U.S. Department of Justice Office of Justice Programs Bureau of Justice Statistics Bureau of Justice Statistics Bulletin Criminal Victimization 1993 May 1995, NCJ-151658 This report is one in a series. More recent editions may be available. To view a list of all in the series go to http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pubalp2.htm#ncvs Full text with tables available from: Bureau of Justice Statistics Clearinghouse 800-732-3277 Box 179 Annapolis Junction, MD. 20701-0179 FAX Number (for report orders and mail list sign up only): 410-792-4358 Criminal Victimization 1993 By Lisa Bastian BJS Statistician In 1993 U.S. residents age 12 or older experienced a total of 43.6 million crimes 3/4 nearly 11 million violent victimizations and over 32 million property crimes. Expressed as the number of crimes per 1,000 persons or households, crime rates indicate that there were 52 violent victimizations per 1,000 persons and 322 property crimes per 1,000 households. Violent crimes, a quarter of the total that victims described, include rape and sexual assault, robbery, and both aggravated and simple assault, from a victimization survey, and homicide, from crimes reported to police. Property crimes are comprised of burglaries, motor vehicle thefts, and thefts of other property. About 4 in 10 of the violent crimes estimated by the victimization survey, and about 3 in 10 of the property crimes, were reported to the police. For both violent and property crimes, blacks were more likely than whites -- and urban residents more likely than rural residents -- to be victimized. Highlights Of the 43.6 million criminal victimizations that victims described in 1993, 10.9 million were rapes, robberies, or assaults. Among the almost 100 million households in the United States, there were over 32 million property crimes in 1993. * Violent victimization rates, the number of crimes during 1993 per 1,000 persons age 12 or older, included: 2 rapes or attempted rapes 1 sexual assault 4 robberies with property taken 3 assaults with serious injury. * Victims sustained a rape or some other non-rape injury in over 2.6 million incidents in 1993; about 29% of the robberies involved injury. * Males, blacks, and the young were more likely than others to experience violent crime -- --1 in 16 males and 1 in 23 females --1 in 15 blacks and 1 in 20 whites --1 in 8 persons age 12 to 15 and 1 in 179 persons age 65 or older. * Persons in households with an income below $7,500 a year were over twice as likely as those from households with $75,000 or more to be victims of violence. * City dwellers were robbed at more than 3 times the rate of rural residents. * The households of city dwellers were victimized by motor vehicle theft at almost 5 times the rate of rural households. * An estimated 35% of the crimes described by victims were reported to law enforcement authorities. Violent victimizations had the highest reporting rate, 42%, compared to 27% of personal thefts and 34% of household property crimes. The National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) is an ongoing survey of households, each year interviewing about 100,000 persons in 50,000 households. Improved NCVS survey procedures and a revised questionnaire now enable BJS to count crimes that were excluded or unreported in previous years. To learn about these changes, see The NCVS redesign. This Bulletin includes not only the 1993 victimization estimates from the redesigned survey but also the first tabulations of 1992 based data on the redesigned survey. 10.9 million violent crimes in 1993 Victims sustained 10.9 million violent crimes. These crimes included almost a half million rapes and sexual assaults, 1.3 million robberies, over 2.5 million aggravated assaults, 6.5 million simple assaults, and 24,526 murders. In terms of crime rates per 1,000 persons age 12 or older, during 1993 there were 2 rapes or attempted rapes, 1 sexual assault, 6 completed or attempted robberies, 12 aggravated assaults, and 31 simple assaults. Murders were the least frequent violent victimizations -- in 1993 about 1 murder per 10,000 persons. In over 70% of all violent crime incidents the crime was attempted but not completed. Such incidents ranged from attempts to rape or rob to threats of violence, which may or may not have included a weapon. Over 2.6 million incidents, nearly a quarter of the violent crimes, resulted in injury to the victim. (Rapes are included as injuries.) About 29% of all the robberies occurring that year involved injury to the victim. Burglaries, motor vehicle thefts, and household thefts Most crimes sustained in 1993 were property crimes. Nearly three-quarters of all victimizations studied by the survey, or 32 million victimizations, were burglaries, motor vehicle thefts, or thefts. About 6 million household burglaries occurred in 1993. Almost a third of the total, 1.9 million victimizations, were forcible entries. Three million were unlawful entries without force, and 1.2 million were attempts to enter using force. There were close to 2 million car thefts and an additional 24 million property thefts. The largest share of the property thefts, 9.6 million or 40%, involved a loss of property valued at less than $50 by the victim. In about 18%, or 4.3 million, the loss was estimated to be at least $250. There were also 1.2 million theft attempts. Expressed as a property crime rate, there were 60 burglaries, 20 motor vehicle thefts, and 243 property thefts per 1,000 households in 1993. Victimizations reported to law enforcement authorities Overall, 42% of the violent crimes committed in 1993 were reported to the police. More than a third of all rapes were reported, while 19% of sexual assaults were brought to the attention of law enforcement authorities. Fifty-six percent of robberies, 53% of aggravated assaults, and 35% of simple assaults were reported to the police. About a third of all the property crimes that victims recalled to NCVS were reported to the police. However, motor vehicle thefts were more likely than any other crime to be reported; the police were informed in 78% of all motor vehicle thefts or attempted thefts. Compared to personal thefts or household property thefts, violent victimizations had the highest reporting rate. Victims may cite many reasons for reporting or not reporting particular crimes to law enforcement authorities. (For analyses of reasons why victims reported or did not report crimes, see "Criminal Victimization in the United States, 1992," NCJ-145125, March 1994.) When victims report violent incidents to the police a common reason they give is that they wanted to prevent future crimes from being committed against them by the offender or offenders. Victims also reported incidents because they thought it was the right thing to do. Among victims who chose not to report a violent crime many indicated that they felt the matter was private or personal in nature. Victims of personal and property thefts frequently reported the incidents in order to recover their stolen property, or chose not to report because they had been able to recover their property or the theft attempt had been unsuccessful. Murder in the United States, 1993 In its annual compilation of local police agency statistics for 1993, the FBI reported 24,526 murders or nonnegligent manslaughters -- a 3% increase over the previous year. The national murder rate was 10 per 100,000 inhabitants. The FBI defines murders in its annual report Crime in the United States as the willful (nonnegligent) killing of one human being by another. The incidence of murder varies by U.S. region, and characteristics of murder victims vary according to sex, race, and age. In 1993, Southern States accounted for 41% of the homicides but 35% of the Nation's population. The West, which held 22% of the population, accounted for 23% of the murders. The Midwest reported 19% of the murders, and the Northeast, 17%. Supplemental demographic information was available for 23,271 murder victims. About 51% of these victims were black, 46% were white, and more than 2%, of some other racial identity. Victims were likely to be male and relatively young: 77% were male, and nearly 50% were between ages 20 and 34. About 12% were under age 18. In 1993, 47% of murder victims were known to be either related to (12%) or acquainted with (35%) their assailants. Fourteen percent of victims were murdered by strangers, while 39% of the victims had an unknown relationship to their murderer. Characteristics of victims Research by BJS has shown a relationship between certain demographic characteristics and the risk of crime victimization. (Highlights from "20 Years of Surveying Crime Victims," BJS Report, NCJ-144525, October 1993.) Males, younger persons, blacks, Hispanics, residents of central cities, and the poor tend to have higher rates of victimization than persons who do not possess these characteristics. For every violent crime category but rape and sexual assault, victimization rates were significantly higher for males than females. Males were twice as likely as females to experience robbery and aggravated assault. However, there were 4 rapes or sexual assaults per 1,000 females age 12 or older and 0.4 rapes per 1,000 males. Except for rape/sexual assault and simple assault, blacks were more likely than whites or persons of other races, such as Asians or Native Americans, to be victims of crime. For instance, in 1993 there were 19 aggravated assaults per 1,000 black persons, 11.4 per 1,000 whites, and 8.8 per 1,000 persons in other racial categories. The victimization rates for rape and sexual assault were not significantly different among the three racial groups. Victimization rates generally decline with age. Persons under age 25 had higher victimization rates than older persons. Those 65 or older generally had the lowest victimization rates. The rate of assault, for example, was 98.1 per 1,000 persons age 16 to 19 and 4.1 per 1,000 persons 65 or older. Hispanics and non-Hispanics had similar victimization rates for the crimes of rape/sexual assault, simple assault, and personal theft. However, Hispanics had significantly higher rates for all other personal crimes, especially robbery, with a rate twice that of non-Hispanics (10.8 versus 5.8). Victimization rates generally decline with increases in family income. Compared to persons in higher income groups, members of households with an income under $7,500 had significantly higher rates of rape and sexual assault and of aggravated assault. For personal crimes of theft, however, this pattern did not hold. Residents of urban areas had higher victimization rates for all personal crimes than did suburbanites or residents of rural areas. In fact, urban residents were robbed at greater than 3 times the rate of residents of rural areas (10.9 versus 3.0) and raped or sexually assaulted at twice the rate of suburban residents (3.4 versus 1.7). Higher property crime victimization rates in 1993: households of blacks, Hispanics, the poor, urban dwellers, and renters As occurred with personal crimes, certain demographic groups had higher property victimization rates than others. Blacks had a significantly higher rate of property crime than whites. Compared to non-Hispanics, Hispanics had a higher rate for each of the property crimes. In general, households with higher annual family incomes were victimized by household property crimes at greater rates than the lowest income households. However, households earning under $7,500 a year sustained burglaries at almost twice the rate of households with the highest annual earnings. As with personal crimes, place of residence was related to a household's risk of victimization. For each type of property crime in the survey, urban residents had consistently higher rates than suburban or rural residents. For example, households in urban areas were burglarized at 1.5 times the rate of rural households (84.4 versus 53.6). Households that rented their residence had significantly higher victimization rates than households that owned. Households that rented sustained motor vehicle thefts at more than 1.5 times the rate of households that owned their residence, with 26.6 thefts per 1,000 households versus 15.8. Recent trends In recent years, a pattern could be discerned in which levels of certain completed violent crimes had been declining or holding steady while levels of attempted victimizations had generally been on the increase. Data from the redesigned survey comparing victimization levels and rates between 1992 and 1993, however, show little change. Among the major crime categories there were no statistically significant differences in the numbers of victimizations between the 2 years. Because estimates for 1992 are based on a half sample of data from the redesigned survey, larger increases or decreases than usual may be required to indicate statistically significant change between the 2 years. The rate at which victims reported their incidents to the police was also generally stable between 1992 and 1993. Characteristics of sexual assault and domestic violence: new data from the redesigned victimization survey The redesign effort has increased reporting and improved estimates of some of the most difficult-to-measure crimes, like rape, sexual assault, and domestic violence. These new data permit the analysis of relationships and patterns that the NCVS could not previously detect: * There were almost a half million rapes and sexual assaults in 1993 -- 2 rapes or attempts per 1,000 persons age 12 or older and 1 sexual assault per 1,000. * Males were the victims in 7% of all rapes and over 13% of the sexual assaults. * Persons age 12 to 15 experienced 12% of all rapes and 17% of sexual assaults measured by the victimization survey. * Offenders committed over 1 million violent crimes against victims to whom they were related; in well over half of these, the offender was the victim's spouse or ex-spouse. * Females were victimized by relatives at 4 times the rate of males (8 violent victimizations per 1,000 females versus 2 per 1,000 males). * Offenders committed over a half million violent crimes against a spouse or ex-spouse. Of these, 9% were rapes or sexual assaults, 6% were robberies, 14% aggravated assaults, and 71% were simple assaults. A comprehensive tabulation of 1993 victimization data from the redesigned NCVS is forthcoming in the publication Criminal Victimization in the United States, 1993. The NCVS redesign This Bulletin presents for the first time data from the redesigned National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS). Beginning in 1979, the NCVS underwent a thorough, decade-long redesign to improve the survey's ability to measure victimization in general and certain difficult-to-measure crimes, such as rape, sexual assault, and domestic violence, in particular. A consortium of experts in criminology, survey design, and statistics performed extensive study and testing to update the questionnaire as well as survey procedures. Among the changes was the addition of sexual assault to expand the types of sexual crimes counted. Direct questions about these crimes were added to encourage victims to report to interviewers incidents that may have been committed by someone known to them. Other improvements introduced in the redesigned NCVS were Computer Assisted Telephone Interviewing (CATI) and an enhancement of some initial survey questions by "short cues" -- examples of specific people, places, objects, or actions which may have been associated with a victimization -- used to jog respondents' memories of events. In general, the redesign had the anticipated result of increasing the number of crimes counted by the survey. Specifically, however, the increases in crimes not reported to the police were greater than the increases in crimes reported to the police. One reason for this occurrence is that the improved cues for certain questions, as described above, caused respondents to recall more of the less serious crimes -- those that are also less likely to be reported to law enforcement officials. As a result, the percentage of crimes reported to police based on the redesigned survey is lower than the percentage calculated based on data collected with the previous survey design. This difference is particularly the case for crimes like simple assault, which does not involve the presence of weapons or serious injury. Comparisons of estimates of crime based upon previous survey procedures with estimates from the data in the redesigned survey are not recommended. The improvements noted above and other fundamental changes introduced by the redesign make comparisons inappropriate. Several forthcoming technical reports will address these issues in more detail. ****************************************************************************** *********** The Bureau of Justice Statistics is the statistical agency of the U.S. Department of Justice. Jan M. Chaiken, Ph.D., is director. BJS Bulletins are a publication series that presents the first release of findings from permanent data collection programs. Lisa Bastian of the Bureau of Justice Statistics wrote this report. Robyn Cohen provided statistical review. Tom Hester and Tina Dorsey edited the report. The report as published under the direction of Marilyn Marbrook, assisted by Yvonne Boston and Jayne Robinson. May 1995, NCJ-151658 .Recent trends . Table 4. Property victimization rates, by type of crime and race, ethnicity, income, residence, and form of tenure of head of household, 1993 Victimizations per 1,000 households Motor vehicle Total Burglary theft Theft Race White 315.0 56.7 17.2 241.1 Black 369.9 85.8 33.9 250.2 Other 344.3 51.9 33.8 258.7 Ethnicity Hispanic 444.7 87.8 36.8 320.2 Non-Hispanic 313.3 58.0 18.5 236.9 Family income Less than $7,500 314.4 97.5 14.1 202.8 $7,500-$14,999 299.3 67.1 19.2 213.0 $15,000-$24,999 311.2 58.2 18.8 234.2 $25,000-$34,999 335.9 50.8 21.2 263.9 $35,000-$49,999 340.8 54.1 18.6 268.1 $50,000-$74,999 370.9 49.7 22.4 298.8 $75,000 or more 392.2 51.2 26.4 314.6 Residence Urban 411.6 84.4 34.3 292.9 Suburban 304.6 46.8 17.2 240.6 Rural 250.3 53.6 7.2 189.5 Form of tenure Home owned 286.3 50.0 15.8 220.5 Home rented 386.4 77.7 26.6 282.1