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- FBI
Releases Uniform Crime Report for 2000
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UPDATE:
UCR data for more recent years are also available by clicking here.
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- The Federal Bureau of Investigation has released its
Uniform Crime Report for 2000.
The FBI said in a press release that there was virtually no change in
the Crime Index in 2000 compared to the 1999 figures.
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The Crime Index (composed of crimes in seven categories,
see below) decreased 0.2 percent
in 2000, the smallest year-to-year decrease in volume since 1991.
Both violent and property crime experienced marginal declines in volume
when compared to the 1999 volume reported the Bureau.
According to the report, an estimated 11.6 million
offenses were reported to law enforcement agencies across the Nation
in 2000. This average of 4,124.0 crimes for every 100,000 inhabitants
is 3.3 percent less than the 1999 rate, 18.9 percent less than the
1996 rate, and 30.1 percent less than the crime rate recorded in 1991.
The report only covers crimes reported to law enforcement agencies
(approximately 17,000 agencies, representing 94% of the U.S. population
supplied data for the 2000 report).
The FBI's Uniform Crime Reporting Program was initiated
in 1929 to collect information on serious crimes in the following
categories:
- homicide
- forcible rape
- robbery
- aggravated assault
- burglary
- larceny
- theft
- motor vehicle theft
- arson
- Additionally, the Program collects
information on hate crimes and on persons
arrested for twenty-two other less serious crime
categories. Hate crime offenses cover incidents
motivated by race, religion, sexual orientation,
and ethnicity/national origin.
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