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Manslaughter - A person recklessly causes the death of another, or acting under extreme emotional disturbance, causes the death of another, or acting under circumstances when a person reasonably believes the circumstances provide a legal justification or excuse for his conduct constitutes manslaughter.
Summary findings
Violent Crime
Trends |
Victim/offender relationship | Time |
Place | Weapon use | Role of alcohol
Property Crime
Trends | Home ownership| Region | Urban, suburban, rural
Violent Crime
Murder, Rape and sexual assault, Robbery, Assault
Trends
Violent crime rates have declined since 1994, reaching the lowest
level ever recorded by the National Crime Victimization Survey in 2001.
Trends in violent victimizations, 1973-2001
See trends for Murder, Rape, Robbery, Assault
Victim/offender relationship
Males were more likely to be victimized by a stranger, and females were more likely to be violently victimized by a friend, an acquaintance, or an intimate.
During 2001 -- More than six in ten rape or sexual assault victims stated the offender was an intimate, other relative, a friend or an acquaintance.
Seventy-eight percent of males and 51% of females stated the individual(s) who robbed them was a stranger.
Violence against men and women by friends/acquaintances and strangers and intimate partner violence against females fell significantly between 1993 and 1998.
Family members were most likely to murder a young child -- About one in five child murders was committed by a family member -- while a friend or acquaintance was most likely to murder an older child age 15 to 17.
Intimates were identified by the victims of workplace violence as the perpetrator in about 1% of all workplace violent crime. About 40% of the victims of nonfatal violence in the workplace reported that they knew their offender.
For murder victims, 44% were related to or acquainted with their assailants; 13% of victims were murdered by strangers, while 43% of victims had an unknown relationship to their murderer in 2000.
Intimate violence
· In 2001, women experienced an
estimated 588,490 rape, sexual assault, robbery, aggravated assault and simple
assault victimizations at the hands of an intimate, down from 1.1 million in
1993. In 1993, men were victims of about 160,000 violent crimes, and in 2001 men
were victims of about 103,220 violent crimes by an intimate partner.
·On
average, from 1976-1998, the number of murders by intimates decreased by 4
percent per year for male victims and 1 percent per year for female
victims.
The sharpest decrease in number of intimate murder has been for
black male victims. A 74% percent decrease in the number of black men murdered
between 1976 and 1998 occurred.
Intimate violence is primarily a crime against women -- in 1998, females were
the victims in 72% of intimate murders and the victims of about 85% of nonlethal
intimate violence.
Women age 16-24 experienced the highest per capita rates
of intimate violence (19.6 victimizations per 1,000 women).
· Intimates
(current and former spouses, boyfriends and girlfriends) were identified by the
victims as the perpetrators of about 1% of all workplace violent crime.
In
surveys of 12 cities in 1998, the percentage of violent crime in which the
offender was a stranger to the victim ranged from 42% in Tucson to 74% in Los
Angeles.
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Time of occurrence
In 2001, while overall violent crimes were more likely to occur during the day than at the night, some crimes exhibited different patterns.
In 2001, 57% of incidents of violent crime occurred between 6 a.m. and 6 p.m. Almost two-thirds of rapes/sexual assaults occurred at night -- 6 p.m. to 6 a.m.
Place of occurrence
Workplace | School | Region | Urban,
suburban, rural
In 1995 about a quarter of incidents of violent crime
occurred at or near the victim's home. Among common locales for violent crimes
were on streets other than those near the victim's home (19%), at school (14%),
or at a commercial establishment (12%).
One in four violent crimes occurred in or near the victim's home. Including these, almost half occurred within a mile from home and 73% within five miles. Only 4% of victims of violent crime reported that the crime took place more than fifty miles from their home.
Twenty-three percent of victims of violent crime reported being involved in some form of leisure activity away from home at the time of their victimization. Twenty-one percent said they were at home, and another 21% mentioned they were at work or traveling to or from work when the crime occurred.
Workplace violence Of selected occupations examined from 1993 to 1999, police officers were the most vulnerable to be victims of workplace violence, as well as correctional officers, taxicab drivers, private security workers, and bartenders.
While working or on duty, U.S. residents experienced 1.7 million violent victimizations annually from 1993 to 1999 including 1.3 million simple assaults, 325,000 aggravated assaults, 36,500 rapes and sexual assaults, 70,000 robberies, and 900 homicides. Workplace violence accounted for 18% of all violent crime between 1993 to 1999.
Police officers were victims of a nonfatal violent crime while they were working or on duty between 1993 to 1999 at a rate of 261 per 1,000 officers.
School violence
In 1999, Students age 12 through 18 were
victims of about 186,000 serious violent crimes at school, and about 476,000
away from school. Between 1992 and 1999 victimization rates at school and away
from school declined.
· In 1993, 1995, 1997, and 1999, about 7 to 8 percent
of students in grades 9 to 12 reported being threatened or injured with a weapon
such as a gun, knife, or club on school property in the past 12 months.
· In
1999, about 7% of students carried a weapon such as a gun, knife, or club on
school property in the past 30 days.
· Thirty-three school-associated
homicides were of school age children between July 1, 1998 and June 30, 1999.
· The percent of students reporting street gang presence at school decreased
from 29% to 17% between 1995 and 1999.
Region
Crime rates differ across regions. In 2001 Western residents experienced the highest rates of violent victimization, and property crime in the nation.
In 2001 --
· 32 Westerners, 24 Midwesterners, 24 Southerners and 20
Northeasterners per 1,000 were violent crime victims.
See also Homicide
Trends in the United States and Data Online for characteristics of homicide
victims by State and large locality.
Urban, suburban and rural
Urban residents had the
highest violent victimization rates, followed by suburban resident rates. Rural
resident had the lowest rates.
In 2001--
· Eight urban residents, four suburban
residents and five rural residents per 1,000 were victims of an aggravated
assault, and urban residents were robbed at about 4 times the rate of rural
residents.
· Suburban and rural residents were victims of simple assault at
similar rates.
Surveys of 12 cities in 1998 found that black residents in
urban areas experienced a higher rate of violent crime than urban whites in a
majority of the cities.
See also Homicide Trends in the United States and Data Online for
characteristics of homicide victims by State and large locality.
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Weapon use
In 26% of the incidents of violent crime, a
weapon was present.
Offenders had or used a weapon in 55% of all robberies, compared with 7% of all rapes/sexual assaults in 2001.
Homicides are most often committed with guns, especially handguns. In 2000, 52% of homicides were committed with handguns, 14% with other guns, 14% with knives, 5% with blunt objects, and 15% with other weapons.
In each of 12 cities surveyed in 1998, victims said that less than half of
the violent crimes involved a weapon.
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The
role of alcohol in crime victimization
About 3 million violent crimes occur
each year in which victims perceive the offender to have been drinking at the
time of the offense. Among those victims who provided information about the
offender's use of alcohol, about 35% of the victimizations involved an offender
who had been drinking.
Two-thirds of victims who suffered violence by an intimate (a current or former spouse, boyfriend, or girlfriend) reported that alcohol had been a factor. Among spouse victims, 3 out of 4 incidents were reported to have involved an offender who had been drinking. By contrast, an estimated 31% of stranger victimizations where the victim could determine the absence or presence of alcohol were perceived to be alcohol-related.
For about 1 in 5 violent victimizations involving perceived alcohol use by
the offender, victims also reported they believed the offender to have been
using drugs as well.
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Property
crime
Property crimes include burglary, theft, and motor vehicle theft.
Trends
Property crime continued a 27-year decline.
Trends in property
crime victimizations, 1973-2001
See trends in burglary, theft, and motor
vehicle theft.
Property crime makes up about three-quarters of all crime in
the United States.
Overall, about 85% of all burglaries were successful.
About 72% of all motor vehicle thefts were successful.
Of the 13.7 million completed thefts of property in 2001, there were 4.7
million property thefts of less than $50, 4.8 million between $50 and $249, and
3.2 million of $250 or more.
Home ownership
Property crime, regardless of the type, occurred to those living in rented property.
In 2001--
· Households in rented property experienced 210, while those
that are owned experienced 146 overall property crimes per 1,000 households.
· Rented households were burglarized at rates 79% higher than owned
households.
· Households living in rented property had almost twice the rate
of motor vehicle theft than those in owned property.
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top
Region
The Western portion of the nation experiences the highest
rates of property crime overall in the nation.
In 2001--
· Western households had at least slightly higher rates of
property crime and theft of all regions.
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top
Urban, suburban and rural
Urban households have historically been and continue to be the most vulnerable to property crime, burglary, motor vehicle theft and theft in the United States.
In 2001--
· Suburban households experienced all forms of property crime
except burglary at rates higher than those for rural households.
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BJS publications
This list is in order of
the most recent publication first. Additional titles are listed on other topical
pages and a comprehensive list is contained on the BJS publications page. To see
a full abstract of a publication with links to electronic versions of the
publication, click on the title below.
Reporting Crime to the Police, 03/03.
Presents National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) data from 1992 to 2000 on
non-lethal crimes against persons age 12 or older that were reported to police.
NCJ 195710
Intimate Partner Violence, 1993-2001, 2/03. Reports on trends in
intimate partner violence of persons age 12 or older in the United States using
data from the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) and the FBI's
Supplementary Homicide Reports. This Crime Data Brief updates some of the data
in Intimate Partner Violence, a more detailed report on this subject published
in 2000. NCJ 197838
Indicators of School Crime and Safety, 2002, 11/02.
Examines crime occurring in school as well as on the way to and from school. A
collaborative report from the Bureau of Justice Statistics and the National
Center for Education Statistics, it presents data on crime at school from the
perspectives of students, teachers, principals, and the general population,
using a comprehensive array of sources. NCJ 196753
Indicators of School Crime
and Safety, 2001, 10/01. NCJ 190075
Indicators of School Crime and Safety,
2000, 10/00. NCJ 184176
Indicators of School Crime and Safety, 1999, 9/99.
NCJ 178906
Indicators of School Crime and Safety, 1998, 10/98. NCJ 172215
Crime and the Nation's Households, 2000 with Trends 1994-2000, 09/02.
Presents the percentages of households touched by rape, robbery, assault,
burglary, theft, and motor vehicle theft, as well as the victims' race,
ethnicity, income, region, and place of residence. NCJ 194107
Crime and the
Nation's Households, 1992, 9/93.NCJ 143288
Criminal Victimization 2001:
Changes 2000-2001 with Trends 1993-2001, 9/02. This report summarizes criminal
victimization levels and rates in 2001. It also includes other findings about
the characteristics of victims and examines trends in victimization rates from
1993 to 2001. NCJ 194610
Criminal Victimization 2000: Changes 1999-2000 with
Trends 1993-2000, 6/01. NCJ 187007
Criminal Victimization 1999: Changes
1998-99 with Trends 1993-99, 8/00. NCJ 182734
Criminal Victimization 1998:
Changes 1997-98 with Trends 1993-98, 7/99. NCJ 176353
Criminal Victimization
1997: Changes 1996-97 with Trends 1993-97, 12/98. NCJ 173385
Criminal
Victimization 1996: Changes 1995-96 with Trends 1993-96, 11/97. NCJ 165812
Criminal Victimization in the United States 1995, 5/00. Presents detailed
data on major variables measured by the National Crime Victimization Survey
(NCVS) for 1995. NCJ 171129
After 1995, these data are available only in
electronic formats. See Criminal Victimization in the United States -
Statistical Tables 8/02.
Criminal Victimization in the United States 1994,
5/97. NCJ 162126
Criminal Victimization in the United States 1993, 5/96. NCJ
151657
Criminal Victimization in the United States 1992, 5/95. NCJ 145125
Third-Party Involvement in Violent Crime, 1993-99, 7/02. Presents detailed
information about third-party involvement in violent crime, using the National
Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS). NCJ 189100
Violence in the Workplace,
1993-99, 12/01. Presents data for 1993 through 1999 from the National Crime
Victimization Survey estimating the extent of workplace crime in the United
States. NCJ 190076
Other publications on this topic:
Workplace Violence,
1992-96, 7/98. NCJ 168634
Violence and Theft in the Workplace, 7/94. NCJ
148199
Intimate Partner Violence and Age of Victim, 10/01. Provides
estimates of violence by intimates (current or former spouses, girlfriends, and
boyfriends) with an emphasis on the victim's age using the National Crime
Victimization Survey (NCVS), 1993-99. NCJ 187635
Hate Crimes Reported in
NIBRS, 1997-99, 9/01. Utilizes data from the FBI’s National Incident-Based
Reporting Program (NIBRS) to describe hate crimes reported to law enforcement in
NIBRS-participating jurisdictions, between 1997 and 1999. NCJ 186765
Injuries
from Violent Crime, 1992-98, 6/01. Presents data from the redesigned National
Crime Victimization Survey, examining injuries as a result of violent
victimizations. NCJ 168633
Policing and Homicide, 1976-98: Justifiable
Homicide of Felons by Police and Murder of Police by Felons, 03/01. Presents
annual trends from 1976 to 1998 in two types of homicide: justifiable homicides
of felons by police, and murders of police officers by felons. NCJ
180987
Violent Victimization and Race, 1993-98, 3/01. Presents incidence
estimates and per capita rates of violent victimization of whites, blacks,
American Indians and Asians in 1998, and includes victimization trends, 1993-98.
NCJ 176354
Sexual Victimization of College Women, 1/01. A joint report from
BJS and the National Institute of Justice which explores the prevalence and
nature of sexual assault occurring at colleges throughout the nation. NCJ
182369
Urban, Suburban, and Rural Victimization, 1993-98, 10/00 Examines the
extent of criminal victimization in urban, suburban, and rural areas using 1993
to 1998 National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) data. NCJ 182031
Firearm
Injury and Death from Crime, 1993-97 10/00 Reports on the incidence of fatal and
nonfatal firearm injuries that result from crime. Most of the data presented are
from the FBI’s Supplementary Homicide Reports and Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention's Vital Statistics and the Firearms Injury Surveillance Study
which collects data on injuries treated in hospital emergency departments. NCJ
182993
Sexual Assault of Young Children as Reported to Law Enforcement:
Victim, Incident, and Offender Characteristics 7/00. Presents findings from the
National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS) regarding sexual assault,
especially of young children. NCJ 182990
Intimate Partner Violence, 5/00.
Provides information on fatal and nonfatal violence by intimates (current or
former spouses, girlfriends, or boyfriends) from 1993 through 1998. NCJ
178247
Homicide Trends in the United States: 1998 Update, 3/00. Outlines the
primary findings from the section of the BJS website about homicide patterns and
trends since 1976 (www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/homicide/homtrnd.htm). NCJ 179767
Homicide Trends in the United States, 1/99. NCJ 173956
Criminal
Victimization and Perceptions of Community Safety in 12 Cities, 1998, 6/99.
Presents survey data from 12 cities regarding criminal victimization and
residents' attitudes toward their neighborhood, their city, and the local
policing services. NCJ 173940
Carjackings in the United States, 1992-96,
3/99. Presents data from the National Crime Victimization Survey about
carjackings (completed or attempted robbery of a motor vehicle by a stranger to
the victim) that occurred during 1992-96. NCJ 171145
Carjacking, 3/94. NCJ
147002
Perceptions of Neighborhood Crime, 1995, 5/98. Presents data from the
American Housing Survey (U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development) and
the BJS National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) about how residents perceive
crime in their neighborhoods and their relative likelihood of victimization. NCJ
165811
Students' Report of School Crime: 1989 and 1995, 4/98. Compares
findings from the 1989 and 1995 School Crime Supplements to the BJS National
Crime Victimization Survey, discussing student reports of victimization, drug
availability, street gang presence, and gun presence at school. NCJ 169607
Alcohol and Crime, 4/98. Provides an overview of national information on the
role of alcohol in violent victimization and its use among those convicted of
crimes, including victim perceptions of alcohol use by offenders at the time of
the crime. NCJ 168632
Violence by Intimates, 3/98. Reports findings about
violence between people who have an intimate relationship -- spouses, exspouses,
boyfriends, girlfriends, and former boyfriends and girlfriends from statistical
data maintained by the Bureau of Justice Statistics and the Federal Bureau of
Investigation. NCJ 167237
Sex Differences in Violent Victimization, 1994,
9/97. Contains detailed information about specific violent crime types and
contextual characteristics of violence against both women and men and their
relationship to those who victimize them. NCJ 164508
Violence-Related
Injuries Treated in Hospital Emergency Departments, 8/97. Presents findings from
a study of violence related-injuries treated in hospital emergency departments
in 1994. The study was conducted using the Consumer Product Safety Commission's
National Electronic Injury Surveillance System (NEISS) program. NCJ 156921
Sex Offenses and Offenders 2/97. Reports on more than two dozen statistical
datasets maintained by the Bureau of Justice Statistics and on data from the
Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) Program of the FBI to provide a comprehensive
overview of current knowledge about the incidence and prevalence of violent
victimization by sexual assault, the response of the criminal justice system to
such crimes, and the characteristics of those who commit sexual assault or rape.
NCJ 163392
Domestic and Sexual Violence Data Collection: A Report to
Congress Under the Violence Against Women Act, 7/96. Reports how States and the
Federal government collect data on the incidence of sexual and domestic violence
offenses. NCJ 161405
Violence between Intimates, 11/94. Using data from a
variety of sources, this report examines murders, rapes, robberies, and assaults
committed by spouses, ex-spouses, boyfriends, or girlfriends. NCJ 149259
Murder in Families, 7/94. This BJS Special Report is a survey of murder
cases disposed in 1988 in the courts of large urban counties. NCJ 143498
Crime and Neighborhoods , 7/94. Compares victimization levels and
perceptions of neighborhood crime for the Nation's households using data from a
variety of sources. NCJ 147005
Guns and Crime: Handgun Victimization,
Firearm Self-Defense, and Firearm Theft, 5/94. Provides estimates of the extent
of handgun crime in the United States through 1992, as well as estimates from
the National Crime Victimization Survey of thefts of firearms and the extent of
firearm use for self-defense. NCJ 147003
Violent Crime, 4/94. Summarizes
1973-92 trends in rape, robbery, and assault from the National Crime
Victimization Survey; homicide data from Vital Statistics of the United States,
National Center for Health Statistics; and 1992 murder data from the FBI Uniform
Crime Reports. NCJ 147486
Carjacking, 3/94. Presents the first National
Crime Victimization Survey estimates of the extent and characteristics of the
recently identified crime of carjacking. NCJ 147002
The Costs of Crime to
Victims, 2/94. Provides information on both the overall and the average cost of
crime to victims. NCJ 145865
School Crime 1991, 9/91. Analyzes the
experiences of U.S. students in grades 6-12 regarding crime victimization at
school, the availability of illicit substances, gang presence, fear of crime,
and school security measures. NCJ 131645
Selected
statistics
Criminal Victimization in the United States -
Statistical tables
in spreadsheet and portable document format files.
Subjects include:
· Demography of victims
· Victims and offenders
·
Geography
· The crime event
· Victims and the criminal justice system
· Series victimization
1996-2001 data are currently available, 01/03
See Data Online for State and local data on crime trends and homicide trends and victim characteristics
Related sites
From BJS
· Data Online for
criminal offenses and homicide trends by State and locality.
· Firearms and
Crime
· Homicide Trends in the United States
· Improving the Quality and
Accuracy of Bias Crime Statistics Nationally: An Assessment of the First Ten
Years of Bias Crime Data Collection
Other relevant sites
· Reports from
the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention:
Child Abuse
Reported to the Police
Juvenile Victims of Property Crimes
· In The
Crossfire: The Impact of Gun Violence on Public Housing Communities (Pdf file,
222 KB) from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development which includes
data from the National Crime Victimization Survey.
· Office for Victims of
Crime
· Violence Against Women Office
· National Center for Education
Statistics
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