Shootings bedevil Alameda County highways, despite statewide decline

More than once a week last year, bullets from rolling gunbattles, road rage-fueled shootings and seemingly unprovoked attacks flew on Alameda County freeways at a frequency far outpacing most of the state, according to an analysis of highway patrol data by this news organization.

Often, innocent motorists — and children — are caught in the cross fire. Sometimes, the shootings turn deadly. Rarely are they solved.

While encouraging signs abound elsewhere in the state, the scourge of freeway shootings remains persistent in the East Bay, where the problem in Alameda County appears to be just as bad, if not worse, than pandemic-era highs seen across the state a few years ago. The county had the same number of reported shootings — 217 — as the rest of the entire Golden Gate Division, covering the nine larger Bay Area counties, from 2021 to 2023, largely because shootings in Alameda County increased slightly over time, while the rest of the region saw reports of gunfire drop by more than half.

Alameda County has one-sixth the population of Los Angeles County, but has a freeway and highway shootings-per-capita rate five times higher since 2021, according to the data, which was provided by the California Highway Patrol to this newspaper in March. Last year, Alameda County surpassed L.A. for a first-place finish no one wants: 79 reported highway shootings, compared to 71 in L.A., a place known for being the capital of the nation’s car culture.

The East Bay “is the wild wild West right now — it’s full of guns, and the smallest inkling of a disagreement can result in a shooting,” said Glen Upshaw Sr., a violence interrupter with the Oakland-based nonprofit Youth Alive! “Ninety percent of the stories we hear are, ‘I don’t even know why he shot me.’”

Across the state, reports of shootings involving firearms — as opposed to BB guns, pellet guns and the like — last year dropped 27% from 2021, easing from 477 to 347, according to the analysis. Yet reports of shootings in Alameda County jumped to 79 in 2023, up from 66 and 72 the two previous years. The most dangerous highway was Interstate 580, particularly in Oakland and east of Dublin.

Few cases here are ever solved, despite state officials pouring millions into fighting the issue, with extra overtime for officers to patrol the region’s roadways and the planned implementation of an expansive network of cameras.

Authorities made arrests in just 13 of the 211 confirmed shootings that police investigated across the Bay Area in 2022 and 2023. That 6% arrest rate in those cases mirrored statewide trends, with CHP investigators finding meager success in solving freeway shooting cases, specifically in those two years.

“These shootings are notoriously hard to investigate,” said Michelle Rippy, a professor of criminal justice at California State University, East Bay. She specifically pointed to the fact that there are often fewer witnesses to freeway shootings; by their very nature, such incidents mean suspects and victims leave the scene almost instantly.

“What’s happening is we’re seeing these community gun violence issues also being dredged onto the highway,” Rippy added. “We almost need to turn to look at our community violence from a public health lens,” she said, emphasizing that freeway shootings are part of a larger issue of gun violence.

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