FBI: Less Violent Crime In 2007
Crime On Decline After Two Years Of Increases; Numbers Up In Rural Areas
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Crime dipped slightly for the first half of 2007, the FBI reported Monday, Jan. 8, 2008 signaling a stop to a 2-year increase in violence nationwide. But violent crime appears to be rising, if slightly, in small cities and rural areas, the data shows. (CBS/AP)
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Interactive FBI Crime Statistics Explore the latest information on U.S. crime, from acts of violence to property damage.
Violent crime - including murders, rapes and robberies - dropped by 1.8 percent between January and June last year, the FBI's preliminary data show. Property crimes also decreased, including a 7.4 percent drop in car thefts and arsons by nearly 10 percent.
Among population groups, decreases in violent crime were largest -- 5.1 percent -- in cities with 250,000 to 499,999 residents, according to the report.
But violent crime appears to be rising, if slightly, in small cities and rural areas, the data shows.
The FBI data, compiled from local and state police departments around the nation, offer a snapshot of crime rates over the six month period. The numbers will not be finalized until later this year.
Still, the data appears to end two years of rising violent crime rates, which increased by 2.3 percent in 2005 and 1.9 percent in 2006.
"The latest numbers from the FBI are encouraging," Justice Department spokesman Peter Carr said. "The report suggests that violent crime remains near historic low levels."
Carr acknowledged some communities continue to face violence, and said the Justice Department "is committed to assisting our state and local partners in combating violent crime wherever it exists."
The data show that violent crime dropped dramatically in big cities with 1 million or more residents, where murders decreased by 6.5 percent and rapes by 14 percent.
Smaller cities and rural areas, however, saw a 1.1 percent increase in violence. And murder rates jumped by 5 percent in suburbs and by 3.2 percent in cities with between 50,000 and 100,000 residents, the FBI reported.
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So unless crime goes to zero, i.e. there are not crime stories to report, then crime is not down? - Reply to this comment
- Self defense is the most basic of human rights.
www.a-human-right.com - Reply to this comment
- FBI says violent crime down! Kind of makes you wonder about statistics!
The next two articles in line are:
Boy Kills Crying Baby With Bat, Police Say
Cops: Texas Man Killed, Cooked Girlfriend - Reply to this comment
Yeah, right.
Sounds like they''ve just found a way to "report" less crime.
An old compassionate conserv repub trick.- Reply to this comment
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