BJS Director Jan Chaiken stated the decline in the violent victimization rate began in 1994 and interrupted a rising trend that had existed since the mid-1980s, and theft offenses continued a 20-year pattern of declining rates. BJS estimates there were 39.6 million personal and household crimes of theft and violence during 1995, compared to 42.4 million the year before, which is a 6.6-percent decline. In 1995 rape decreased almost 18 percent, robbery fell 14 percent, aggravated assault declined 19 percent, and purse-snatching and pocket-picking were down 18 percent. Murders were not included in BJS's National Crime Victimization Survey because of an inability to interview victims. According to the FBI's preliminary 1995 data, murder estimates fell 8 percent from the level of the previous year. Approximately 14.4 million of the violent and property crimes were reported to the police during 1995, down from the 15.2 million reported the previous year. 3 tables and 1 figure
Victims Report Nine Percent Fewer Violent Crimes Last Year
NCJ Number
162603
Date Published
September 1996
Length
8 pages
Annotation
According to preliminary estimates by the U.S. Justice Department's Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS), there were an estimated 9.9 million violent crimes during 1995, compared to approximately 10.9 million during 1994.
Abstract
Date Published: September 1, 1996