Title: The Measurement of Crime: Official Crime Data
1The Measurement of Crime Official Crime Data
2Official Crime Data
- Comes from a number of sources
- UCR (or police reports of offenses and arrests)
- Charges filed by prosecutors
- Imprisonment data
- Prison releases
3Police Statistics on Crime (UCR)
- Uniform Crime Reports
- Begun in 1930s
- Need for reliable, uniform crime statistics for
the nation - The U.S. Department of Justice instituted the
compilation (by FBI) and publication
4UCR
- FBI receives data from more than 17,000 city,
university and college, county, state, tribal,
and federal law enforcement agencies (voluntarily
reporting) - For the most part, agencies submit monthly crime
reports, using uniform offense definitions, to a
centralized repository within their state. The
state UCR Program then forwards the data to the
FBI's national UCR Program. - Coverage 90 in cities, 87 in rural areas
5Three annual publications
- Crime in the United States
- Hate Crime Statistics
- Law Enforcement Officers Killed and Assaulted
6Data collection
- Monthly basis
- FBI provides report forms, UCR Reporting Handbook
(1984), and self-addressed envelops - UCR Reporting Handbook general rules for the
classification and scoring of criminal offences - Definitions are important for standardization of
reporting practices
7UCR includes
- Crimes reported to local law enforcement agencies
- The number of arrests made by police agencies
8Structure of UCR
- Index Crimes (Part I)
- Murder
- Forcible rape
- Robbery
- Aggravated assault
- Burglary
- Larceny-theft
- Motor vehicle theft
- Arson (1979)
- Non-Index Crimes (Part II)
- Simple assault
- Forgery
- Fraud
- Embezzlement
- Buying, receiving, and possessing stolen property
- Carrying/possessing weapons
- Prostitution
- Sex offences
- Drug use violations
- Gambling
- Offense against family/children
9UCR tabulates
- The number of offenses
- National Volume, Trends, and Rates
- The offense rate per 100,000 population
- The UCR Program examines data in increments of 2,
5, and 10 years to formulate trend information
(in percentage change)
10UCR tabulates
- The offense rate by region (Northeast, Midwest,
South, and West) - The UCR Program aggregates crime data into three
community types Metropolitan Statistical Areas
(MSAs), cities outside metropolitan statistical
areas, and nonmetropolitan counties - The UCR Program collects weapon data for murder,
robbery, and aggravated assault offenses - An examination of these data indicated that most
violent crime (30.7 percent) involved the use of
personal weapons, such as hands, fists, feet,
etc. Firearms were used in 26.4 percent and
knives or cutting instruments were used in 15.5
percent of violent crime
11UCR tabulates
- The nature of the offense (age, gender, race of
offenders and victims) - The arrest (or clearance) rates of offenses
12Clearance
- Crimes are cleared in two ways
- 1. When at least one person is arrested, charged,
and turned over to the court for prosecution - 2. When some element beyond police control
precludes the physical arrest of an offender (for
example, the offender leaves the country)
13Clearance (2005)
Offence Frequency Clearance Rate
1. Larceny-Theft 7 million 18
2. Burglary 2 million 13
3. Motor Vehicle Theft 1.2 million 14
4. Aggravated Assault 1 million 56
5. Robbery 500,000 25
6. Rape 100,000 46
7. Arson 80,000 16
8. Murder 16,000 63
14Murder Definition
- The Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) Program defines
murder and nonnegligent manslaughter as the
willful (nonnegligent) killing of one human being
by another. - The classification of this offense is based
solely on police investigation as opposed to the
determination of a court, medical examiner,
coroner, jury, or other judicial body - The UCR Program does not include suicide, or
accident justifiable homicides and attempts to
murder or assaults to murder, which are scored as
aggravated assaults
15Ambiguity with murder
- A victim of aggravated assault dies
- Follow-up investigation are important for
correcting multiple monthly reports - Less reliable agencies fail to record subsequent
death of the victim as murder
16Killings that dont count
- Corporate killings (rarely perceive as homicide
or prosecuted as such) - Unsafe working conditions, unsafe pharmaceutical
products, unfit food products or illegal
emissions into the environment
17Killings that dont count
- Death by driving is not treated as real
homicide (because does not fit the definition) - According to the U.S. Department of
Transportation, 16,694 people died in
alcohol-related crashes in 2004, down 2.4 percent
from 17,105 in 2003
18Killings that dont count
- Deaths in custody and During the Course of
Arrests - Issue of deaths in prison or police custody or at
the hands of police in the course of arrests - When police or prison officers cause the deaths
of those they encounter (suspects or convicted
criminals), these deaths are often not viewed as
unlawful
19Killings that dont count
- Hidden Bodies (no corpse no homicide)
- Missing Persons 85 to 90 of the 876,213
persons reported missing to Americas law
enforcement agencies in 2000 were juveniles
(persons under 18 years of age) - Establishing Mode of Death due to complexities
in establishing cause of death - In a case of a discovered body, it is not always
possible to determine whether the death was a
result of foul play
20Establishing Mode of Death
- One of key purposes of a medical-legal autopsy is
to establish the mode of death - Four modes of deaths are possible
- Natural
- Accidental
- Suicide
- Homicide
21Sudden Infant Death Syndrome
- Distinguishing SIDS from homicide can be
difficult - SIDS is characterized by the death of seemingly
healthy babies where the cause of death cannot be
identified - It has been estimated that around 20 of SIDS
cases are in fact suspicious infant deaths
22Assessment of UCR data
- Unknown, probably massive amount of crime that
goes unreported to the police (dark figure of
crime) - Participation in the UCR is voluntary, not all
police departments send crime reports to the FBI
- UCR does not include federal crimes (blackmail),
white collar crimes
23Assessment of UCR data
- In any single event, the most serious crime is
reported (hierarchy rule) for statistical
purposes - The UCRs Crime Index Total misrepresents the
crime rate at any given year - Decrease in the number of larcenies cancels out
an identical increase in the number of homicides
(constant crime rate) - Auto theft, a less serious crime, has a very high
reportability (artificially inflates the crime
index rate)
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25Unweighted Index
- Murder has the same weight as a auto theft
- Imagine two cities each with a crime rate of 100
per 100, 000 population. In city A, 100 murders
were recorded whereas in city B, 100 joyrides
were recorded. - The existence of the Crime Index may cause
police agencies to concentrate on these crimes at
the expense of other crimes. - Most crimes that are committed are not index
offenses (Hagan, 2004)
26Discontinuing the use of the Crime Index
- In June 2004, the CJIS APB approved discontinuing
the use of the Crime Index in the UCR Program and
its publications and directed the FBI publish a
violent crime total and a property crime total
until a more viable index is developed
27Assessment of UCR data
- UCR data are more valid indicators of the
behavior of the police than of offenders (Barkan,
1999) - Decision whether to record
- Do not believe the victims account (Block, 1990)
- May be busy to do the paperwork to record it
(especially if the crime is not serious) - If there is no record there is no crime
28Assessment of UCR data
- Police departments have a dilemma (more
crimemore resources, less crimegood work) - Poor, nonwhite males are more likely to be
arrested - Public is more likely to report
- Research suggests that police personnel and funds
are concentrated in nonwhite poor neighborhoods
(more arrests in these areas) - Arrest data gives a distorted picture of the
typical offender
29Assessment of UCR data
- Official number of crimes might change
artificially (citizens become more or less likely
to report offenses committed against them) - Example increased number of reported rapes in
the last two decades partly reflect growing
awareness by women and police
30Assessment of UCR data
- Police in various communities have different
understanding and definitions of crimes - One study found that Los Angeles police recorded
any attempted or completed sexual assault as
rape, while Boston police recorded a sexual
assault as a rape only if it involved completed
sexual intercourse (Chappell, 1980) - Result Bostons official rape rate was much
lower than that for Los Angeles
31Redesigned UCR
- the National Incident-Based Reporting System, or
NIBRS - The NIBRS collects data on each single incident
and arrest within 22 crime categories - For each offense known to police within these
categories incident, victim, property, offender,
and arrestee information are gathered when
available - Use of alcohol immediately before the offense
32The National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS)
- The NCVS is under the auspices of the Bureau of
Justice Statistics (BJS)
33The National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS)
- Begun in early 1970s to avoid the police
reporting problems and bias - Provide more detailed information than UCR
- Context of crime such as time of day and physical
setting in which it occurs - Characteristics of crime victims (gender, race,
income, age, extent of injury, and relationship
with their offenders) - Characteristics of the offenders
- Whether victimization has been reported to the
police
34The National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS)
- Every six months the Census Bureau interviews
about 110,000 residents age 12 and older - 50,000 randomly selected households
- Aggravated and simple assault, rape and sexual
assault, robbery, burglary, larceny-theft, motor
vehicle theft - No homicide, arson, commercial crimes, white
collar crimes, gambling - Crimes are described to respondents
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36Forcible rape
- UCR underreported crime
- NCVS around 30 of victims do not report rape to
the police
37Findings
- Males have higher victimization rates then
females for all violent crimes except rape/sexual
assault - Young people have greater victimization risk than
older people (victim risk diminishes rapidly
after 25 years old) - African Americans had higher violent
victimization rates than whites or other races
38Findings
- People in the lowest income categories are much
more likely to become crime victims - Females and African Americans were more likely to
report a crime to police than were males and
whites (Barkan, 1999)
39Males victims of DV
- I am larger than her. I was a one time amateur
boxing champion. She never used weapons, so she
never came close to hurting me physically. But
she hit me whenever she got the notion to, she
cut up my clothes and threw them in the yard, she
destroyed the trophies I had accumulated in
various sports competitions since childhood, and
she destroyed a wedding album. Neither party was
blameless, but the physical violence was all hers
40Males victims of DV
- I was in a hellish marriage with a woman who had
difficulty controlling her rage, which would
frequently erupt with her hitting, verbal abuse,
and screaming. If fighting with her did occur, it
was self-defense if she threw a punch or kicked,
I defended myself. In one particular case, after
she initiated a fight by kicking and throwing
punches, she called the police to report me as
the violent abuser! When they responded, I was
seen as the bad guy, she was the victim!
41Males victims of DV
- I was abused too many times and decided to end
the relationship but I was unable to do so. The
abuse intensified, she did not hesitate to hit me
... She also clawed me numerous time and even cut
me with a knife. I was again failed to report the
incidents to the authority. Many times she had
threatened me that if I bring any charges against
her, she would not hesitate to bring false
charges against me ...
42UCR and NCVS
- UCR data are based on reported criminal acts
(offender characteristics) - NCVS data based on individuals actually
victimized (characteristics of victims)
43Assessment of NCVS
- Document a massive amount of crime that goes
unreported - Underestimate crime rate
- Insignificant crimes tend to be forgotten
- Victims of several crimes may also forget about
all the crimes - Females do not report victimization if her abuser
live in the same household
44Assessment of NCVS
- NCVS respondents are interviewed every six months
(7 interviews) - Reported victimization rates usually decease with
each interview (awareness of victimization) - Overestimation of some crimes
- Respondents might mistakenly interpret some
noncriminal events as crimes - Telescoping effect
45How do UCR and NCVS differ?
- The UCR Program provides a reliable set of
criminal justice statistics for law enforcement
administration, operation, and management, as
well as to indicate fluctuations in the level of
crime in America - The NCVS provides previously unavailable
information about victims, offenders, and crime
(including crime not reported to the police) - The two programs employ different methodologies,
but they measure a similar subset of serious
crimes. Both programs cover forcible rape,
robbery, aggravated assault, burglary, theft, and
motor vehicle theft