CrimeRisk


Content

CrimeRisk is a block group and higher level geographic database consisting of a series of standardized indexes for a range of serious crimes against both persons and property. It is derived from an extensive analysis of several years of crime reports from the vast majority of law enforcement jurisdictions nationwide. The crimes include murder, rape, robbery, assault, burglary, larceny, and motor vehicle theft. These categories are the primary reporting categories used by the FBI in its Uniform Crime Report (UCR), with the exception of Arson, for which data is very inconsistently reported at the jurisdictional level.

 

In accordance with the reporting procedures using in the UCR reports, aggregate indexes have been prepared for personal and property crimes separately, as well as a total index. While this provides a useful measure of the relative “overall” crime rate in an area, it must be recognized that these are unweighted indexes, in that a murder is weighted no more heavily than a purse snatching in the computation. For this reason, caution is advised when using any of the aggregate index values. 

 

Methodology

The primary source of CrimeRisk was a careful compilation and analysis of the FBI Uniform Crime Report databases. On an annual basis, the FBI collects data from each of about 16,000 separate law enforcement jurisdictions at the city, county, and state levels and compiles these into its annual Uniform Crime Report (UCR). The latest national crime report can be obtained either from the FBI web site in Adobe Portable Document (PDF) format or can be ordered directly from the FBI. While useful, the UCR provides detailed data only for the largest cities, counties, and metropolitan areas. 

 

Virtually all jurisdictions nationwide participate in the UCR program. In 1996, the overall coverage rate was 95%, with 97% coverage in metropolitan areas. Rural coverage is somewhat lower at 87% and non-metropolitan area cities at 90%.

 

In order to undertake the analysis, AGS obtained detailed jurisdictional level data for the years 1990 - 1996 (the latest year currently available) and supplemented these detailed statistics with 1999 preliminary UCR statistics at the State level and for cities and metropolitan areas where those have been released.  We are now using UCR data from 1996-2003.

 

A considerable effort was made to correct a number of problems that are prevalent within the FBI databases, including:

 

  • The standardization of jurisdictional names: the FBI does not employ Census bureau codes in its databases and the jurisdictional names contain numerous typographical errors and format discrepancies which needed to be manually corrected
  • Reporting by individual jurisdictions can be inconsistent from year to year, in that data for some jurisdictions is missing for one or more years and required handling
  • Reporting for some crime types is inconsistent between jurisdictions. The FBI handles this by simply suppressing the statistics entirely for those areas. This primarily affects the rape category for Illinois, where statistics are suppressed for all but the largest jurisdictions. These missing values were handled via the modeling process, in which rape estimates were prepared for these jurisdictions by using a model which related rape incidence to other crime types 
  • The standardization of the database to account for jurisdictional overlaps. For example, the California Highway Patrol has jurisdiction over only state and Interstate highways in urban areas.
  • Crime rates in general have been declining over the past several years, so it was necessary to adjust the historical data to reflect current crime rates.

 

Once this correction and standardization effort was completed, the database consisted of a time series of six years of data covering:

  • All cities and towns which have their own police agency
  • All cities and towns where policing for the local jurisdiction is contracted to a higher level agency but which tracks statistics separately .
  • A record for each county, which covers the population not covered by either of the two cases above. This is normally either a County Sheriff (or equivalent) or a State level jurisdiction, which reports incidence of crime by county (e.g. in New York, the State Trooper).

 

The initial models were undertaken using a subset of this database. In the smallest cities, a single murder will have a profound effect on the crime rate per 100,000 population that would severely distort the resulting models. Cities with less than 2,500 people were reassigned to their parent counties for the purpose of the analysis. A wide range of 1990 Census and current year demographic attributes was extracted from AGS’ databases for the remaining areas (approximately 8,500 separate “jurisdictions”). This database was then used as the primary modeling database and was used later for scaling purposes.

 

Each of the seven crime types was modeled separately, using an initial range of about 65 socio-economic characteristics taken from the 2000 Census and AGS’ current year estimates. Separate models were constructed for each of the nine Census regions (e.g. New England, East North Central, Pacific) in order to account for regional differences in crime rates and the demographic characteristics, which underlay them. The models constructed typically accounted for over 85% of the variance in crime rates at this “jurisdiction” level, although it should be noted that the results for property crimes were generally more reliable than for personal crimes.

 

The results of these models were then applied to the block group level using the same demographic attributes compiled at the block group level. The resulting estimates were then scaled to match the master database of 8,500 jurisdictions. For cities, the block groups within each city were scaled to match the city total. For areas outside of these cities (or for smaller centers), results were scaled to match the county total after adjusting for those cities scaled separately.

 

The final crime rate estimates were then weighted by population and aggregated to the national totals.

 

CrimeRisk Variables

Current Year Estimates
Total Crime Index
Personal Crime Index

  Murder
  Rape
  Robbery
  Assault
Property Crimes
  Burglary
  Larceny
  Motor Vehicle Theft 

 

Pricing

Level of Data Size "A" Size "B" Size "C" Size "D" United States County or CBSA
Block Group* $300. $400. $500. $600. $2,000. $200/$400.
Census Tract†  $150. $200. $250. $300. $1,000.  
Zip Code $150. $200. $250. $300. $1,000.
Place   $500.
County $320.

 

 

Size "A" States

Size "B" States

Size "C" States

Size "D" States

Alaska, Arizona, Delaware, D.C., Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Oregon, Rhode Island, Utah, Vermont, Wyoming Alabama, Colorado, Connecticut, Maine, Maryland, Mississippi, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Washington, West Virginia Arkansas, Georgia, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Missouri, North Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, Wisconsin California, Florida, Michigan, Illinois, Minnesota, New York, New Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas

 

Notes:

* Block Group Data also includes Census Tract, County, Place & State level data.
†  Census Tract Data also includes Country and State level data.
  Zip Code data also includes County and State level data.

 

AGS is a trademark of Applied Geographic Solutions, Thousand Oaks, CA