Washington Post, 25 Jan. 2024
  • And here at home, a crisis at our border, a crime wave in our major cities, families struggling, and the worst inflation in 40 years.
    Nbc Universal, NBC News, 22 Oct. 2023
  • To combat the crime wave, Pesce said retailers have been trained to mark pin pads with a specific symbol in a unique location.
    Alison Cross, Hartford Courant, 8 Aug. 2024
  • The GOP is now seeking to take advantage, warning of a violent migrant crime wave.
    Tim Balk, New York Daily News, 7 Feb. 2024
  • Secretary Mayorkas and Joe Biden opened the border — and helped unleash a national crime wave.
    Mark Green, National Review, 17 Mar. 2024
  • In the run-up to the 2022 midterm elections, Adams was front-and-center in promoting the image of a crime wave in America’s cities, one that was amplified by local news.
    Max Rivlin-Nadler, The New Republic, 27 Oct. 2023
  • Some neighborhoods have suffered from the recent crime wave, including Ward 6, which includes the site where Cuellar was carjacked and is the largest ward in D.C.
    Luke Barr, ABC News, 3 Oct. 2023
  • The robbery was part of a crime wave against street food vendors in Los Angeles, breathlessly reported on by the media.
    Gustavo Arellano, Los Angeles Times, 29 Aug. 2023
  • Lightfoot also is the first mayor of a major U.S. city to face reelection following the pandemic, the recession and the crime wave that's occurred in many places.
    CBS News, 28 Feb. 2023
  • DeWine’s visit to Cleveland follows a summer crime wave that many have called unprecedented.
    cleveland, 16 Aug. 2023
  • The arrests on Thursday, however, were unrelated to that crime wave.
    Will McCarthy, The Mercury News, 2 Apr. 2024
  • Former New York governor Nelson Rockefeller toughened up punishment for drug offenses in the 1970s in response to a crime wave in the city.
    Joe Weisenthal, Bloomberg.com, 20 Apr. 2023
  • Yet even as the data contradicts Trump’s description of a nation in the grip of terrible crime wave, many Americans are inclined to agree with him, polls show, and crime could be a key issue this election cycle.
    Zac Anderson, USA TODAY, 30 Apr. 2024
  • The crime wave has spurred national attention and on occasion hurled the institution into the zany milieu of 24-hour news, social media and pop culture.
    Dallas News, 24 Feb. 2023
  • Other major cities such as Seattle, New York and Chicago had sued the automakers, claiming the cars’ lack of anti-theft technology had led to a crime wave and threatened public safety.
    The Courier-Journal, 7 Jan. 2024
  • Buckingham said that Houston's soft-on-crime policies are being fueled by Democrat leaders who have contributed to the ongoing crime wave.
    Sarah Rumpf-Whitten, Fox News, 20 Sep. 2023
  • Trump’s emphasis on public safety fits into a broader Republican narrative that Democrats’ policies have led to the crime wave of recent years.
    David Sivak, Washington Examiner - Political News and Conservative Analysis About Congress, the President, and the Federal Government, 18 June 2024
  • The report makes an urgent call for the city to get the intervention program back on track, and marks a fresh effort to understand how intercepting cycles of violence could turn the tide on Oakland’s current crime wave.
    Shomik Mukherjee, The Mercury News, 16 Jan. 2024
  • John Bigs, who initiated an online petition opposing Thao, blamed the recent crime wave on a lack of funding for police and a delay in filling the empty office of police chief.
    James Rainey, Los Angeles Times, 14 Mar. 2024
  • In 2022, a special task force of the judicial branch said the state should reopen the controversial juvenile jail to combat an ongoing crime wave that experts attributed to a small group of repeat young criminals.
    Christopher Keating, Hartford Courant, 14 Feb. 2024
  • Two decades later, that liberal ideal had collapsed thanks to the largest violent crime wave in the 20th century and the discovery that few rehabilitation programs worked.
    Barry Latzer, WSJ, 19 Nov. 2023

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'crime wave.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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