
This graph shows a sharp drop-off in
violent crime since 1993.

Property crime rates in the United
States (1986-2005)
Crime in the
United
States
is characterized by extremely high levels
of violence and homicide compared to nearly all other developed countries. Some authors
attribute both trends to the fact that criminals in America are
more likely to have firearms.
Crime statistics are published annually by
the Federal Bureau of Investigation
in the Uniform
Crime Reports which represents crimes
reported to the police. The
Bureau of Justice Statistics
conducts the annual
National Crime Victimization
Survey which captures crimes not reported to the police.
The country's overall
crime rate is
displayed in two indices. The
violent
crime index comprises
homicide,
forcible
rape,
robbery
and
assault. The
property crime index consists of
burglary,
larceny/
theft,
motor vehicle
theft, and
arson. Statistics for index
offenses are generally available for the country as a whole, all
fifty
states and all communities within
the United States with 10,000 or more residents.
The crime rate is measured by the number of offenses being reported
per 100,000 people. While the crime rate had risen sharply in the
late 1960s and early 1970s, bringing it to a constant all-time high
during much of the 1970s and 1980s, it has drastically declined
ever since 1991.
One
hypothesis suggests there is a causal link between
legalized abortion and the drop in crime during
the 1990s. In 2004 America's crime rate was roughly the same as in
1970, with the
homicide rate being at its
lowest level since 1965. Overall, the national crime rate was 4982
crimes per 100,000 residents, down from 4852 crimes per 100,000
residents thirty years earlier in 1974 (-17.6%).
The likelihood of committing and falling victim to crime also
depends on several
demographic
characteristics, as well as location of the population. Overall,
men, minorities, the young, and those in financially less favorable
positions are more likely to be crime victims, as well as commit
crimes. Crime in the US is also concentrated in certain
areas.
It is quite common for crime in American cities to be highly
concentrated in a few, often economically disadvantaged areas.
For
example, San Mateo County, California
had a population of approximately 624,000 and 17
homicides in 2001. 6 of these 17 homicides took place in poor,
largely African and Hispanic
American East Palo Alto
, which had a population of roughly 30,000.
So, while East Palo Alto accounted for 4.8% of the population,
about one-third of the homicides took place there.
Crime over time

The violent crime rate of the United
States, 1960 to 2005.

The property crime rate of the US,
1960 to 2005.
Crime has
been a long-standing concern in the United States
, with high rates at the beginning of the 20th
century compared to parts of Western Europe. In 1916, 198 homicides
were recorded in Chicago
, a city of
slightly over 2 million at the time. This level of crime
was not exceptional when compared to other American cities such as
New York
City
, but was much higher relative to European cities,
such as London
, which then
had three times the population but recorded only 45 homicides in
the same year.
Since 1964, the U.S. crime rate has increased by as much as 350%,
and over 11 million crimes were reported in the year 2007 alone.
Crime in the United States has fluctuated considerably over the
course of the last half-century, rising significantly in the late
1960s and 1970s, peaking in the 1980s and then decreasing
considerably in the 1990s.
Over the past thirty years, the crime rate rose throughout the
1980s, reached its peak in 1991 and then began to decrease
throughout the 1990s and 2000s. Recent statistics indicate that
crime could again be increasing.
The year 2005 was overall the safest year in the past thirty years.
The recent overall decrease has reflected upon all significant
types of crime, with all violent and property crimes having
decreased and reached an all-time low. The
homicide rate in particular has decreased over 42%
between its record high point in 1991 and 2005.
Recently, however, the homicide rate has stagnated. While the
homicide rate decreased continuously between 1991 and 2000 from 9.8
homicides per 100,000 persons to 5.5 per 100,000, it has remained
level through 2005. In the years between 2000 and 2005 the homicide
rate has remained at an all-time low between 5.5 and 5.7 homicides
per 100,000 individuals.
Despite the recent stagnation of the homicide rate, however,
property and violent crimes overall have continued to decrease,
though at a considerably slower pace than in the 1990s. Overall,
the crime rate in the U.S. was the same in 2004 as in 1969, with
the homicide rate being roughly the same as in 1966. Violent crime
overall, however, is still at the same level as in 1974, despite
having decreased steadily since 1991.
| Crime Rate |
1960 |
1961 |
1963 |
1965 |
1967 |
1969 |
1971 |
1973 |
1975 |
1977 |
1979 |
1981 |
1983 |
1985 |
1987 |
1989 |
1991 |
1993 |
1995 |
1997 |
1999 |
2001 |
2003 |
2005 |
2008 |
| Violent crime rate |
160.9 |
158.1 |
168.2 |
200.2 |
253.2 |
328.7 |
396.0 |
417.4 |
487.8 |
475.9 |
548.9 |
594.3 |
537.7 |
556.6 |
609.7 |
663.1 |
758.1 |
746.8 |
684.6 |
610.8 |
523.0 |
504.4 |
475.8 |
469.2 |
454.5 |
| Homicide rate |
5.1 |
4.8 |
4.6 |
5.1 |
6.2 |
7.3 |
8.6 |
9.4 |
9.6 |
8.8 |
9.8 |
9.8 |
8.3 |
8.0 |
8.3 |
8.7 |
9.8 |
9.5 |
8.2 |
6.8 |
5.7 |
5.6 |
5.7 |
5.6 |
5.4 |
| Property crime rate |
1,726 |
1,747 |
2,012 |
2,249 |
2,736 |
3,351 |
3,769 |
3,737 |
4,811 |
4,602 |
5,017 |
5,264 |
4,637 |
4,650 |
4,940 |
5,078 |
5,140 |
4,738 |
4,591 |
4,312 |
3,744 |
3,656 |
3,591 |
3,430 |
3,213 |
|
SOURCES: US Bureau of Justice Statistics (2004), Federal
Bureau of Investigation, (2008)
Characteristics of offenders
As of 2005, statistics show
[1] that offending rates for blacks were more than 7
times higher than the rates for whites.
A
subsequent United States Department of
Justice
report which surveyed homicide statistics between
1974 and 2004 stated that of the crimes surveyed for which the
identity of the offender could be determined, 52.1% of the
offenders were Black, 45.9% were White, and 2% were Other
Races. Of the victims in those same crimes, 51% were White,
46.9% were Black, and 2.1% were Other Races. African Americans are
disproportionately the offender in workplace killings. For example,
in work place killings, 26.7% of offenders are Black out of a total
African American population of about 13.4%. The report further
noted that, "most
murders are intraracial",
with 86% of White murders committed by Whites, and 94% of Black
murders committed by Blacks. The document does not provide any
details concerning what races or ethnicities are included in the
designations "White", "Black", or "Other Races".
As of 2001, the chances of going to prison in percentages for
various demographic groups
A February 1997 report on
rape and
sexual-based crime published by the United States Department of
Justice stated that of the crimes surveyed, 56% of arrestees were
White, 42% were Black, and 2% were of other races; although
"Hispanic" was not recognized as a racial category, with Hispanics
predominantly being grouped together with Non-Hispanic Whites. The
report additionally noted that "victims of rape were about evenly
divided between whites and blacks; in about 88% of forcible rapes,
the victim and offender were of the same race."
For both 2004 and 2005, the percentage of incidents of rape or
sexual assault with a white perpetrator and a black victim was 0.0,
an estimate based on 10 or fewer sample cases. In contrast, in
2005, in cases where the victim was white, 33.6% of the
perpetrators were black. In 2004, only 8.3% of the perpetrators
were black.
According to "Hate Crime Reported by Victimsand Police," a 2005
Bureau of Justice StatisticsSpecial Report,
hate crime offenders were most likelymen (79%),
strangers (51%), 30 or older (37.8%), and white (43.9%). Although
the raw number of whites charged with hate crimes is generally
larger, the black rate per 100,000 is twice as high as the white
rate.
Reporting at the annual meeting of the
American Sociological
Association (August 3, 2008), sociologists at
Bowling Green State
University found that men who attend college are more likely to
commit
property crimes during their
college years than their non-college-attending peers. The research
draws from three waves of data from the
National
Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health and examines education,
crime levels, substance abuse and socializing among adolescents and
young adults.
Prison statistics
Compared with other countries, the United States has among the
highest incarceration rates in the world. As of 2006, a record 7
million people were behind bars, on
probation or on
parole, of
which 2.2 million were incarcerated.
The People's
Republic of China
ranks second with 1.5 million. The United
States has 5% of the
world's
population and 25% of the world's incarcerated
population.
In 1998, nearly one out of three Black men between the ages of
20-29 were in
prison or
jail, on probation or parole on any given day.
Approximately 70% of prisoners in the United States are
non-Whites.
In terms of
federal prison, 57% of
those incarcerated were sentenced for
drug
offenses. However, the federal prison population is a very
small percentage of the massive state prison population, which also
holds numerous people convicted of drug offenses. Currently,
considering local jails as well, almost a million of those
incarcerated are in prison for non-violent crime. In 2002, roughly
93.2 % of prisoners were
male. About 10.4 % of
all black males in the United States between the ages of 25 and 29
were sentenced and in prison by year end, compared to 2.4 % of
Hispanic males and 1.2 % of white males.
Crime victimology

This graph shows the homicide
victimization rate for whites and blacks, according to the US
Bureau of Justice Statistics.

Violent crime rates by gender
1973-2003
Patterns are found within the
victimology of crime in the United States.
Overall, the financially disadvantaged, males, those younger than
25 and non
European-Americans were
more likely to fall victim to crime.
Income, sex and age
had the most dramatic effect on the chances of a person being
victimized by crime, while the characteristic of race depended upon
the crime being committed.
In 2005, 27 out of 1,000
African
Americans became the victim of a violent crime, compared to 20
out of every 1,000
White
Americans. African Americans were overall 35% more likely to
sustain a violent crime. The likelihood of being murdered was
drastically higher for African Americans. In 2004 African Americans
constituted roughly 13.4% of the general population, yet, nearly
half, 49%, of all murder victims in 2005 were African
American.
Sexual assault and rape rates were roughly the same for all races.
Whites and African Americans also had approximately the same
chances of falling victim to simple assaults.
In terms of gender, males were more likely to become crime victims
than were females, with 79% percent of all murder victims being
male. Males were also twice as likely to be
carjacked as were females. In terms of income, all
households had roughly the same chance of becoming victims of
property crime. Yet, households with
an
annual
income of less than $7,500 were far more likely to be
assaulted, robbed and have their homes burgled.
Concerning age, those younger than twenty-five were more likely to
fall victim to crime, especially violent crime. The chances of
being victimized by violent crime decreased far more substantially
with age than the chances of becoming the victim of property crime.
For example, 1 out of every 33 crimes committed against a young
person was theft, while 1 out of every 5 crimes committed against
an elderly person was theft. Thus one can conclude that the
probability of becoming a crime victim decreases as income and age
increase, in addition to being lower for European Americans and
females.
The
United States Department of
Justice
compiles statistics on crime by race, but only
between and among people categorized as black or white.
According to U.S. Department of Justice document
Criminal
Victimization in the United States, there were overall
3,201,320 white and 507,210 black victims of
violent crimes reported in 2005. Out of the
3,201,320 cases involving white victims, 63.6% (2,358,625) had
white offenders and 17.2% (550,627) had black offenders, while the
507,210 black victims had a figure of 73.3% (371,785) black
offenders and 10.4% (52,750) white offenders.
There were 111,490 white and 36,620 black victims of
rape or
sexual assault
reported in 2005. Out of the 111,490 cases involving white victims,
44.5% (49,613) had white offenders and 33.6% (37,461) had black
offenders, while the 36,620 black victims had a figure of 100%
black offenders, with a 0.0% estimation for any other race based on
ten or fewer sample cases.
According to "Hate Crime Reported by Victims and Police," a 2005
Bureau of Justice
Statistics Special Report,
hate crime
victims were most likely to be men (55.4%), white (85%),
non-Hispanic (88.6) and aged 30–49 (37.3%). The study also showed
that whites had had a per capita victimization rate of 0.9 per
1,000, while blacks had a rate of .07 per 1,000, and members of
other races had a rate of 1.4 per 1,000.
Crimes against the homeless
A 2007 study found that the number of violent crimes against the
homeless is increasing. The rate of such
documented crimes in 2005 was 30% higher than of those in 1999. 75%
of all perpetrators are under the age of 25. Studies and surveys
indicate that homeless people have a much higher criminal
victimization rate than the non-homeless, but that most incidents
never get reported to authorities.
In recent years, largely due to the efforts of the
National Coalition for the
Homeless (NCH) and academic researchers the problem of violence
against the homeless has gained national attention. The NCH called
deliberate attacks against the homeless
hate
crimes in their report
Hate, Violence, and Death on
Mainstreet USA (they retain the definition of the American
Congress).
The
Center for the Study of Hate & Extremism at
California State
University, San Bernardino in conjunction with the NCH found
that 155 homeless people were killed by non-homeless people in
"hate killings", while 76 people were killed in all the other
traditional hate crime
homicide categories
such as race and religion, combined. The CSHE contends that
negative and degrading portrayals of the homeless contribute to a
climate where violence takes place.
International comparison
The Burglary rates of selected developed countries as published by
the US Bureau of Justice Statistics
The manner in which America's crime rate compared to other
countries of similar wealth and development depends on the nature
of the crime used in the comparison. Overall crime statistic
comparisons are difficult to conduct, as the definition of crimes
significant enough to be published in annual reports varies across
countries. Thus an agency in a foreign country may include crimes
in its annual reports which the United States omits.
Some countries such as Canada, however, have similar definitions of
what constitutes a violent crime, and nearly all countries had the
same definition of the characteristics that constitutes a homicide.
Overall the total crime rate of the United States is similar to
that of other highly developed countries. Some types of reported
property crime in the U.S. survey as
lower than in Germany or Canada, yet the
homicide rate in the United States is substantially
higher.
There were 17,034 murders in the United States in 2006 (666,160
murders from 1960 to 1996). Direct comparison
of the totals (selected) for violent crime in Canada and the U.S.
have been used in articles by conservative or pro-gun writers in
both countries. Their claims of higher Canadian numbers speaking to
their issues however do not stand up to review as the 2 countries
use widely different criteria for selection of data to include in
their totals.
While similar reporting methods for homicide shows the U.S. figures
as 189.5% higher, the reported US violent crime rate includes only
Aggravated Assault, whereas the Canadian violent crime rate
includes all categories of assault, including the
much-more-numerous Assault level 1 (i.e., assault not using a
weapon and not resulting in serious bodily harm). A government
study concluded that direct comparison of the 2 countries' violent
crime totals or rates was "inappropriate".
According
to a 2004 study by the Bureau of Justice Statistics, looking at the
period from 1981 to 1999, the United States had a lower surveyed
residential burglary rate in 1998 than
Scotland
, England
, Canada
, the
Netherlands
, and
Australia. The other two
countries included in the study, Sweden
and Switzerland
, had only slightly lower burglary rates.
(Note: The rate of burglary in Police records remained higher in
the U.S. than most other countries during the study period (see
graph)). For the first nine years of the study period the same
surveys of the public showed only Australia with rates higher than
the U.S. The authors noted various problems in doing the
comparisons including infrequent data points (The U.S. performed 5
surveys from 1995 to 1999 when its rate dipped below Canada's While
Canada ran a single telephone survey during that period for
comparison).
Despite the overall crime rate of the United States being seemingly
in line with that of other industrialized countries, its homicide
rate, which has declined substantially since 1991, is still among
the highest in the industrialized world. Comparing just
homicide rates by themselves, however, may not be
representative of the overall crime rate of a country.
Only the homicide
rate of Northern
Ireland
in the early 1990s compares to that of the United
States today.
In 2004, there were 5.5 homicides for every 100,000 persons,
compared to 1.9 in Canada and 1.0 in Germany.
This means that the
homicide rate in the United States was nearly three times as high
as in Canada and slightly more than five times as high as in
Germany
. Most industrialized countries had homicide
rates below the 2.5 mark. Overall the homicide rate in the United
States was similar to that of some lesser developed
Eastern European countries.
| Country |
Ireland |
Germany |
Norway |
United Kingdom |
France |
Canada |
Scotland |
United States |
Russia |
Venezuela |
Jamaica |
Colombia |
| Homicide rate |
0.9 |
0.9 |
1.0 |
1.4 |
1.6 |
1.9 |
1.59 |
5.6 |
20.15 |
31.61 |
32.41 |
61.78 |
| Year |
2000 |
2007 |
2000 |
2000 |
2004 |
2004 |
2008 |
2007 |
2000 |
2000 |
2000 |
2000 |
Where there is a marked disparity between the incidence of crime in
the US and all other comparable developed countries is in the per
capita rate of murder committed with firearms. The most recent data
show that the proportion of people in America killed by firearms is
more than three and a half times greater than in Portugal, the next
country of comparable development. (Scotland, though shown in the
table, is not an independent country). The proportion of Americans
killed by firearms per year is more than seven and a half times
greater than the comparable proportion of residents in the 10
developed countries with the next highest rates of firearm
homicides.
SOURCES: US Department of Justice Statistics (2007),
Bundeskriminalamt, BKA (2007), Canada Statistics (2004), Seventh
United Nations Survey of Crime Trends and Operations of Criminal
Justice Systems (2000)
Geography of crime

This graph shows the homicide rate for
America's three worst and five best ranking jurisdictions in
2004.
Location
has a very significant impact on crime in the United States
. While some responding jurisdictions are
nearly free of serious crime, others are plagued by some of the
highest serious crime rates in the industrialized world. The
homicide rate exemplifies the stark differences between
communities.
For
example, in 2004 the Baltimore
police departments reported more homicides per
100,000 residents than any other jurisdiction. The rate of
homicide per 100,000 was 43.5, nearly eight times the national
average.
By contrast, in 2005 Forbes magazine listed Long Island
, one of the suburban areas of New York City
, which is also one of the wealthiest and most
expensive communities in the United States, as having 2.042 crimes
per 100,000 residents; the lowest crime rate and less than half the
US average [358876].
Fairfax
County, Virginia
, a very affluent suburban
enclave of the nation's
capital
with 1,041,200 residents, had the lowest homicide
rate of any jurisdiction. In 2004, Fairfax County's homicide
rate was reported at 0.3 homicides per 100,000 persons, 94.5% below
the national average and 1/145 of Baltimore's homicide rate. It is
therefore important to remember that the risk of being victimized
by crime in the United States varies greatly from locale to
locale.
Large cities
Crime among the country's twenty largest cities tended to be above
the national average. It is, however, important to note that these
statistics exclude the given city's suburbs and only reflect the
crime rates within the jurisdiction of a given city's police
department.
Rates are based on cases per 100,000 for all of calendar
2007.
generated with [[:de:Wikipedia:Helferlein/VBA-Macro for EXCEL
tableconversion]] V1.7<\hiddentext>>
| City |
State |
Population |
Violent crime |
Murder and
nonnegligent manslaughter |
Forcible rape |
Robbery |
Aggravated
assault |
Property crime |
Burglary |
Larceny-theft |
Motor vehicle
theft |
Arson |
| Foo |
Foo |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
Austin |
Texas |
716,817 |
540 |
4 |
46 |
203 |
287 |
6,341 |
1,120 |
4,808 |
413 |
16 |
Baltimore |
Maryland |
624,237 |
1,631 |
45 |
23 |
624 |
939 |
4,796 |
1,182 |
2,682 |
932 |
65 |
Chicago |
Illinois |
2,824,434 |
N/A |
16 |
N/A |
546 |
617 |
4,472 |
876 |
2,937 |
659 |
25 |
Columbus |
Ohio |
735,981 |
852 |
11 |
90 |
523 |
228 |
6,996 |
1,952 |
4,198 |
846 |
87 |
Dallas |
Texas |
1,239,104 |
1,069 |
16 |
41 |
583 |
429 |
6,776 |
1,814 |
3,849 |
1,113 |
73 |
Detroit |
Michigan |
860,971 |
2,289 |
46 |
40 |
764 |
1,440 |
6,772 |
2,064 |
2,430 |
2,278 |
88 |
El
Paso |
Texas |
616,029 |
418 |
3 |
42 |
77 |
297 |
3,201 |
349 |
2,361 |
492 |
13 |
Fort
Worth |
Texas |
670,693 |
667 |
9 |
50 |
242 |
367 |
5,469 |
1,343 |
3,726 |
400 |
34 |
Houston |
Texas |
2,169,544 |
1,132 |
16 |
32 |
529 |
555 |
5,684 |
1,339 |
3,449 |
897 |
48 |
Indianapolis |
Indiana |
797,268 |
1,234 |
14 |
63 |
507 |
649 |
6,308 |
1,679 |
3,666 |
963 |
42 |
Jacksonville |
Florida |
797,350 |
1,022 |
15 |
31 |
391 |
584 |
5,696 |
1,394 |
3,698 |
604 |
23 |
Los Angeles |
California |
3,870,487 |
718 |
10 |
26 |
348 |
334 |
2,621 |
507 |
1,506 |
608 |
57 |
Memphis |
Tennessee |
669,264 |
1,951 |
19 |
68 |
728 |
1,136 |
8,062 |
2,183 |
4,953 |
926 |
22 |
New
York |
New
York |
8,220,196 |
614 |
6 |
11 |
265 |
332 |
1,819 |
254 |
1,403 |
161 |
N/A |
Philadelphia |
Pennsylvania |
1,435,533 |
1,475 |
27 |
67 |
715 |
667 |
4,305 |
803 |
2,728 |
774 |
N/A |
Phoenix |
Arizona |
1,541,698 |
724 |
14 |
33 |
321 |
356 |
5,826 |
1,246 |
3,227 |
1,353 |
32 |
San
Antonio |
Texas |
1,316,882 |
556 |
9 |
48 |
186 |
313 |
6,390 |
1,272 |
4,607 |
511 |
35 |
San
Diego |
California |
1,261,196 |
502 |
5 |
23 |
166 |
308 |
3,502 |
609 |
1,845 |
1,049 |
16 |
San Francisco |
California |
733,799 |
874 |
14 |
17 |
514 |
330 |
4,696 |
692 |
3,199 |
804 |
32 |
San
Jose |
California |
934,553 |
402 |
4 |
23 |
114 |
261 |
2,575 |
476 |
1,412 |
686 |
36 |
SOURCES: FBI Uniform Crime Reports (2007)
States
[[File:US Violent Crime 2004.svg|thumb|250px|Map of violent crime
per 100,000 people in the US by state in 2004.
]]
Crime rates vary greatly across the states.
Overall, New England
had the lowest crime rates, for both violent and
property crimes. New England states also had the lowest
homicide rates in the country.
Southern states had the
highest overall crime rates. Crime can also be isolated to one
particular part of a state.
Lafayette, Louisiana
, for instance had only 6 murders per 100,000 people
in 2004, while New Orleans, Louisiana
, had 32.5 murders per 100,000 people.
With few exceptions, there also seems to be a strong correlation
between
median
household income and crime rates.
In addition to having
the country's lowest crime rates, New England
states also had the country's highest median
household income, while the Southern states have the lowest.
Almost
all of the nation's
wealthiest twenty states, which included northern mid-western
and western states such as Wisconsin
and California
, had crime rates below the national
average.
The
nation's more dangerous states, such as Texas
, Arizona
and Arkansas
in turn ranked among those with a household income
below the national median. For example, New Hampshire
was one of the nation's wealthiest and safest
state. New Hampshire's total crime rate was 57.9%; its
violent crime rate was 64.1% and its homicide rate 69.1% below the
national average.
Connecticut
, the nation's fourth wealthiest state, had a crime
rate 27% and a homicide rate 52.7% below the national
average.
This
contrasts starkly to some of the nation's
poorer states such as Georgia
, Florida
or Louisiana
. Louisiana had a crime rate 27% and a
homicide rate 130.9% above the national average and ranked as the
nation's fourth poorest state with a median household income 20%
below the national median.
While these trends hold generally true,
several states who fell below the national median for household
income such as Maine
and
Kentucky
also had crime rates below the national average,
while some wealthier states such as Maryland
and Hawaii
had crime
rates above the national average.
| State |
Population |
Number of Crimes per 100,000 persons (Crime
Rates) |
| Violent Crime Rates |
Property Crime Rates |
Total |
Rank |
| Violent Crime |
Homicide |
Rape |
Robbery |
Serious Assault |
Property Crime |
Burglary |
Larceny |
Motor vehicle theft |
Alabama |
4,530,182 |
426.6 |
5.6 |
38.5 |
133.4 |
249.1 |
4,025.0 |
986.0 |
2,729.5 |
309.6 |
4,451.6 |
17 |
Alaska |
655,435 |
634.5 |
5.6 |
85.1 |
68.2 |
475.6 |
3,382.8 |
575.6 |
2,465.4 |
341.8 |
4,017.3 |
23 |
Arizona |
5,743,834 |
504.1 |
7.2 |
33.0 |
134.4 |
329.4 |
5,340.5 |
990.4 |
3,387.2 |
962.9 |
5,844.6 |
2 |
Arkansas |
2,752,629 |
499.1 |
6.4 |
42.4 |
86.2 |
364.1 |
4,013.0 |
1,093.5 |
2,683.8 |
235.8 |
4,512.1 |
16 |
California |
35,893,799 |
551.8 |
6.7 |
26.8 |
172.1 |
346.3 |
3,419.0 |
685.1 |
2,030.1 |
703.8 |
3,970.8 |
25 |
Colorado |
4,601,403 |
373.5 |
4.4 |
42.5 |
81.5 |
245.1 |
3,919.3 |
717.3 |
2,679.0 |
522.9 |
4,292.8 |
22 |
Connecticut |
3,503,604 |
286.3 |
2.6 |
20.7 |
120.5 |
142.6 |
2,627.2 |
444.4 |
1,868.1 |
314.7 |
2,913.5 |
41 |
Delaware |
830,364 |
568.4 |
2.0 |
41.5 |
146.7 |
378.1 |
3,163.9 |
648.3 |
2,257.1 |
258.6 |
3,732.3 |
28 |
District of Columbia |
553,523 |
1,371.2 |
35.8 |
40.1 |
578.5 |
716.9 |
4,859.1 |
712.9 |
2,627.2 |
1,519.0 |
6,230.3 |
1 |
Florida |
17,397,161 |
711.3 |
5.4 |
38.0 |
172.4 |
495.5 |
4,179.7 |
956.1 |
2,773.3 |
450.2 |
4,891.0 |
10 |
Georgia |
8,829,383 |
455.5 |
6.9 |
27.0 |
154.7 |
266.8 |
4,265.9 |
940.0 |
2,825.0 |
501.0 |
4,721.4 |
14 |
Hawaii |
1,262,840 |
254.4 |
2.6 |
26.4 |
74.8 |
150.7 |
4,792.8 |
857.4 |
3,252.8 |
682.6 |
5,047.2 |
6 |
Idaho |
1,393,262 |
244.9 |
2.2 |
40.9 |
17.2 |
184.6 |
2,794.4 |
547.3 |
2,051.5 |
195.5 |
3,039.3 |
37 |
Illinois |
12,713,634 |
542.9 |
6.1 |
33.2 |
177.2 |
326.4 |
3,186.1 |
597.3 |
2,271.3 |
317.4 |
3,729.0 |
29 |
Indiana |
6,237,569 |
325.4 |
5.1 |
28.9 |
102.2 |
189.2 |
3,37.6 |
676.0 |
2,383.5 |
338.1 |
3,723.0 |
30 |
Iowa |
2,954,451 |
270.9 |
1.6 |
26.7 |
38.0 |
204.5 |
2,905.3 |
615.1 |
2,107.3 |
182.9 |
3,176.2 |
35 |
Kansas |
2,735,502 |
374.5 |
4.5 |
40.4 |
66.3 |
263.4 |
3,973.5 |
731.1 |
2,934.0 |
308.4 |
4,348.0 |
19 |
Kentucky |
4,145,922 |
244.9 |
5.7 |
29.9 |
78.8 |
130.5 |
2,537.7 |
624.8 |
1,701.3 |
211.6 |
2,782.6 |
44 |
Louisiana |
4,515,770 |
638.7 |
12.7 |
35.8 |
145.4 |
444.9 |
4,410.2 |
1,004.5 |
2,969.2 |
436.6 |
5,048.9 |
5 |
Maine |
1,317,253 |
103.5 |
1.4 |
23.9 |
21.9 |
56.3 |
2,409.6 |
481.4 |
1,829.3 |
98.9 |
2,513.1 |
47 |
Maryland |
5,558,058 |
700.5 |
9.4 |
23.7 |
229.6 |
437.8 |
3,640.2 |
660.0 |
2,335.1 |
645.2 |
4,340.7 |
20 |
Massachusetts |
6,416,505 |
458.8 |
2.6 |
28.0 |
116.4 |
311.7 |
2,459.7 |
537.2 |
1,578.8 |
343.7 |
2,918.5 |
40 |
Michigan |
10,112,620 |
490.2 |
6.4 |
54.2 |
111.9 |
317.7 |
3,057.6 |
636.8 |
1,921.0 |
499.9 |
3,547.8 |
32 |
Minnesota |
5,100,958 |
269.6 |
2.2 |
41.6 |
79.8 |
146.0 |
3,039.0 |
549.9 |
2,224.2 |
265.0 |
3,308.6 |
33 |
Mississippi |
2,902,966 |
295.1 |
7.8 |
40.0 |
86.2 |
161.1 |
3,478.5 |
952.9 |
2,254.2 |
271.4 |
3,773.6 |
27 |
Missouri |
5,754,618 |
490.5 |
6.2 |
25.7 |
115.2 |
343.4 |
3,903.5 |
703.3 |
2,750.2 |
450.0 |
4,394.0 |
18 |
Montana |
926,865 |
293.8 |
3.2 |
29.5 |
25.1 |
236.0 |
2,936.2 |
379.2 |
2,382.4 |
174.6 |
3,230.0 |
34 |
Nebraska |
1,747,704 |
308.6 |
2.3 |
35.5 |
65.1 |
205.7 |
3,519.6 |
562.2 |
2,654.9 |
302.5 |
3,828.2 |
26 |
Nevada |
2,334,771 |
615.9 |
7.4 |
40.9 |
210.1 |
357.6 |
4,206.6 |
991.2 |
2,246.0 |
969.5 |
4,822.5 |
12 |
New Hampshire |
1,299,500 |
167.0 |
1.4 |
35.3 |
38.5 |
91.8 |
2,040.1 |
382.1 |
1,508.5 |
149.4 |
1,675.5 |
51 |
New
Jersey |
8,698,879 |
355.7 |
4.5 |
15.3 |
150.3 |
185.6 |
2,429.2 |
471.7 |
1,609.1 |
348.4 |
2,784.9 |
43 |
New
Mexico |
1,903,289 |
687.3 |
8.9 |
54.6 |
108.3 |
515.5 |
4,197.7 |
1,046.8 |
2,735.7 |
415.2 |
4,885.0 |
11 |
New
York |
19,227,088 |
441.6 |
4.6 |
18.8 |
174.3 |
244.0 |
2,198.6 |
367.7 |
1,617.7 |
213.3 |
2,640.2 |
46 |
North Carolina |
8,541,221 |
447.8 |
6.2 |
27.4 |
137.9 |
276.2 |
4,160.2 |
1,184.8 |
2,659.4 |
316.0 |
4,608.0 |
15 |
North Dakota |
634,366 |
79.4 |
1.4 |
25.1 |
6.1 |
46.8 |
1,916.6 |
301.1 |
1,472.7 |
142.8 |
1,996.0 |
50 |
Ohio |
11,459,011 |
341.8 |
4.5 |
40.5 |
153.1 |
143.6 |
3,673.2 |
846.1 |
2,470.6 |
356.5 |
4,015.0 |
24 |
Oklahoma |
3,523,553 |
500.5 |
5.3 |
44.2 |
87.7 |
363.3 |
4,242.1 |
1,000.2 |
2,874.1 |
367.7 |
4,742.6 |
13 |
Oregon |
3,594,586 |
298.3 |
2.5 |
35.7 |
76.5 |
183.6 |
4,631.3 |
836.6 |
3,279.0 |
515.6 |
4,929.6 |
9 |
Pennsylvania |
12,406,292 |
411.1 |
5.2 |
28.5 |
148.9 |
228.4 |
2,415.0 |
438.8 |
1,726.5 |
249.6 |
2,926.1 |
39 |
Rhode Island |
1,080,632 |
247.4 |
2.4 |
29.6 |
67.6 |
147.7 |
2,884.1 |
505.7 |
2,001.0 |
377.4 |
3,131.5 |
36 |
South Carolina |
4,198,068 |
784.2 |
6.9 |
40.9 |
129.7 |
606.7 |
4,504.8 |
1,034.4 |
3,097.9 |
372.5 |
5,289.0 |
3 |
South Dakota |
770,883 |
171.5 |
2.3 |
43.8 |
14.8 |
110.5 |
1,933.5 |
408.5 |
1,415.3 |
109.7 |
2,105.0 |
49 |
Tennessee |
5,900,962 |
695.2 |
5.9 |
37.6 |
149.8 |
501.8 |
4,306.5 |
1,020.3 |
2,866.8 |
419.4 |
5,001.7 |
8 |
Texas |
22,490,022 |
540.5 |
6.1 |
37.3 |
159.3 |
337.9 |
4,494.0 |
978.7 |
3,097.0 |
418.3 |
5,034.5 |
7 |
Utah |
2,389,039 |
236.0 |
1.9 |
39.1 |
51.7 |
143.3 |
4,085.6 |
637.1 |
3,128.2 |
320.3 |
4,321.6 |
21 |
Vermont |
621,394 |
112.0 |
2.6 |
24.5 |
12.2 |
72.7 |
2,308.2 |
544.9 |
1,670.8 |
92.5 |
2,420.2 |
48 |
Virginia |
7,459,827 |
275.6 |
5.2 |
23.7 |
92.6 |
154.1 |
2,676.6 |
386.0 |
2,057.2 |
233.4 |
2,952.2 |
38 |
Washington |
6,203,788 |
343.8 |
3.1 |
46.1 |
94.6 |
200.2 |
4,849.2 |
977.3 |
3,175.0 |
696.9 |
5,193.0 |
4 |
West Virginia |
1,815,354 |
271.2 |
3.7 |
17.6 |
42.3 |
207.6 |
2,506.2 |
602.2 |
1,698.1 |
206.0 |
2,777.4 |
45 |
Wisconsin |
5,509,026 |
209.6 |
2.8 |
20.6 |
73.8 |
112.4 |
2,663.1 |
433.0 |
2,023.6 |
206.5 |
2,872.2 |
42 |
Wyoming |
506,529 |
229.6 |
2.2 |
22.1 |
13.2 |
192.1 |
3,334.3 |
540.5 |
2,636.0 |
157.7 |
3,563.9 |
31 |
United States (Total) |
293,655,404 |
465.5 |
5.5 |
32.2 |
136.7 |
291.1 |
3,517.1 |
729.9 |
2,365.9 |
421.3 |
3,980.6 |
(26) |
|
SOURCE: US Bureau of Justice Statistics,
2004
See also
References
- Bureau of Justice Statistics, crime
1974-2004
- "Hate Crime Reported by Victims and Police" -
Bureau of Justice Statistics
- Gabbidon, Shaun L./Greene, Helen Taylor Race, crime, and justice: a reader,
Routledge, 2005, pg. 217 ISBN 0415947073, 9780415947077
- Male College Students More Likely than Less-Educated Peers
to Commit Property Crimes Newswise, Retrieved on August 3,
2008.
- Report: 7 million Americans in justice system
- Prison Racism
- Race and the Criminal Justice System
- State University of New York - Binghamton
- Criminal Victimization in the United States --
Statistical Tables
- United States Department of Justice document,
(table 42)
- Hate Crime Reported by Victims and Police - Bureau
of Justice Statistics
- Lewan, Todd, "Unprovoked Beatings of Homeless Soaring",
Associated
Press, April 8, 2007.
- National Coalition for the
Homeless, Hate, "Violence, and Death on Main Street USA: A
report on Hate Crimes and Violence Against People Experiencing
Homelessness, 2006", February 2007.
- National Coalition for the Homeless: A Dream Denied.
- United States Crime Rates 1960 - 2006
- Twentieth Century Atlas - Homicide
- "Dan Gardner, Lies,
Damned Lies and Crime Statistics, The Ottawa Citizen, Feb. 15,
2006, reprint by author, Accessed June 28, 2009"
- Feasibility Study on Crime Comparisons Between
Canada and the United States Maire Gannon, Canadian Centre for
Justice Statistics, Statistics Canada, Cat. no. 85F0035XIE,
Accessed June 28, 2009
- Seventh United Nations Survey of Crime Trends and Operations of
Criminal Justice Systems, covering the period 1998 - 2000 (United
Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, Centre for International Crime
Prevention)
http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/cri_mur_wit_fir_percap-crime-murders-firearms-per-capita
- The data collection methodology for the offense of forcible
rape used by the Illinois state UCR Program (with the exception of
Rockford, Illinois) does not comply with national UCR Program
guidelines. Consequently, their figures for forcible rape and
violent crime (of which forcible rape is a part) are not published
in this table. Source:
- http://www.fbi.gov/ucr/cius2007/data/table_08.html
External links