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- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!cs.utexas.edu!gateway
- From: barreau@wam.umd.edu (Deborah Kay Barreau)
- Newsgroups: misc.legal
- Subject: Criminal Victimization '91 (BJS Press Release)
- Date: 29 Dec 1992 14:49:55 -0600
- Organization: UTexas Mail-to-News Gateway
- Lines: 91
- Sender: daemon@cs.utexas.edu
- Message-ID: <199212292049.AA14212@rac1.wam.umd.edu>
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-
- ADVANCE FOR RELEASE AT 5 P.M. EST
- BJS
- MONDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1992
- 202-307-0784
-
- FEW SIGNIFICANT CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION RATE CHANGES 1990-1991
-
- WASHINGTON, D.C. -- U.S. residents 12 years old or older
- experienced 34.7 million crimes last year, according to a Bureau of
- Justice Statistics (BJS) report published today. BJS, a Department
- of Justice component in the Office of Justice Programs, estimated
- that there were 6.4 million violent crimes, 12.5 million thefts and
- 15.8 million household crimes during 1991.
- The total number of personal and household crimes committed
- last year did not change by a statistically significant amount from
- the 1990 total, the report noted. Rates in several of the major
- crime categories have generally been declining since the National
- Crime Victimization Survey began in 1973.
- "The rates of robbery, aggravated assault and household
- burglary each showed no statistically significant changes from 1990
- to 1991," noted BJS Director Steven D. Dillingham. Because rapes
- accounted for only about one-half of one percent of all crimes
- measured by the survey in 1991, last year's rate for rape was not
- statistically different from any annual rape rate measured during
- the past ten years.
- The violent crime rate last year was 11 percent lower than
- during 1981, and the burglary rate was almost 40 percent
- lower than in 1981. The only crime to show a statistically
- significant rate increase during the past decade was motor vehicle
- theft--up almost 28 percent.
- The crime victimization survey is the nation's second
- largest on-going household measure. Last year the survey
- interviewed the residents of a nationally representative sample of
- 42,000 households and obtained crime victim data from approximately
- 83,000 people.
- During 1991, personal thefts decreased slightly, reaching 61
- thefts per 1,000 U.S. inhabitants, the lowest survey rate recorded
- in the survey's 19 years. The 1991 household crime rate was not
- significantly different from that of 1990, when it was the lowest
- since 1973.
- The violent crime rate peaked in 1981 with 35.3 victimizations
- per 1,000 persons aged 12 years old or older. The 1991 rate was
- 31.3 per 1,000--an 11 percent reduction during the decade, the
- report noted.
- One category to show a significant rate increase during the
- 1990-1991 period was simple assaults, which grew an estimated 11
- percent. Aggravated assaults (attacks with a weapon or resulting
- in serious injuries) did not change significantly--the 1991 rate
- was 7.8 per 1,000 U.S. residents.
- The percentage of victims reporting crimes to police
- remained unchanged between 1990 and 1991. Thirty-eight percent
- of all crimes were reported to law enforcement agencies last
- year, including 49 percent of all violent crimes.
- Blacks were more likely than were whites to be violent crime
- victims. The rate of violent victimization among blacks was about
- 50 percent higher than the rate among whites. Rates of
- violent victimization also were highest among people under 25 years
- old, residents of central cities and people living in poor
- households.
- Last year there were 13.5 robberies for every 1,000 black
- residents, 4.4 robberies for every 1,000 whites and 7.4 robberies
- for every 1,000 residents in other racial classifications.
- Hispanics and non-Hispanics generally had similar
- victimization rates except for robberies and for total violent
- crime. Hispanics were robbery victims at a rate of 10 such
- offenses per 1,000 residents, compared to 5.2 for non-Hispanics.
- Overall, the violent crime victimization rate was 36.2 per 1,000
- for Hispanics, compared to 30.8 per 1,000 for non-Hispanics.
- In every personal crime category males sustained significantly
- higher victimization rates than did females. For example, males
- were more than 2.5 times as likely as females to experience
- aggravated assaults.
- People 65 years old or older generally had the lowest
- victimization rates. The assault rate for people 16 to 19 years
- old was 79.2 per 1,000 residents, compared to 1.8 per 1,000 people
- 65 years old or more.
- Single copies of the BJS bulletin, "Criminal Victimization
- 1991" NCJ-136947) and other BJS information and publications may be
- obtained from the National Criminal Justice Reference Service, Box
- 6000, Rockville, Maryland 20850. The telephone number is
- 1-301-251-5500. The toll-free number from places other than
- Maryland and metropolitan Washington, D.C., is 1-800-732-3277.
- Data from the tables and graphs used in the BJS report can
- be made available to news organizations in spreadsheet files on 5,"
- and 3+" diskettes by calling (202) 307-0784. The statistics are
- also available from the National Archive of Criminal Justice Data
- at the University of Michigan by calling 1-800-999-0950.
- # # #
- 92-89 (N)
- After hours contact: Stu Smith 301-983-9354
-