Crime Victims: An Introduction to Victimology Seventh Edition

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Presentation transcript:

Crime Victims: An Introduction to Victimology Seventh Edition By Andrew Karmen Chapter Three: Sources of Information About Crime Victims The UCR and the NCVS

Introduction The Big Picture When and where do crimes occur? How often are weapons used? Are victims usually strangers? Do victims resist? Should they? How often are victims injured? What do victims lose?

Introduction How do we “put together” the Big Picture? Official statistics gathered by government Criminologists and victimologists gather their own data Special interest groups gather crime data

Use and Abuse of Statistics Statistics—meaningful numbers that reveal important information Official statistics—compiled and published by government Statistics— Provide realistic assessments of a threat posed to individuals by criminal activity Reveal patterns of criminal activity Reflect trends in criminal activity

Use and Abuse of Statistics Statistics –continued– Reveal costs and losses by criminal activity Project number of possible victims of a particular crime Evaluate effectiveness of recovery efforts and prevention strategies Identify statistical portraits (profiles) of a typical victim

Use and Abuse of Statistics Interpretation of Statistics Can be used to influence decision makers Can be used to reduce fears Can be used to support police administration Can be used to show something is not working

Caution However, be aware that statistics can be used to present one viewpoint, or be presented with a “spin.”

Uniform Crime Report (UCR) FBI gathers data from local police departments and publishes an annual report of crime statistics called the Uniform Crime Report (UCR) Part One Crimes Reported—8 Crimes Violent Crime Data—(4) Murder, Forcible Rape, Robbery and Aggravated Assault Property Crime Data—(4) Burglary, Larceny/Theft, Motor Vehicle Theft and Arson

Uniform Crime Report (UCR) One method of illustrating the UCR data is the “Crime Clock,” which shows how many seconds or minutes apart a particular crime or criminal event occurs—see Figure 3.1, Page 55

Uniform Crime Report (UCR) UCR reflects data for cities, counties and states Reports include: Number of complaints filed with police Proportion of cases solved Characteristics of offenders arrested

Uniform Crime Report (UCR) Shortcomings of UCR Report Underreporting a major problem Focus is offenders, not victims (homicide exception) Mixes attempted crimes and completed crimes Robbery includes all targets, does not single out households, banks, stores, etc. Uses ‘hierarchy rule,’ which reports only the most serious crime in a sequence of several criminal incidents

National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS) Tracks 46 Group A Offenses—Greater Breakdown in data: i.e. simple assault, vandalism, blackmail, fraud, statutory rape, kidnapping Gathers data relating to commission of crime, victim information, value of theft, race/ethnicity Originally scheduled for year 2000 implementation

The NCVS Another set of data is collected by the Bureau of Justice Statistics and is based on surveys with victims. It is called the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) and it often paints a different picture than the UCR

National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) Crime rates determined by public survey randomly selected by U. S. Census Bureau First survey, 1966—President’s Commission on Law Enforcement and the Administration of Justice The NCVS reports crimes in the form of rates per 1000

National Crime Victim Survey (NCVS) Crimes studied: Forcible rape & sexual assault Robbery Aggravated assault & simple assault Theft Household burglaries Motor vehicle thefts Only surveys those 12 years of age or older—Does NOT include crimes against those under 12 years of age

Four Reasons NCVS Questioned Bias of Information Credibility of Information Wives reporting abuse, girls reporting date rape, boys reporting robberies on bad drug deals Crimes against children under 12 not probed Over reporting Pollsters, not detectives, to sort out conflicting stories or facts

Estimated Victimization Rates Table 3.1, Pages 65-66 Crime rates reported by NCVS & UCR for 2006 presented

UCR vs. NCVS During 70s and 80s, there appeared to be low correlation between the two official sources of data in regards to victimization rates The two reporting systems again gave conflicting signals at the end of 2001 regarding violent crimes and property crimes

UCR vs. NCVS UCR—No data for victims except murder NCVS—No data on crimes of murder, bias/hate crimes, line of duty assaults on police No data on offenses against children under 12 No data on business robberies or burglaries No data on arson or victims of arson UCR—computes rates/100,000 population NCVS—computes rates/1,000 age 12 and older or/households (no number)

Key Terms Statistics Official Statistics Patterns Trends Profiles Spin Crime Clock Uniform Crime Report National Crime Victimization Survey Correlation Index crimes Hierarchy Rule Self report survey Memory decay Forward telescoping Range (Confidence Interval) Victimization Rates Raw numbers Big Picture Rates