Your first MotherJones link seems a bit inaccurate... Try this one
I was about to post on this subject myself to see if there were any LessWrong opinions. It's certainly more than just one US-wide correlation; similar correlations appear at the level of individual states and cities, and internationally too. Plus there are longitudinal studies (following cohorts of children with different measured lead exposures through time, and monitoring levels of school delinquency then criminality).
Oh goddamit... thanks for catching the bad link. Fixed.
A friend has been asking my views on the likelihood that there's anything to a correlation between changing levels of lead in paint (and automotive exhaust) and the levels of crime. He quoted from a Reason Blog:
I responded with the following:
He's apparently continued to pursue the question, and just forwarded these remarks from Steven Pinker that I thought were very illuminating, and probably deserve a place in this community's toolkit for skeptics. Pinker's main point is that the association between Lead and crime is a long tenuous chain of suppositions, and several of the intermediate points should be far easier to measure. Finding correlations at this distance is not very informative.
http://stevenpinker.com/files/pinker/files/pinker_comments_on_lead_removal_and_declining_crime.pdf
Does the phrase "long-chain correlation" stick in your head and make it easier to dismiss this kind of argument?