FBI: Violent Crime Decreasing
Justice Department Credits Crackdowns On Gangs, Drug Dealers And Gun Crimes
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(CBS/96Rock)
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Interactive FBI Crime Statistics Explore the latest information on U.S. crime, from acts of violence to property damage.
Data released Monday show violent crime dipped slightly nationwide in 2007. That ended two years of increases in murders, robberies, and other kinds of the worst crime in U.S. cities.
An estimated 1.4 million violent crimes were reported across the country last year about 10,000 fewer, or a 0.7 percent drop, than 2006.
The number of burglaries, car thefts, arsons and other property crimes also dropped by 140,000, or 1.4 percent. That marked the fifth year of property crime decreases, the FBI said.
Justice Department spokesman Peter Carr said the data are the result of crackdowns on gangs, drug dealers and gun crimes, and used the drop to call on Congress for $200 million in additional funding to continue such efforts.
Mayors across the nation have pleaded for years for more federal funding to combat violent crime. They expressed tepid support for the $200 million when Attorney General Michael Mukasey called for it in January, and said far more dollars are needed.
The crime rate began to rise after historic lows that began during the Clinton administration and continued into President Bush's first years in the White House.
Monday's results confirm what the FBI predicted earlier this year: that increases in violence nationwide have waned, even if not as much as originally thought. Preliminary data released in January showed a 1.8 percent drop in violent crime for the first six months of 2007 a decrease more than twice as large as the full year's results.
The new data show that police nationwide made 14 million arrests in 2007, not counting traffic offenses.
From murders to carjackings, crime dropped in every category compared to last year, the FBI reported. Murders decreased by 0.6 percent, for example, as did larcenies and thefts. Rapes dropped by 2.5 percent to the lowest levels since 2000.
Except for arsons, property crime accounted for $17.6 billion in losses to victims, the data show. Police reported an estimated 9.8 million property crimes in 2007.
© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
- Crime is the number one entitlement mentality.
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- As long as you keep 25% of black males between 18-24 jailed, crime will continue to fall. Its not rocket science.
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- The country is not only lead by Bush but by senators and congressmen. Both Reps and Dems. It is our elected officals that are the problem. We need to vote everyone out of office and get some good hard working non-lawyers into office.
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- Why is it that most city say crime is up, but the FBI says it is going down. I think bush has something to do with this. I do not belive the FBI, on anything.
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- Great! Now all the illegal aliens are gettin'' lazy!
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- Likely the cars they steal do not have enough fuel to make it to the 7/11 to rob it.
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- And if anyone is confused,,I want less government.
With less government, the rules don''t tend to change.
The smartest, the most resourseful survive. And that''s the group I belong to. - Reply to this comment
- Justice Department Credits Crackdowns On Gangs, Drug Dealers And Gun Crimes
It will be on the up-tick in a couple of yrs, or less, when regular Americans can''t find work and feed themselves.
Then, it will be from some other made up crime, and the feds will illegalise something else to imprison Americans over.
Welcome to the Nazi Amerikkan statez. - Reply to this comment
- Should read: The crime rate began to rise after historic lows that began in the Clinton administration and ENDED in President Bush''s first years. What a mentor for the country. Thanks GOP.
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