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Los Angeles Times Staff Writer - September 25,
2007
Violent crime rises again
Homicides, rape, robbery or aggravated assault climb nearly
2% last year, FBI records show. But property crimes are down.
By Jordy Yager
WASHINGTON - Violent crime increased in the
United States in 2006 for the second consecutive year, continuing
an upward climb after more than a decade of declines, according
to statistics released Monday by the FBI.
Violent crime incidents -- defined as homicide,
rape, robbery and aggravated assault -- increased 1.9%, to
1.41 million, in 2006. Homicides increased 1.8%, to 17,034.
The volume of violent crimes was higher than expected; preliminary
data released by the FBI this summer showed a 1.3% increase
over 2005.
"To some extent, the rise that we saw this year
and last has been because we're at a relative low point,"
said James Alan Fox, a criminal justice professor at Northeastern
University in Boston. "When you're that low, the only way
to go is up."
The violent crime rate -- measured as incidents
per 100,000 people -- peaked in the early 1990s, then steadily
declined until 2005.
Justice Department spokesman Brian Roehrkasse
noted that the overall crime rate declined to its lowest level
in 30 years. "While there's encouraging news in the latest
crime rates . . . violent crime remains a challenge for some
communities," Roehrkasse said.
Fox said the increase in violent crime could
be attributed to a mix of factors, including more gang activity
and less law enforcement. And the nation is "not dealing with
the gun issue as aggressively as we were a decade ago," he
said.
Young men's job prospects are a key factor in
crime statistics, said Alfred Blumstein, a professor at Carnegie
Mellon University in Pittsburgh who specializes in criminology.
"A job is what turns a crime-prone teen into a responsible
adult."
Property crimes, which outnumber violent crimes
by nearly 10 to 1, declined 1.9% last year, to 9.98 million.
Property crime rates dropped to their lowest level since 1987.
In that category only burglary was up, by 1.3%; larceny/theft
and motor vehicle thefts declined.
Among specific violent crime categories, the
greatest increase was in the number of robberies, which rose
7.2% from 2005. The number of rapes and aggravated assaults
dropped.
In California, violent crimes rose 2.1%, to
194,120. Homicides declined 0.7%, to 2,485.
The FBI's data are from the Uniform Crime Reporting
Program, which collects crime statistics from nearly 17,000
law enforcement agencies throughout the country. Its category
for homicide -- labeled "murder and nonnegligent manslaughter"
-- excludes justifiable homicide and deaths caused by negligence,
suicide and accident.
Copyright 2007 Los Angeles Times
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