ot, GOvF, P.; CRIME IN ARIZONA 1978 An annual report compiled by the Uniform Crime Reporting Unit Arizona Department of Public Safety 2310 North 20th Avenue Phoenix, Arizona 85009 V. L. Hoy, Director June 1979 81 4 2 S U 3457 11198 30-010-02 Gat Ir TABLE OF CONTENTS Foreword iii Acknowledgment The Arizona Uniform Crime Reporting System History of Uniform Crime Reporting Objectives of Arizona UCR Considerations for Interpretation Portrait and Profile of Arizona Population Grouping 1 2 2 2 4 4 Uniform Crime Reporting Summary Data State Crime Summary 7 8 Part I Index Crimes Murder Summary Analysis Rape Summary Analysis Robbery Summary Analysis Aggravated Assault Summary Analysis Burglary Summary Analysis Larceny-Theft Summary Analysis Motor Vehicle Theft Summary Analysis 11 12 16 18 21 23 26 29 Part I and Part II Arrest Data Persons Arrested Summary Analysis 43 44 Law Enforcement Employee Data 51 Assaults on Police In Memoriam Police Officers Assaulted Summary Analysis 55 56 57 Appendices A. Map of Arizona Counties B. Map of Arizona Justice Planning Regions C. Glossary of Terms D. Arizona Revised Statutes 41-1750 E. Arizona Uniform Crime Reporting Data Flow Chart 61 62 63 64 65 66 STATISTICAL CHARTS Et GRAPHS Time Clock of Index Crimes Murder Comparison by Month Murder Comparison Murder Victim by Time of Day Murder Victim by Day of Week Murder Victim Distribution by Relationship Murder Victim Distribution by Circumstance and Population Group Murder Victim by Age, Sex and Race Murder by Type of Weapon Used Rape Comparison Rape by Month Rape by Population Group Rapes per 1000 Population Robbery Comparison Robbery by Month and Weapon Used Robbery by Location and Value Robbery by Population Group Robberies per 1000 Population Assault by Weapon Used Aggravated Assault Comparison Assault by Population Group Assaults per 1000 Population Assault Trend by Month Burglary Comparison Burglary by Month and Means of Entry Burglary by Location and Time Burglary by Population Group Burglaries per 1000 Population Larceny-Theft Comparison Larceny-Theft by Value by Month Larceny-Theft by Population Group Larceny-Thefts per 1000 Population Larceny-Theft by Type by Month Stolen Vehicles by Type Motor Vehicle Theft Comparison Motor Vehicle Theft Trend by Month Motor Vehicle Recovery Information Motor Vehicle Theft by Population Group Motor Vehicle Thefts per 1000 Population Part I Index Crime Comparison Index Crimes by Month - State Totals Value, in Dollars, of Property Stolen by Crime and Month - State Totals Type and Value, in Dollars, of Property Stolen and Recovered by Month - State Totals Index Crimes by County Value, in Dollars, of Property Stolen by Crime by County Type and Value, in Dollars, of Property Stolen and Recovered by County Index Crimes by Justice Planning Region Value, in Dollars, of Property Stolen by Crime by Justice Planning Region Type and Value, in Dollars, of Property Stolen and Recovered by Justice Planning Region Arrest by Age Group Arrest by Offense and Race Arrest Comparison by Sex Arrest Comparison by Age Group Juvenile Male Arrests Adult Male Arrests Juvenile Female Arrests Adult Female Arrests Number of Full Time Law Enforcement Employees by Agency Officers Assaulted by Month Officers Assaulted by Weapon Time of Assault Officers Assaulted by Activity 12 12 13 13 14 14 15 15 16 17 17 17 18 19 19 20 20 21 21 22 22 22 23 24 24 25 25 26 27 27 27 28 29 29 30 31 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 44 45 46 46 47 48 49 50 52 57 58 58 59 Foreword The purpose of this publication is to expose the nature and extent of crime in Arizona, to guide the criminal justice system in its efforts to combat crime and to prompt the citizen action that is necessary if we are to control crime in our society. Legislators need statewide information about crime in order to pass laws that will increase the stability of our society. Arizona citizens are understandably concerned about the possibility of becoming victims of crime. To provide an effective defense against crime it is vital that every citizen unites with law enforcement authorities. To flourish, crime needs the apathy of the community. If apathy is replaced with hostility to crime, that ability to flourish is greatly reduced. We hope this publication will help arouse that hostility to crime in the Arizona community. V. L. Hoy Director iii ,1‘ CITY 4 COUNTY FEDERAL STATE Acknowledgment This fourth edition of "Crime in Arizona" is dedicated to the law enforcement agencies and their personnel who participate in the operation of the Arizona Uniform Crime Reporting Program. It is only through their continued cooperation and effort that this publication can be both possible and meaningful. We would also like to acknowledge the Federal Bureau of Investigation for its advice and support. 1 HISTORY OF UNIFORM CRIME REPORTING CONSIDERATIONS FOR INTERPRETATION The Committee on Uniform Crime Records of the International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP) was established in 1927 to initiate a national program for collecting crime information. This Committee's responsibility to provide management information to law enforcement agencies was eventually turned over to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in 1930, when the FBI received a Congressional mandate to collect and disseminate national crime information. The IACP has continued to serve the Uniform Crime Reporting Program (UCR) in an advisory capacity, and has been joined in this responsibility by the Committee on Crime Records of the National Sheriff's Association (NSA) in 1966. Statistics are a tool used to summarize information so that patterns or trends become clearer. All statistics must be interpreted with an understanding of just what it is that they can say. Too often information of the type in this report is used incorrectly to draw conclusions that the statistics simply do not support. We ask that great care be taken in analysis and interpretation. The Arizona Uniform Crime Reporting (AUCR) Unit first began receiving voluntary crime information from Arizona law enforcement agencies in January 1975. Prior to this date these agencies submitted their crime data directly to the FBI. At the close of calendar year 1978, all 90 eligible law enforcement agencies were contributing crime data to the AUCR unit. OBJECTIVES OF ARIZONA UCR Because increasing attention has been focused on the problem of crime in our communities in recent years, many segments of our population need more complete information for a variety of reasons. Law enforcement professionals, managers and administrators who must focus on crime in their own jurisdictions, also need to know what is occurring in surrounding jurisdictions in order to deploy personnel and equipment most efficiently. Researchers and planners need to know what is actually happening to predict trends and recommend changes. The goal of Crime in Arizona is to identify the nature and extent of criminal activity in this state and present the information needed by each of these groups. This information will not in itself prevent crime, but it may encourage all segments of society, by understanding the problem, to work together with law enforcement agencies to reduce crime through more effective enforcement. The objectives of Crime in Arizona are (1) To identify the nature and extent of crime in our state; (2) To provide the management information needed by the law enforcement community to augment their ability to attack the crime problem; (3) To provide our citizens with the most complete information available; (4) To provide legislators with the information necessary to formulate laws which address the crime problems, and (5) To provide sufficient detailed data for researchers and planners. 2 The following factors have a major influence on the statistics presented in this report: 1. Crime figures are police statistics as distinguished from the findings of a court, coroner, jury or decision of a prosecutor. 2. Density and size of community population. 3. Variations in composition of the population, particularly age structure. 4. 5. Stability of population with respect to transient factors. Economic conditions, including job availability. 6. Climate. 7. Effective strength of law enforcement agencies; some police jurisdictions overlap. 8. Attitudes of citizenry toward crime. 9. Crime reporting practices of citizenry. 10. Crime rates are based on census-fixed residential populations of police jurisdictions. 11. Crimes committed on Indian reservations are not counted in the AUCR program, although their population is included in the state's population figures. To obtain accurate information from many different agencies, the national UCR program had to precisely define the methods for collecting such information as the number of offenses, arrests, clearances and value of stolen or recovered property. The methods of collecting and some resulting limitations are explained below. Classification of Offenses UCR divides offenses into two major classifications which are designated Part I and Part II offenses. This distinction is important to keep in mind because different information is collected for each. Part I offenses include: Violent Crimes 1. 2. 3. 4. Criminal Homicide Forcible Rape Robbery Aggravated Assault Non-Violent Crimes 5. Burglary 6. Larceny-Theft Motor Vehicle Theft 7. Note.• These offenses are also referred to as the Index Crimes. These seven offenses are used to calculate the crime index and crime rates. Part II offenses include: Other Assaults - simple Arson Forgery and Counterfeiting Fraud Embezzlement Stolen Property: Buying, Receiving, Possessing, Etc. 14. Vandalism 15. Weapons: Carrying, Possessing, Etc. 16. Prostitution 17. Sex Offenses (Except forcible rape and prostitution) 18. Narcotic Drug Laws 19. Gambling 20. Offenses Against Family and Children 21. Driving Under the Influence 22. Liquor Laws 23. Drunkenness (not reported in Arizona) 24. Disorderly Conduct 25. Vagrancy 26. All Other Offenses (except traffic) 27. Suspicion (not reported in Arizona) 28. Curfew and Loitering Law Violations (Juveniles) 29. Runaways (Juveniles) 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. Note: Only arrests are counted for Part II offenses. All offenses are classified on the basis of law enforcement officer investigation in accordance with UCR offense definitions (which will not necessarily be identical to Criminal Code definitions). Because UCR identifies a police problem, offense classifications are not based on the findings of a court, coroner, jury or decision of a prosecutor. For burglary, one offense is counted for each structure which is illegally entered. However, when the structure is an apartment house, business or office building in which units are leased for a period of time, one offense is counted for each unit burglarized. For motor vehicle theft, one offense is counted for each vehicle stolen. Note: Attempts to commit any of the above are also counted as offenses, except that attempts to kill and assaults to kill are counted as aggravated assaults. For multiple offenses that occur in one crime incident, only the most serious offense is counted. Part I crimes are ranked according to seriousness and appear in order from most serious to least serious under "Classification of Offenses," above. Clearances An offense is considered cleared (solved) when at least one offender is arrested for a crime, even though several may have been involved. Offenses may also be cleared by exceptional means when the offender: commits suicide; makes a dying declaration; confesses while in custody or serving time for another crime; is prosecuted in another jurisdiction for the same offense; is a juvenile who is handled by notifying the parents; when the victim refuses to prosecute or another jurisdiction refuses to extradite the offender. Clearances are counted as "adult" and "juvenile." A "juvenile" clearance is counted only when juveniles are exclusively involved in the clearance of an offense. If the arrest of both adults and juveniles results in a clearance, it is counted as an "adult" clearance. Property Stolen and Recovered Counting of Offenses The number of offenses is counted only for Part I crimes and simple assault. The method of counting varies with the type of crime committed, and it is important to remember that the number of offenders does not determine the number of offenses. For murder and non-negligent manslaughter, negligent manslaughter, rape, aggravated assault and simple assault, one offense is counted for each victim, regardless of the number of offenders involved. For robbery and larceny-theft, one offense is counted for each distinct operation which is separate in time and place. The number of victims in any one operation does not determine the number of offenses. The figures for value of property stolen and recovered report the value at each point in time. Although property can increase in value over time, it is more likely that stolen property will be recovered in a damaged condition. Therefore, recovery value does not necessarily represent a "clearance rate" for stolen property, and one cannot use it to determine law enforcement effectiveness in recovering stolen goods. Because stolen and recovered property figures indicate thefts and recoveries in the current year, it is important to note that recovered property may have been stolen in a previous year. In addition, the type and value of stolen or recovered property is reported only for Part I offenses and does not include such Part II offenses as fraud, forgery or embezzlement. 3 Arrests Arrest information is collected for all Part I and Part II offenses according to the age, sex and race of the offender. It is not possible, however, to correlate race with sex or specific ages because the information is collected independently, thus limiting analysis. Furthermore, arrest figures cannot be directly related to the number of crimes cleared because arrest totals count all offenders arrested for each offense, and clearance totals count only the offenses for which an arrest(s) or exceptional clearances have occurred. One of the unique characteristics of Arizona is its temperate climate. This factor, along with the economic opportunities and a desire to live in the West, has contributed to the state's dynamic population and economic growth. The state's population density is 20 persons per square mile, with a total population of 2,354,000. This figure includes the Indians living on the reservations within the state. Arizona experienced strong economic growth during 1978 with manufacturing, construction, tourism and travel, and agriculture producing the greatest majority of income for Arizonans. Reporting Variations and Procedures Arizona now receives Uniform Crime Reports from all eligible 90 law enforcement agencies. One must be aware that unintentional variations from UCR guidelines may occur that would affect the validity of the data presented in this report. Offense totals vary from the actual number of offenses that occur because UCR statistics are based on crimes that are reported to law enforcement agencies and many crimes are not reported. Each contributing law enforcement agency is responsible for compiling its own monthly reports. To aid in this endeavor, the Arizona UCR guide manual and the FBI UCR handbook are supplied to all contributors. These manuals outline reporting procedures in detail and are complete with examples and illustrations. Additionally, our Field Representatives provide instruction and clarification as required. Each agency is supplied with twelve sets of monthly report forms which are used by the agencies to submit their reports. POPULATION GROUPING The crime statistics reported by an individual agency indicates what is happening in one particular area. AUCR groups jurisdictions on the basis of population size and reports crime rates among these groups. The cities, towns and counties within the state have been divided into seven groups according to population size. The seventh group (ungrouped) is provided for identification of volume and type of crime to account for total offenses. This population grouping factor has some influence on the volume and type of crime presented in this report. For use in interpreting this report, the UCR grouping is listed below: Group No. 1 Over 250,000 population. There are two (2) cities that fall within this group. 2 100,001 to 250,000 population. There are four (4) cities and counties that fall within this group. 3 50,001 to 100,000 population. There are two (2) cities that fall within this group. 4 25,001 to 50,000 population. There are nine (9) cities and counties that fall within this group. 5 10,001 to 25,000 population. There are ten (10) cities, towns, or counties that fall within this group. 6 10,000 or less population. There are fifty-five (55) cities, towns, or counties that fall within this group. PORTRAIT AND PROFILE OF ARIZONA Arizona, with 113,909 square miles, is the sixth largest state in the United States. Much of this area is owned by the Federal Government in the form of Indian reservations, National Parks, and National Forests. Arizona is 69% federally owned; 27% of that federal ownership is in the form of Indian reservations. The state owns 13%, leaving 18% to private ownership. Arizona has two principal metropolitan areas, Phoenix and Tucson (Maricopa and Pima counties). Phoenix, the capitol city, is the financial, commercial, retail, cultural and employment hub in the state, as well as the largest population center with an estimated 696,763 people. Tucson, the largest business, educational and cultural center in southern Arizona, has an estimated population of 309,200 people. More than 43 percent of the people who live in Arizona live in these two cities. 4 7 Ungrouped. There are eight (8) reporting agencies. These are Educational Institutions and the Department of Public Safety, that by definition do not have measurable population. For purposes of this report, they are combined for the crimes by population distribution. The following is a listing by population group and Justice Planning Region of law enforcement agencies submitting crime data to the Uniform Crime Reporting Unit. AGENCY Apache S.O. Arizona DPS ASU AZ Western College Avondale P.D. Benson P.D. Bisbee P.D. Buckeye P.D. Casa Grande P.D. Central AZ College Chandler P.D. Clarkdale P.D. Clifton P.D. Cochise S.O. Coconino S.O. Coolidge P.D. Cottonwood P.D. Douglas P.D. Duncan P.D. Eager P.D. Eastern AZ College El Mirage P.D. Eloy P.D. Flagstaff P.D. Florence P.D. Fredonia P.D. Gila Bend P.D. Gila S.O. Gilbert P.D. Glendale P.D. Globe P.D. Goodyear P.D. Graham S.O. Greenlee 5.0. Hayden P.D. Holbrook P.D. Huachuca City P.D. Jerome P.D. Kearny P.D. Kingman P.D. Mammoth P.D. Marana P.D. Maricopa S.O. POPULATION GROUP NO. ASJP REGION 4 7 7 7 6 6 6 6 5 7 5 6 6 5 4 6 6 5 6 6 7 6 6 4 6 6 6 5 6 3 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 2 3 1 1 4 1 6 6 1 5 5 1 3 6 6 3 5 3 6 6 3 6 1 5 3 5 3 1 5 1 1 5 1 6 6 5 3 6 3 5 4 5 2 1 AGENCY Mesa P.D. Miami P.D. Mohave S.O. Navajo S.O. Nogales P.D. Northern AZ Univ. Oro Valley P.D. Page P.D. Paradise Valley P.D. Parker P.D. Patagonia P.D. Payson P.D. Peoria P.D. Phoenix P.D. Pima Comm. College Pima P.D. Pima S.O. Pinal S.O. Prescott P.D. Safford P.D. St. Johns P.D. Santa Cruz S.O. Scottsdale P.D. Show Low P.D. Sierra Vista P.D. Snowflake P.D. Somerton P.D. South Tucson P.D. Springerville P.D. Superior P.D. Surprise P.D. Taylor P.D. Tempe P.D. Thatcher P.D. Tolleson P.D. Tombstone P.D. Tucson P.D. University of AZ Wickenburg P.D. Willcox P.D. Williams P.D. Winkelman P.D. Winslow P.D. Yavapai S.O. Youngtown P.D. Yuma P.D. Yuma S.O. Note: POPULATION GROUP NO. ASJP REGION 2 6 4 4 5 7 6 6 5 6 6 6 5 1 7 6 2 4 5 6 6 6 3 6 5 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 2 6 6 6 1 7 6 6 6 6 6 4 6 4 4 1 5 4 3 6 3 2 3 1 4 6 5 1 1 2 6 2 5 3 6 3 6 1 3 6 3 4 2 3 5 1 3 1 6 1 6 2 2 1 6 3 5 3 3 1 4 4 Population figures for these groups are furnished by the FBI. 5 Uniform Crime Reporting Summary Data 7 STATE CRIME SUMMARY OFFENSES • There were 178,430 Crime Index Offenses reported. Of these offenses, 19 percent were cleared. • The crime rate for the state of Arizona was established at 75.6 offenses for every 1,000 inhabitants. • The value of property stolen amounted to $74,536,997. The value of property recovered was $23,574,422 for a recovery rate of 32 percent. • In 1978, law enforcement agencies reported 220 murders, an increase of 3 percent over 1977. • Handguns were used in 45 percent of all murder cases reported. • The number of rapes increased 33 percent from 1977, the largest percentage increase of the seven index crimes. • Bank robberies increased 73 percent over 1977 and had the largest dollar loss per robbery, $2,440.31. • Aggravated Assaults accounted for 7,869 Crime Index Offenses. Of these, 31 percent were committed by the use of hands, fists, feet, etc. • Burglary accounted for a substantial value of property loss amounting to $26,437,953. Residential burglaries accounted for 70 percent of all burglaries reported. Of these, 35 percent were committed during the day. • Larceny-Theft represented the largest number of our Crime Index Offenses. The 105,594 offenses accounted for 59 percent of the State Crime Index. • In 1978, 10,917 motor vehicles were stolen with a property value of $27,659,223. There were 8,045 vehicles recovered with a reported value of $18,758,513. INDEX CRIME COMPARISON 1977 CLEARANCES 1978 Change + 2.8% +33.0% +21.6% + 11.1% - 8.5% + 4.0% + 9.0% 178 417 1,047 4,437 6,581 19,110 1,966 152 452 1,135 4,685 6,052 19,440 2,045 - 14.6% + 8.4% + 8.4% + 5.6% - 8.0% + 1.7% + 4.0% + 1.2% 33,736 33,961 + 0.7% 1977 OFFENSES 1978 Change Murder Forcible rape Robbery Aggravated assault Burglary Larceny-theft Motor vehicle theft 214 781 3,155 7,081 53,520 101,575 10,019 220 1,039 3,835 7,869 48,956 105,594 10,917 TOTALS 176,345 178,430 INDEX CRIMES ARRESTS • During 1978, there were 116,339 persons arrested for all Criminal Acts. • Adults accounted for 79 percent of all Violent Crime arrests. • Juveniles accounted for 58 percent of all Property Crimes and 30 percent of all arrests made during 1978. LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICERS KILLED AND ASSAULTED 8 • Two Arizona law enforcement officers lost their lives in 1978. • There were 1,277 Assaults on Police Officers reported and 97 percent were cleared. TIME CLOCK OF INDEX CRIMES 48 36 1978 12 45 15 24 30 MURDER ONE EVERY 40 HOURS BURGLARY ONE EVERY 11 MINUTES rialiONSEINFONAN MerrifiliSPEEPHIONIMIG 24 18 60 6 f:.47,1 45 15 12 30 30 RAPE ONE EVERY 8 HOURS LARCENY-THEFT ONE EVERY 5 MINUTES 1 INDEX CRIME EVERY 3 MINUTES 14 24 18 24 18 60 15 45 12 12 30 ROBBERY ONE EVERY 2 HOURS ASSAULT ONE EVERY 1 HOUR MOTOR VEHICLE THEFT ONE EVERY 48 MINUTES 9 11 MURDER AND NONNEGLIGENT MANSLAUGHTER MURDER COMPARISON BY MONTH SUMMARY ANALYSIS Murder in Arizona increased by 3 percent over the number reported in 1977. A total of 220 individuals were murdered in 1978, which represents 2 percent of all reported violent crimes. The largest number of murders reported in one month was 30 in August. The offense of murder represents .1 of one percent of the state crime index. Because murder is such a serious crime, detailed information is collected concerning victims, offenders, weapons used, and the circumstances in which the offense took place. Handguns were used in the majority of killings, 46 percent of the time. The relationship between the victims and the offenders was undeterminable in 27 percent of the murders. Acquaintance was the next most frequent relationship, 25 percent; and stranger was third, 16 percent. Arguments led to 29 percent of the deaths, and in 28 percent of the cases, police were unable to determine the circumstances. The large number of cases where the circumstances were unknown and the victim/offender relationship was also undeterminable may have contributed to the 14 percent reduction in murder clearances from 1977. Despite this reduction, murder had the highest clearance rate, 70 percent, of the seven Index Crimes. 1975 1976 1977 1978 JAN FEB MAR APR 17 17 15 11 18 15 11 9 29 18 14 20 11 13 17 15 MAY JUN JUL AUG 10 16 20 17 18 19 11 10 14 13 17 17 15 24 23 30 SEP OCT NOV DEC 15 16 17 13 11 17 20 14 18 14 16 24 18 13 17 24 TOTAL 184 173 214 220 The age group of the most frequent offender was in the 15 to 19 year olds with 42, or 18 percent; 38, or 16 percent were in the 20 to 24 age group. Of the known offenders, 68 percent were males and 9 percent were females. Whites accounted for 144, or 61 percent; Negros 29, or 12 percent and Indians 8, or 3 percent. MURDER COMPARISON 1975 1976 1977 214 1978 220 184 173 .111111111 ACTUAL OFFENSE 12 VANNVANNVANNW toktikko.4.0.0.1mmt CLEARANCES MURDER VICTIM BY TIME OF DAY UNKNOWN 17 7.7% 2:01 AM 10:00 AM 53 24.1% 6:01 PM 2:00 AM 97 44.1% 10:01 AM 6:00 PM 53 24.1% 220 REPORTED MURDERS DURING 1978 MURDER VICTIM BY DAY OF WEEK 46 20.9% 31 14.1% 27 12.3% 24 10.9% MON. TUE. 34 15.5% 32 14.5% WED. THURS. 26 11.8% FRI. SAT. SUN. 13 MURDER VICTIM DISTRIBUTION BY RELATIONSHIP HUSBAND 5 2.3% WIFE 14 6.4% OTHERS 13 5.9% UNDETERMINABLE 59 26.8% ACQUAINTANCE 56 25.4% FRIEND 16 7.3% OTHER FAMILY 22 10% STRANGER 35 15.9% MURDER VICTIM DISTRIBUTION BY CIRCUMSTANCE Et POPULATION GROUP 1 Circumstance 100,001 50,001 Over To To 250,000 250,000 100,000 6 7 25,001 To 50,000 10,001 To 25,000 10,000 Or Less Ungrouped Totals Dist. Lovers Triangle 5 1 1 1 1 1 - 10 4.6% Brawl Due To Alcohol 13 5 - 4 2 4 - 28 12.7% Felony Murder 19 1 1 10 1 4 - 36 16.4% Argument (Property/Money) and Other Arguments 35 11 1 4 4 8 - 63 28.6% Suspected Felony Murder 7 2 3 3 2 4 - 21 9.5% Other Murders 35 13 1 10 3 - - 62 28.2% TOTALS 114 33 7 32 13 21 - 220 100% 15.0% 3.2% 14.5% 5.9% 9.6% - - - Distribution 14 2 POPULATION GROUP 3 4 5 51.8% MURDER VICTIM BY AGE, SEX Et RACE Age Number Distribution Race Sex Male 1 Female infant 1-4 5-9 10- 14 15-19 20 - 24 25 - 29 30 - 34 35 - 39 40 - 44 45 - 49 50 - 54 55 - 59 60-64 65-69 70 - 74 75 and Over Unknown TOTALS 2 5 1 2 23 38 34 24 19 20 15 16 6 4 3 4 4 .9% 2.3% .4% .9% 10.5% 17.3% 15.5% 10.9% 8.6% 9.1% 6.8% 7.3% 2.7% 1.8% 1.4% 1.8% 1.8% 2 3 1 17 23 29 19 18 14 13 11 5 3 2 2 2 1 1 6 15 5 5 1 6 2 5 1 1 1 4 2 220 - 162 58 Distribution - 100% 26.4% ADULT JUVENILE UNKNOWN 196 20 4 89.1% 9.1% 1.8% 73.6% 1 White I Negro All Other - - - 2 5 . Indian 1 - - - 2 19 1 3 - 28 5 4 1 29 19 15 18 12 12 6 3 3 4 4 4 1 1 3 4 1 - 1 4 3 2 .. - - 182 20 17 1 82.7% 9.1% , 7.7% .5% MURDER BY TYPE OF WEAPON USED WEAPON NUMBER OF OFFENSES Handgun DISTRIBUTION 45.0% Rifle Shotgun Knife or Cutting Instrument Blunt Object (Club, Hammer, etc.) Personal Weapon (Hands, Fist, Feet, etc.) All Other Weapons 15 RAPE SUMMARY ANALYSIS Rapes reported in Arizona increased 33 percent over the number reported in 1977, the largest increase of any of the seven index crimes. A total of 1,039 rapes were reported, which represents 8 percent of all reported violent crimes and .6 of one percent of the state crime index. Forcible rape accounted for 72 percent (751) of all rapes. The largest number of reported forcible rapes and August, 75. The month of August has the largest increase in rapes, 56, from 1977. Rapes were cleared 44 percent of the time, down 8 percent from 1977. Adults accounted for 40 percent of the clearances and juveniles 4 percent. There were 36 more arrests in 1978 than in 1977. Adults made up 86 percent of the increase and juveniles 14 percent. for one month was in June with 81, followed by July, 77 RAPE COMPARISON 1976 1977 1978 751 561 485 288 220 182 FORCIBLE RAPE ATTEMPTED RAPE MEI ACTUAL OFFENSES 16 FORCIBLE RAPE ATTEMPTED RAPE WOW.' e•VCCV•1 144.11.1•11.1411.11•41440 IMAWAWAttt1,4 FORCIBLE RAPE CLEARANCES ATTEMPTED RAPE RAPE BY MONTH 85 ,-- 80 75 70 65 60 ■Pv 55 50 45 40 .•'"- ..■ •• 4t 35 30 ••• 0 .0 •* 25 20 o 0 441, 444,4 JO oir • . 4 .40L•••• • 44% 1114.• .,. _ 40 er• .. . •„qh ..44, -.4. 11,4 •0o .40 .• 15 ,...---... 10 _I JAN KEY: MAY FEB MAR APR JUN SEP JUL AUG OCT DE NOV ATTEMPTED RAPE RAPE BY FORCE RAPE BY POPULATION GROUP 1 3 50,001 To 100,000 4 25,001 To 50,000 5 10,001 To 25,000 6 10,000 Or Less 7 Population Group Over 250,000 2 100,001 To 250,000 Rape By Force Distribution Attempted Rape Distribution 433 57.6% 185 64.2% 167 22.2% 51 17.7% 17 2.3% 13 4.5% 65 8.7% 23 8.0% 24 3.2% 2 .7% 43 5.7% 14 4.9% 2 .3% — Total Distribution 59.5% 21.0% 2.9% 8.4% 2.5% 5.5% .2% Ungrouped RAPES PER 1000 POPULATION .21 .20 .15 .11 .01 OVER 250,000 100,001 TO 250,000 FORCIBLE RAPE 50,001 TO 100,000 25,001 TO 50,000 WeeeeWWWW. 041114•4111141441-1 10,001 TO 25,000 10,000 OR LESS ATTEMPTED RAPE 17 ROBBERY SUMMARY ANALYSIS During 1978, Arizonans reported 3,835 robberies, an increase of 22 percent (680) over the number of robberies reported during 1977. Robbery represents 30 percent of the violent crimes and 2 percent of the state crime index. Robberies occurring on highways, that is streets, alleys and sidewalks, were the most frequent type of robbery reported, 1,448 or 38 percent of all robberies, whereas, commercial houses had the highest dollar loss, $541,959. As in 1977, banks had the lowest number of reported robberies, but the largest loss per robbery, $2,440. Bank robberies increased 73 percent over the 37 reported in 1977, the highest increase reported of the different type of robbery locations. The reported value of $1.6 million taken in robberies was up from $1.1 million in 1977. Strong-arm {hands, fists, feet, etc.) was used in 43 percent of the robberies and firearm was the weapon used 39 percent of the time. Robberies were cleared in 30 percent of the cases, a decrease from 1977, when the clearance rate was 33 percent. Adult arrests accounted for 24 percent of the clearances and juveniles 6 percent. However, there were 160 more robbery arrests in 1978 than in 1977. ROBBERY COMPARISON 1975 1976 1977 1978 3,835 3,751 3,155 2,921 9% ACTUAL OFFENSES 18 VOVVIVIFIITOWilrfilrf 11•••••••■ 14.4.44 CLEARANCES 1•••••••44.1■• 11411.441111.4141111411141 ROBBERY BY MONTH Et WEAPON USED WEAPON Total Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Firearm 1,494 39.0% 148 148 122 116 114 78 113 134 129 114 127 151 Dist Knife Or Cutting Instrument 434 11.3% 36 40 41 37 35 30 40 34 29 28 41 43 Other Dangerous Weapons 268 7.0% 23 16 29 16 22 22 25 24 25 20 21 25 Strong Arm 1,639 42.7% 136 105 133 129 133 114 142 122 124 177 169 155 TOTALS 3,835 309 325 298 304 244 320 314 307 339 358 374 — 343 i I Distribution — 100% 8.9% 8.1% 8.5% 7.8% 7.9% 6.4% 8.3% 8.2% 8.0% 8.8% 9.3% 9.8% ROBBERY BY LOCATION Et VALUE Number Of Offenses Distribution Total Dollar Value Stolen Average Dollar Value Stolen 1,448 37.7% $ 387,346 $268.00 Commercial House 790 20.6% 541,959 686.00 Gas or Service Station 259 6.8% 74,857 289.00 Convenience Store 442 11.5% 55,504 126.00 Residence 428 11.2% 279,963 654.00 64 1.7% 156,180 2,440.00 404 10.5%, 88,494 219.00 $1,584,303 $413.00 LOCATION Highway Bank Miscellaneous TOTALS 3,835 l 100% 19 ROBBERY BY POPULATION GROUP Population Group 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Over 250,000 100,001 To 250,000 50,001 To 100,000 25,001 To 50,000 10,001 To 25,000 10,000 Or Less Ungrouped 2615 502 179 226 117 192 4 68.2% 13.1% 4.7% 5.9% 3.0% 5.0% .1% Robbery Distribution ROBBERIES PER 1000 POPULATION 2.60 1.01 OVER 250,000 20 100,001 TO 250,000 1.13 .93 50,001 TO 100,000 .69 .73 25,001 TO 50,000 10,001 TO 25,000 10,000 OR LESS AGGRAVATED ASSAULT SUMMARY ANALYSIS Law enforcement agencies reported 19,584 assaults, 11 percent more than in 1977. Of the total assaults, 7,869 (40%) were aggravated and 11,715 (60%) were simple. Simple assault is primarily differentiated from aggravated assault by the seriousness of the injury and the weapon used. Aggravated assault increased 11 percent from 1977 and simple assault increased 10 percent. Aggravated assault represents 61 percent of violent crimes and 4 percent of the state crime index. The largest number of aggravated assaults for one month occurred during October, which also had the highest number of hands, fists, feet, etc., assaults for the year, 11 percent. The clearance rate increased 6 percent over 1977. Adults accounted for 5 percent of the clearances and juveniles 1 percent. There were 150 more arrests for assaults during 1978 over 1977. ASSAULT BY WEAPON USED Weapon Number of Offenses Distribution Firearm 1,970 25.0% Knife or Cutting Instrument 1,454 18.5% Other Dangerous Weapon 1,985 25.2% Hands, Fists, Feet, Etc. 2,460 31.3% TOTALS 7,869 100.0% AGGRAVATED ASSAULT COMPARISON 1975 1976 1977 1978 7,869 7,234 7,081 6,446 ACTUAL OFFENSES VAAAMOVVOAVAMO 110,„WMAM,441,1 CLEARANCES 21 ASSAULT BY POPULATION GROUP 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Over 250,000 100,001 To 250,000 50,001 To 100,000 25,001 To 50,000 10,001 To 25,000 10,000 Or Less Ungrouped Aggravated Assault 3,708 1,492 295 1,076 395 804 99 Distribution 47.1% 19.0% 3.7% 13.7% 5.0% 10.2% 1.3% Population Group ASSAULTS PER 1000 POPULATION 3.90 3.69 3.29 3.01 2.46 1.86 100,001 TO 250,000 OVER 250,000 10,001 TO 25,000 25,001 TO 50,000 50,001 TO 100,000 10,000 OR LESS ASSAULT TREND BY MONTH A ,_...._ IL r 750 700 11 A. N. 6 , 1r . . MOM . .4 ...... 4 600 ..._. . . . . . 550 .. MIMI 500 NW JAN 22 FEB MAR KEY: 1978 APR MAY JUN JUL AUG 1975 -1977 Avg. SEP nr_T ninv nFr BURGLARY SUMMARY ANALYSIS During 1978, there were 48,956 burglaries reported in Arizona, a decrease of 9 percent from 1977. Part of this decrease is attributable to a change in reporting procedure, at the beginning of the year, whereas, thefts from "appurtenance to a dwelling" (carports, patios, etc.) were no longer classified as burglaries. Thefts of this type are now classified in the larceny-theft category. Burglary represented 30 percent of the property crime and 27 percent of the state crime index. The largest number of burglaries occurred during January, 4,547. The month of December had the largest number of burglaries in 1977, 4, 710. Forcible entry was used in 69 percent of the burglaries. Residential burglaries accounted for 70 percent of all burglaries. Of those residential burglaries, 35 percent occurred at night. Fifty-five percent of non-residential burglaries occurred at night. A reported value of $26.4 million was lost to all burglaries during 1978, up from $25.8 million in 1977. The majority (69%) of the dollar loss occurred during residential burglaries, $18.3 million. Burglaries were cleared in 12.4 percent of the cases, up slightly from the 12.3 percent clearance rate in 1977. Adults accounted for 7.3 percent of the clearances and juveniles 5.1 percent. There were 433 fewer persons arrested in 1978 than in 1977 for burglary and again in 1978, more juveniles than adults were arrested. The burglary clearance rate remains the lowest of the seven index crimes. BURGLARY COMPARISON 1975 55,547 1976 53,306 1978 1977 53,520 48,956 ACTUAL OFFENSES WMAWASVM CLEARANCES AJAAMAJAWAM. 23 BURGLARY BY MONTH Et MEANS OF ENTRY Dist Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Forcible Entry 33,656 68.7% 3,223 2,612 2,865 2,515 2,811 2,590 2,837 2,933 2,700 2,883 2,760 2,927 Unlawful Entry No Force 11,196 22.9% 999 908 1,085 938 1,037 926 930 985 807 858 864 859 325 317 345 336 351 327 378 388 336 340 328 333 4,547 3,837 4,296 3,789 4,199 3,843 4,146 4,306 3,843 4,081 3,952 4,119 Total Attempted Forcible Entry TOTALS 4,104 8.4% 48,956 - BURGLARY BY LOCATION Et TIME Number of Offenses Distribution 34,201 69.9% Night (6 PM - 6 AM) 11,803 34.5% Day (6 AM - 6 PM) 12,034 35.2% Unknown 10,364 30.3% 14,755 30.1% Night (6 PM -6 AM) 8,179 55.4% Day (6 AM - 6 PM) 1,409 9.6% Unknown 5,167 35.0% 48,956 100.0% LOCATION Residence Total Non-Residence Total TOTAL 24 BURGLARY BY POPULATION GROUP 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Over 250,000 100,001 To 250,000 50,001 To 100,000 25,001 To 50,000 10,001 To 25,000 10,000 Or Less Ungrouped Burglary 28,800 8,561 2,670 3,667 1,982 3,040 236 Distribution 58.8% 17.5% 5.5% 7.5% 4.0% 6.2% .5% Population Group BURGLARIES PER 1000 POPULATION 28.63 17.27 16.83 14.76 11.22 OVER 250,000 100,001 TO 250,000 50,001 TO 100,000 25,001 TO 50,000 12.32 1 10,001 TO 25,000 10,000 OR LESS 25 LARCENY-THEFT SUMMARY ANALYSIS Larceny-theft, as in years past, is the largest component of the seven index crimes. Arizona law enforcement agencies reported 105,594 larcenies, an increase of 4 percent over 1977. Larceny-theft accounted for 64 percent of the property crimes and 59 percent of the state crime index. As in 1977, the greatest number of larcenies occurred during March, 9,512, All months showed an increase over the corresponding month in 1977 with February showing the smallest gain, 13. Despite the small increase, 4 percent, in the number of larcenies between 1977 vs 1978, the reported value loss increased 18 percent, $3 million. larcenies, was under $50, as in 1977. The value range of $200 and over had the largest reported dollar loss, $15 million, 78 percent of all larceny loss. In 1978 as in 1977, theft from motor vehicles and theft of motor vehicle parts and accessories accounted for over one-third, (35%) of all larcenies. Pocket-picking and purse snatching were the least reported type of larcenies. Larceny-theft clearances dropped slightly from 18.8 percent to 18.4 percent in 1978. Adults accounted for 11.5% of the larceny clearances and juveniles 6.9%. There were 247 more larceny arrests in 1978 than in 1977. The value range of dollar loss with the largest number of LARCENY-THEFT COMPARISON 1975 104,200 1976 104,180 MIN ACTUAL OFFENSES 26 1977 1978 105,594 101,575 NIVECOYINITIFTOW 0•••••••• ••1111011 ,10,440.0.40.1.110.0.41. CLEARANCES LARCENY-THEFT BY VALUE BY MONTH VALUE Total Dist Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Over $200 18,726 17.7% 1,581 1,547 1,712 1,439 1,504 1,456 1,449 1,551 1,463 • 1,639 1,650 1,735 $50 to $200 33,956 32.2% 2,797 2,681 3,053 2,863 2,800 2,727 2,748 3,082 2,824 3,1 i8 2,694 2,569 Under $50 52,912 50.1% 4,449 4,351 4,747 4,324 4,271 4,163 4,257 4,374 4,251 4,684 4,351 4,690 Totals 105,594 100% 8,827 8,579 9,512 8,626 _ 8,575 8,346 8,454 9,007 8,538 9,441 8,695 _ 8,994 LARCENY-THEFT BY POPULATION GROUP 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Over 250,000 100,001 To 250,000 50,001 To 100,000 25,001 To 50,000 10,001 To 25,000 10,000 Or Less Ungrouped Larceny-Theft 58,251 19,136 6,731 7,524 5,080 6,623 2,249 Distribution 55.2% 18.1% 6.4% 7.1% 4.8% 6.3% 2.1% Population Group LARCENY-THEFTS PER 1000 POPULATION 57.91 42.43 38.60 31.59 32.15 10,001 TO 25,000 10,000 OR LESS 23.02 OVER 250,000 100,001 TO 250,000 50,001 TO 100,000 25,001 TO 50,000 27 LARCENY-THEFT BY TYPE BY MONTH Total Dist Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Pocket Picking 418 .4% 31 40 27 21 19 23 32 38 33 65 39 50 Purse Snatching 626 .6% 65 54 63 59 52 41 44 45 48 72 38 45 Classification 28 Shoplifting 19,287 18.2% 1,624 1,597 1,827 1,601 1,533 1,421 1,381 1,551 1,411 1,637 1,632 2,072 From Motor Vehicle 14,914 14.1% 1,270 1,236 1,360 1,187 1,229 1,200 1,225 1,190 1,196 1,267 1,286 1,268 Motor Vehicle Parts/Access. 22,061 20.9% 2,024 1,891 2,044 1,728 1,714 1,774 1,700 2,005 1,688 1,866 1,812 1,815 Bicycles 14,772 14.0% 1,004 1,004 1,160 1,270 1,209 1,345 1,313 1,495 1,375 1,579 1,132 From Buildings 13,008 12.3% 1,153 1,050 1,188 1,091 1,094 From Coin Oper. Machine 1,016 All Other 19,492 TOTALS 105,594 1.0% 81 77 63 84 63 931 966 84 88 886 985 1,144 1,187 1,113 1,106 110 81 108 104 73 18.5% 1,575 1,630 1,780 1,585 1,662 1,527 1,705 1,588 1,562 1,660 1,539 1,679 - 8,827 8,579 9,512 8,626 8,575 8,346 8,454 9,007 8,538 9,441 8,695 8,994 MOTOR VEHICLE THEFT SUMMARY ANALYSIS Arizona law enforcement agencies reported 10,917 motor vehicle thefts, a 9 percent increase over 1977. Motor vehicle theft accounted for 7 percent of property crime and 6 percent of the state crime index. July had the largest total of reported vehicle thefts. April had the lowest number of thefts. Of the motor vehicles stolen, 74 percent (8,045) were recovered. This is a 4 percent decrease from the 78 percent recovery rate in 1977. Motor vehicle thefts accounted for a reported dollar loss of $27,659,223. Of that amount, $18,758,513 was recovered. The recovered amount reflects the value of the vehicle when recovered and may be lower than the value when stolen because of parts missing or damaged. STOLEN VEHICLES BY TYPE Type Number Stolen Distribution Automobiles 5,805 53.2% Truck Et Busses 2,628 24.1% Motorcycles 1,989 18.2% 495 4.5% 10,917 100.0% Other Vehicles TOTALS Motor vehicle theft clearances decreased 1 percent in 1978 from 1977. Of the 19 percent clearance rate, adults accounted for 12 percent and juveniles 7 percent. There were 40 fewer persons arrested for motor vehicle theft in 1978 than in 1977. Again in 1978, the number of juveniles arrested exceeded the adults. MOTOR VEHICLE THEFT COMPARISON 1978 1977 1976 1975 11,337 10,917 10,019 9,460 ACTUAL OFFENSES RECOVERIES 11:n 1 17,11D1 1 oXIM•21:0: tveCaTreerelVelrecelnli CLEARANCES 29 MOTOR VEHICLE THEFT TREND BY MONTH 10 1111111 5 10 ° 11111111111 A,.... AN 11111/111111 AmidIII 11111111111111 N11111111111111111111111 III KW MIMI NNW II 111111111111111111111 11111111111 MIME AMIN Ell 1111/11111111111111111111 ISM MI/ VW/11111111111 MEN 11111 1111111111111111111111 11111/11111111Y 11111111111 1 Ill 9 5 9 0 5 9 III imunimmummiorA )0 mom 8 5 ,0 8 a5 81)0 , Nummoriemmiammao 7 )0 am sammus KEY: Imo JUL AUG SEP OCT NOV JAN FEB MAR APR MAY JUN DEC 1975 - 1977 Avg. 1978 MOTOR VEHICLE RECOVERY INFORMATION Situation Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec 437 416 484 413 461 474 573 524 510 519 491 519 138 149 147 114 139 114 176 179 182 188 127 171 31 606 25 590 28 659 20 547 29 629 43 631 56 805 34 737 42 734 28 735 33 651 31 721 111 113 133 102 127 102 125 169 123 124 113 87 50 47 78 61 65 72 53 58 70 84 68 56 161 160 211 163 192 174 178 227 193 208 181 143, 10,236 767 750 870 710 821 805 983 964 927 943 832 864 Total Stolen Locally Recovered Locally _ 5,821 Stolen Locally Recovered by Other Agencies In State 1,824 Stolen Locally Recovered by Other Agencies Out Of State .. 400 Total Locally Stolen , 8,045 Stolen Out Of Town, Instate, Recovered Locally 1,429 Stolen Out Of State Recovered Locally . 762 Total Recovered/Stolen Out Of Town Or State 2,191 TOTALS 30 MOTOR VEHICLE THEFT BY POPULATION GROUP 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Over 250,000 100,001 To 250,000 50,001 To 100,000 25,001 To 50,000 10,001 To 25,000 10,000 Or Less Ungrouped Motor Vehicle Theft 6,580 1,758 614 924 407 582 52 Distribution 60.3% 16.1% 5.6% 3.7% 5.3% .5% Population Group 8.5% MOTOR VEHICLE THEFTS PER 1000 POPULATION 6.54 3.87 3.55 2.83 2.53 I OVER 250,000 100,001 TO 250,000 50,000 TO 100,000 25,001 TO 50,000 10,001 TO 25,000 2.83 I 10,000 TO LESS 31 CLEARANCES (BY ARRESTS OR EXCEPTIONAL MEANS) INDEX CRIMES BY MONTH - STATE TOTALS INDEX OFFENSES AUG SEP OCT NOV DEC 23 30 18 13 17 24 109 106 113 97 87 70 84 64 22 81 28 77 29 75 38 69 28 63 24 55 15 63 21 298 304 244 320 314 307 339 358 374 122 41 29 133 116 37 16 129 114 35 22 133 78 30 22 114 113 40 25 142 134 34 24 122 129 29 25 124 114 28 20 177 127 41 21 169 151 43 25 155 496 608 598 673 629 721 638 743 839 662 697 156 92 132 185 138 86 132 140 165 105 153 185 148 118 150 182 157 116 200 200 149 118 170 192 214 132 164 211 149 131 163 195 173 128 188 254 188 174 202 275 159 131 157 215 174 123 174 226 48,956 4,547 3,837 4,295 3,789 4,199 3,843 4,145 4,306 3,843 4,081 3,952 4,119 33,656 11,196 4,104 3,223 999 325 2,612 908 317 2,865 1,085 345 2,515 938 336 2,811 1,037 351 2,590 926 327 2,837 930 378 2,933 985 388 2,700 807 336 2,883 858 340 2,760 864 328 2,927 859 333 105,594 8,827 8,579 9,512 8,626 8,575 8,346 8,454 9,007 8,538 9,441 8,695 8,994 10,917 827 767 922 756 883 912 1,040 961 978 1,012 899 960 5,805 2,628 1,989 495 445 181 155 46 401 175 158 33 492 198 205 27 407 188 130 31 481 227 141 34 483 229 141 59 584 246 165 45 538 209 172 42 513 225 186 54 526 259 182 45 474 220 161 44 461 271 193 35 TOTAL JAN FEB MAR APR MAY JUN JUL 220 11 13 17 15 15 24 1,039 61 65 76 85 86 751 288 44 17 49 16 54 22 57 28 3,835 343 309 325 1,494 434 268 1,639 148 36 23 136 148 40 16 105 7,869 565 1,970 1,454 1,985 2,460 CRIMINAL HOMICIDE Murder/Nonneg. Manslaughter FORCIBLE RAPE Rape By Force Attempts To Commit ROBBERY Firearm Knife or Cutting Instrument Other Dangerous Weapon Strong-Arm (Hands, Fist, Feet, Etc.) ASSAULT Firearm Knife or Cutting Instrument Other Dangerous Weapon Hands, Fist, Feet, Etc. - Aggravated BURGLARY Forcible Entry Unlawful Entry - No Force Attempted Forcible Entry LARCENY-THEFT MOTOR VEHICLE THEFT Automobiles Trucks And Buses Motorcycles Other Vehicles . TOTALS MANSLAUGHTER BY NEGLIGENCE OTHER ASSAULTS- SIMPLE 178,430 15,181 14,088 15,755 14,167 14,735 14,107 14,809 15,369 14,524 15,812 14,653 15,252 9 1 0 0 0 0 1 2 1 3 0 1 0 11,715 856 808 909 961 970 991 1,074 985 1,132 1,120 967 942 VALUE, IN DOLLARS, OF PROPERTY STOLEN BY CRIME AND MONTH - STATE TOTALS INDEX OFFENSES TOTAL JAN FEB MAR APR MAY JUN JUL AUG SEP OCT DEC NOV HOMICIDE 15,870 0 0 500 0 0 1,640 580 11,900 200 1,050 0 0 FORCIBLE RAPE 31,121 2,820 114 38 316 491 8,183 896 683 1,291 1,400 1,583 13,306 1,584,303 159,818 112,226 185,481 120,488 264,635 130,253 81,400 86,777 99,831 114,523 124,379 104,492 387,346 541,959 74,857 55,504 279,963 156,180 88,494 58,872 36,897 9,598 8,354 19,775 21,533 4,789 33,673 29,145 10,528 5,628 15,194 7,030 11,028 24,145 40,609 6,007 2,238 85,560 21,604 5,318 29,456 25,567 6,503 2,292 12,151 34,726 9,793 18,667 218,104 5,972 2,092 14,426 3,088 2,286 19,606 61,666 1,571 3,875 33,701 620 9,214 20,920 12,357 6,212 4,433 26,105 3,190 8,183 31,603 24,072 5,898 3,126 5,760 13,831 2,487 23,692 29,903 3,608 4,349 17,050 16,907 4,322 54,209 20,776 3,410 2,614 10,402 19,615 3,497 48,277 17,084 3,115 6,792 25,698 4,660 18,753 24,226 25,779 12,435 9,711 14,141 9,376 8,824 ROBBERY Highway Commercial House Gas Or Service Station Convenience Store Residence Bank Miscellaneous BURGLARY 26,437,953 2,341,063 2,128,029 2,326,432 2,035,166 2,177,178 2,041,837 2,006,322 2,370,708 2,068,209 2,209,381 2,236,236 2,487,392 Residence 18,356,096 1,704,835 1,425,634 1,563,332 1,339,289 1,546,354 1,503,885 1,503,130 1,669,070 1,442,948 1,552,411 1,428,055 1,677,153 Night, 6 PM -6 AM Day, 6 AM -6 PM Unknown Non-Residence Night, 6 PM -6 AM Day, 6 AM - 6 PM Unknown LARCENY-THEFT $200 And Over $50 To $200 Under $50 Pocket-Picking Purse Snatching Shoplifting From Motor Vehicle Vehicle Parts and Access. Bicycles From Buildings Coin-Operated Machines All Other 6,217,411 6,547,950 5,590,735 629,080 581,035 494,720 565,882 491,589 368,163 518,436 622,412 422,484 450,631 515,075 373,583 543,278 565,310 437,766 483,998 561,230 458,657 519,651 502,178 481,301 607,439 541,586 520,045 435,892 472,107 534,949 447,138 621,590 483,683 444,415 528,900 464,740 571,571 544,938 560,644 8,081,857 636,228 702,395 763,100 695,877 630,824 537,952 503,192 701,638 625,261 656,970 808,181 820,239 4,425,976 675,275 2,980,606 347,126 45,450 243,652 380,369 68,089 253,937 446,287 37,859 278,954 398,832 30,412 266,633 285,010 136,978 208,836 336,246 39,387 162,319 243,876 24,537 234,779 381,893 38,388 281,357 312,552 58,952 253,757 333,366 46,577 277,027 472,791 76,162 259,228 487,628 72,484 260,127 19,668,255 1,437,572 1,595,715 1,834,811 1,624,878 1,946,952 1,447,840 1,364,424 1,599,679 1,560,056 1,692,926 1,787,172 1,776,230 15,265,273 1,081,640 1,232,538 1,437,818 1,24.9,098 1,584,300 3,570,780 287,583 294,122 322,255 307,612 298,181 832,202 68,168 64,471 68,349 69,055 74,738 1,095,381 1,018,868 1,211,129 1,198,437 1,293,571 1,428,074 1,434,419 268,501 290,292 321,997 293,127 321,887 282,282 282,941 73,310 68,806 70,177 62,615 68,492 77,468 66,553 70,964 52,880 395,934 4,066,228 2,352,888 1,229,670 3,444,342 51,462 8,003,887 2,950 4,033 32,017 329,524 216,685 75,027 263,463 2,403 511,470 4,722 5,009 27,898 358,737 215,642 76,877 205,649 2,933 698,248 5,362 4,880 32,225 329,674 230,454 91,208 349,362 2,287 789,359 2,811 7,893 4,380 5,314 35,236 27,753 299,878 307,034 171,644 182,752 107,180 97,762 326,264 287,635 4,010 1,489 657,612 1,045,183 2,853 6,520 23,966 357,855 185,182 107,458 250,976 4,801 508,229 5,063 1,916 22,058 296,878 159,452 107,354 244,445 3,970 523,288 10,343 4,774 31,693 322,908 210,408 136,366 294,914 6,962 581,311 5,307 4,121 37,014 302,817 161,581 113,507 303,356 3,598 628,755 9,761 4,413 28,696 354,944 214,974 138,668 321,472 4,235 615,763 6,453 2,136 44,720 385,474 191,709 100,811 308,678 12,327 734,864 7,446 5,384 52,658 420,505 212,405 77,452 288,128 2,447 709,805 MOTOR VEHICLE THEFT 26,799,495 2,082,202 1,835,307 2,043,912 1,731,165 2,107,297 2,273,532 2,617,642 2,251,711 2,345,619 2,652,195 2,206,830 2,652,083 TOTAL STOLEN 74,536,997 6,023,476 5,671,391 6,391,174 5,512,013 6,496,553 5,903,285 6,071,264 6,321,458 6,075,206 6,671,475 6,356,200 7,043,503 TYPE AND VALUE, IN DOLLARS, OF PROPERTY STOLEN AND RECOVERED BY MONTH STATE TOTALS TOTAL JAN FEB MAR APR MAY JUN JUL AUG SEP 4,328,512 8,307,578 1,145,596 318,558 737,017 132,866 301,932 627,732 143,659 455,543 867,538 72,436 348,966 589,596 96,013 335,673 812,715 73,969 376,369 756,190 83,741 339,270 618,339 60,236 353,752 656,305 95,664 346,979 569,435 83,546 27,659,223 950,103 8,706,823 2,127,206 132,805 775,010 1,913,692 69,950 709,179 1,976,356 84,837 749,301 1,794,689 2,104,606 2,342,922 78,776 68,563 78,595 773,651 675,668 676,908 2,696,841 72,435 644,460 2,383,645 90,162 787,486 2,431,568 65,519 669,239 1,563,517 1,965,137 562,507 143,549 . 147,617 72,493 114,459 175,823 48,095 143,423 125,630 66,766 127,745 131,602 46,085 149,798 173,814 37,580 107,145 123,135 34,306 120,479 160,248 41,970 133,723 191,734 45,752 Livestock Miscellaneous 78,955 19,269,046 4,336 1,432,018 2,203 1,564,667 11,939 1,837,405 1,709 1,620,105 2,873 1,953,098 4,375 1,330,871 TOTAL STOLEN 74,536,907 6,023,475 5,871,391 8,391,174 5,512,013 6,495,563 396,197 657,568 137,378 15,143 48,137 10,093 25,988 31,267 30,135 22,763 46,683 8,498 18,417 29,400 5,581 18,758,513 93,212 399,035 1,322,840 28,586 31,918 1,351,524 10,817 43,626 1,424,400 19,486 23,159 125,980 84,802 54,758 13,707 5,375 3,421 6,245 2,411 3,959 8,799 10,395 4,508 15,340 5,586 3,491 29,579 2,837,400 8,750 145,943 220 100,988 1,132 217,882 925 149,857 23,574,422 1,633,913 1,807,180 1,787,706 STOLEN Currency, Notes, Etc. Jewelry/ Precious Metals Clothing And Furs Locally Stolen Vehicles Office Equipment Stereos/TV's/Cameras Firearms Household Goods Consumable Goods OCT NOV DEC 399,554 ' 350,411 788,758 601,268 80,866 84,483 401,505 682,685 138,117 2,825,883 67,641 688,032 2,345,087 80,143 781,563 2,716,729 60,677 776,326 126,406 185,324 28,656 129,237 123,214 40,587 102,514 220,248 38,555 165,039 206,748 61,662 4,198 1,312,788 12,250 1,485 1,581,750 1,556,284 20,075 1,507,628 3,619 1,748,309 9,893 1,824,123 5,903,285 8,071,284 6,321,468 6,075,206 8,671,475 0,358,200 7,043,503 123,979 59,953 8,979 24,141 59,788 7,275 26,900 78,380 7,987 33,018 60,259 7,265 26,554 64,199 8,426 38,754 82,921 10,534 22,322 52,032 13,568 18,218 44,549 19,037 1,151,102 1,318,974 2,567 6,622 29,262 30,230 1,462,413 2,517 24,616 2,126,028 4,331 34,923 1,545,816 3,607 34,033 1,765,785 883 45,186 1,945,814 7,697 30,707 1,545,629 2,331 36,206 1,808,1 3,768 35;169 17,315 9,555 4,512 8,056 9,710 4,534 12,295 5,755 5,373 5,759 5,827 3,422 11,709 8,252 3,871 6,269 4,591 10,388 3,952 7,645 3,538 16,534 9,700 3,741 151 182,702 240 438,992 500 215,587 0 259,887 600 158,504 15,516 167,275 725 503,696 820 296,087 1,418,661 1,757,949 2,032,282 2,518,069 1,958,893 2,093,966 2,320,486 2,191,644 2,256,811 RECOVERED Currency, Notes, Etc. Jewelry/Precious Metals Clothing And Furs Locally Stolen Vehicles Office Equipment Stereos/ TV's/Cameras Firearms Household Goods Consumable Goods Livestock Miscellaneous TOTAL RECOVERED INDEX CRIMES BY COUNTY INDEX OFFENSES SANTA CRUZ APACHE COCHISE COCONINO GILA GRAHAM GREENLEE MARICOPA - 6 2 1 1 - 130 9 1 37 9 6 6 12 - 7 29 - 3 3 685 11 19 208 33 - 12 29 - 6 1 18 11 - 3 - 2 1 490 195 9 2 10 9 152 56 28 5 - 12 - 21 8 5 26 71 11 2 2,699 32 15 756 113 3 20 82 4 - 12 3 3 22 6 4 4 - - - 1,038 297 212 14 2 3 3 6 - 326 86 33 38 14 6 1 - 8 2 3 25 17 4 1 8 39 7 - 2 1,152 13 6 311 55 2 7 36 38 167 206 92 44 28 4,585 188 73 1,277 419 57 150 545 8 5 7 23 15 20 27 48 42 23 11 18 4 5 3 3 3 1,338 920 1,425 33 7 23 6 10 11 330 217 247 94 71 77 5 8 5 32 24 17 47 110 87 18 109 89 40 32 22 902 125 46 483 177 39 77 301 114 725 996 345 127 62 30,723 745 471 10,921 1,376 396 586 1,369 68 36 10 468 211 46 522 363 111 199 123 23 72 47 8 41 18 3 20,091 8,270 2,362 612 104 29 336 98 37 8,870 911 1,140 914 394 68 311 42 43 350 190 46 802 389 178 244 1,722 2,732 742 320 129 67,253 1,217 1,060 22,405 2,684 508 1,212 3,366 MOHAVE NAVAJO PIMA FINAL YAVAPAI YUMA CRIMINAL HOMICIDE Murder and Nonnegligent Manslaughter -, FORCIBLE RAPE Rape By Force Attempts to Commit ROBBERY Firearm Knife or Cutting Instrument Other Dangerous Weapon Strong-Arm (Hands, Fist, Feet, Etc.) ASSAULT Firearm Knife or Cutting Instrument Other Dangerous Weapon Hands, Fist, Feet, Etc. Aggravated BURGLARY Forcible Entry Unlawful Entry - No Force Attempted Forcible Entry LARCENY-THEFT MOTOR VEHICLE THEFT Autos Trucks And Buses Motorcycles Other Vehicles TOTALS 15 170 ' 245 69 33 14 6,906 196 118 2,409 228 50 68 396 5 9 1 - 81 42 39 8 142 63 34 6 34 18 17 - 16 9 7 1 5 6 3 - 3,787 1,616 1,184 319 78 28 60 30 65 28 15 10 1,233 625 488 63 121 44 54 9 17 29 1 3 40 14 13 1 181 97 73 45 418 2,823 4,281 1,280 528 238 112,981 2,398 1,757 38,013 4,862 1,020 2,054 5,799 . MANSLAUGHTER BY NEGLIGENCE 1 - 3 2 - - 2 - - - 1 - - - OTHER ASSAULTS SIMPLE 26 228 569 127 33 14 5,805 44 63 3,710 439 53 183 421 VALUE, IN DOLLARS, OF PROPERTY STOLEN BY CRIME BY COUNTY APACHE COCHtSE COCONINO GRA GRAHAM GREEIVLEE MARICOPA MOHAVE NAVAJO PIMA PINAL SANTA CRUZ YAVAPAI VUMA HOMICIDE 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,415 2,140 0 0 0 200 0 12,115 FORCIBLE RAPE 0 0 0 0 200 0 17,328 0 0 5,214 1,097 0 0 7,282 20,114 13,767 22,062 5,246 114 1,151,970 9,146 31,421 223,322 19,518 1,650 17,394 68,579 19,064 0 0 0 0 0 1,050 2,582 8,936 1,021 323 20 0 885 16,199 1,574 952 433 1,919 0 985 41 4,000 68 200 700 0 237 00000lo o INDEX OFFENSES 0 6 0 0 108 0 0 212,853 459,053 57,275 33,548 179,595 133,975 75,671 5,303 809 1,364 906 485 0 279 3,029 27,772 200 470 0 0 0 113,486 34,440 11,377 16,724 36,359 6,725 4,211 7,949 4,136 1,333 1,347 2,765 0 1,988 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,650 1,893 0 517 654 540 13,790 0 4,947 1,283 750 899 57,472 1,690 1,538 BURGLARY 39,140 393,043 369,735 156,002 42,964 22,321 16,742,027 463,425 248,449 6,415,721 571,580 211,622 241,792 520,132 Residence 21,301 220,418 183,440 103,245 20,759 4,034 11,563,921 330,746 167,538 4,737,872 331,264 157,037 139,366 375,154 10,557 5,678 5,066 114,194 47,235 58,989 62,698 32,409 88,333 37,207 21,907 44,131 7,118 2,540 11,101 1,241 691 2,102 3,190,292 4,155,331 4,218,298 161,189 27,478 142,078 84,106 10,015 73,417 2,127,726 2,049,895 560,251 130,603 60,441 140,220 80,727 36,873 39,437 36,446 20,116 82,806 173,307 77,341 124,506 17,839 172,625 186,295 52,757 22,205 18,287 5,178,106 132,680 80,911 1,677,849 240,316 54,585 102,424 144,978 13,302 2,164 2,373 141,328 4,302 26,995 99,958 28,377 57,960 14,361 1,932 36,464 9,628 1,774 10,803 16,704 130 1,453 2,548,480 297,329 2,332,297 72,037 11,154 49,489 68,840 3,353 8,718 1,089,248 287,543 301,058 151,554 14,727 74,035 46,468 3,849 4,268 64,579 6,781 31,064 89,489 11,860 43,629 74,446 371,472 482,840 130,766 50,233 13,791 12,559,482 385,999 236,828 3,629,810 668,161 81,561 278,585 704,281 $200 And Over $50 To $200 Under $50 63,003 10,143 1,300 297,039 59,835 14,598 366,608 95,424 20,808 99,312 26,138 5,316 34,216 13,755 2,262 6,474 6,443 874 9,900,596 2,139,310 519,576 337,732 40,527 7,740 192,164 38,735 5,929 2,571,365 861,842 196,603 551,624 94,428 22,109 62,534 14,815 4,212 229,163 41,274 8,148 553,443 128,111 ' 22,727 Pocket-Picking Purse Snatching Shoplifting From Motor Vehicle Motor Vehicle Parts And Access. Bicycles From Buildings Coin-Operated Machines All Other 570 266 518 11,025 68 562 4,274 52,243 128 3,720 5,733 101,710 0 69 1,214 35,200 628 125 2,279 10,610 0 140 219 3,235 41,399 31,629 278,124 2,489,675 1,121 729 1,433 67,123 2,452 2,711 9,015 45,735 16,354 11,052 71,333 910,200 3,325 600 8,375 119,517 110 0 2,857 9,863 937 471 5,102 52,026 3,872 806 5,459 158,066 19,669 1,133 13,796 341 27,128 20,183 21,523 70,237 880 201,502 34,408 32,044 120,988 3,014 181,095 16,899 5,028 32,605 240 39,511 4,707 4,061 19,420 72 8,331 2,050 822 2,520 50 4,755 1,615,524 789,424 2,047,207 29,765 5,236,735 20,521 3,920 41,957 1,246 247,949 16,636 10,709 41,009 2,289 106,272 438,469 289,589 766,830 9,773 1,116,210 56,597 25,531 67,961 1,346 384,909 12,831 5,639 24,304 25 25,932 33,683 7,395 64,716 1,521 112,734 60,711 32,852 130,792 900 310,824 MOTOR VEHICLE THEFT 33,380 485,329 738,202 150,531 71,770 8,900 17,323,024 691,675 333,179 5,170,830 510,076 236,220 163,642 882,737 167,080 1,263,811 1,812,639 442,546 185,167 849,877 15,444,807 1,770,432 631,263 701,413 2,196,126 ROBBERY Highway Commercial House Gas Or Service Station Convenience Store Residence Bank Miscellaneous Night, 6 PM - 6 AM Day, 6 AM -6 PM Unknown Non-Residence Night, 6 PM - 6 AM Day, 6 AM -6 PM Unknown LARCENY-THEFT TOTAL STOLEN 45,128 47,795,246 1,562,386 TYPE AND VALUE, IN DOLLARS, OF PROPERTY STOLEN AND RECOVERED BY COUNTY STOLEN APACHE COCHISE COCONINO (IAA Currency, Notes, Etc. Jewelry/ Precious Metals Clothing and Furs 14,944 8,684 1,240 74,507 141,879 18,953 148,950 120,561 42,029 Locally Stolen Vehicles Office Equipment Stereos/TV's/ Cameras 58,480 1,210 8,904 494,029 8,4.60 81,742 6,195 1,736 736 Livestock Miscellaneous TOTAL STOLEN Firearms Household Goods Consumable Goods MARICOPA MOHAVE NAVAJO 2,480,896 5,488,113 740,061 170,939 151,739 21,011 72,006 125,863 5,730 8,900 17,920,498 40 649,425 10,681 5,667,935 682,483 1,748 84,170 953,317 1,217,643 294,719 50 51,426 442,545 165,187 85,383 40,136 8,410 1,423 3,200 829 2,078 669 2,077 295,577 525 9,601 629,136 18,308 31,014 92,205 0 3,427 56,545 300 1,146 2,630 611 6 3,967 1,231 631 10,123 14,045 4,319 7,803 54 1,552 560 1,330 231 190 110 622 15,001 8,495 60 124,535 840 60,001 100 16,409 0 8,608 0 2,613 GRAHAM GREENLEE 41,462 34,208 6,780 10,771 5,005 3,897 1,747 4,194 376 738,027 31,687 170,760 157,156 6,277 32,341 72,170 525 11,064 26,905 46,693 8,030 34,131 54,467 9,808 30,247 17,971 4,980 4,632 4,881 746 17,231 47,720 2,379 360,034 2,317 260,102 350 110,773 167,080 1,283,611 1,612,839 1,680 1,400 255 21,533 15,942 2,944 43,830 800 731 PPM MAL SANTA CRUZ YAVAPAI YUMA 935,775 1,704,377 234,889 116,400 126,634 20,053 39,295 69,960 14,621 66,962 74,745 9,575 153,858 251,616 26,381 331,369 10,423 52,696 5,390,684 207,770 2,180,199 517,949 10,735 153,060 236,040 7,958 48,353 168,267 5,378 47,057 883,171 8,467 157,861 20,161 26,889 7,476 33,750 15,592 4,365 312,610 434,074 182,316 51,405 56,547 25,912 9,589 6,469 2,285 30,009 27,557 9,324 47,775 53,215 10,283 550 38,683 12,917 12,343,956 3,000 382,769 432 197,651 6,215 3,855,988 4,782 686,955 511 96,172 765 261,774 1,690 600,809 45,126 47,795,246 1,552,385 849,877 15,444,897 1,770,432 531,253 701,413 2,195,126 2,791 1,403 1,527 RECOVERED Currency, Notes, Etc. Jewelry/Precious Metals Clothing and Furs Locally Stolen Vehicles Office Equipment Stereos/TV's/Cameras Firearms Household Goods Consumable Goods Livestock Miscellaneous i , TOTAL RECOVERED 75,439 478,546 901,715 127,002 82,590 371,305 61,344 19,462 36,828 26,758 13,567 37,897 2,173 133,504 53,520 20,790 13,503 55,358 2,317 1,177 604 4,566 2,952 20,496 2,305 17,267 19,836 2,591 6,600 12,749,438 41,545 0 5,975 237,651 268,191 0 12,070 246,408 6,067 4,759 3,312,802 4,968 49,867 360,035 3,408 17,067 101,940 474 4,199 114,122 13,557 3,676 481,684 3,260 17,852 60,091 42,018 32,619 2,205 119 1,108 14,200 634 1,178 10,668 7,245 6,921 5,674 5,941 2,389 217 65 372 2,558 2,233 1,395 5,094 9,166 1,415 1,771 1,984,907 300 21,620 1,257 21,247 600 153,227 1,300 276,163 0 8,132 75 34,247 8,275 117,196 3,754,112 743,155 121,746 197,616 683,636 78 377 19 73,544 , , ' 18,584 15,865,279 388,661 349,387 INDEX CRIMES BY JUSTICE PLANNING REGION INDEX OFFENSES REGION 1 REGION 2 REGION 4 REGION 5 REGION 8 130 37 9 21 10 13 685 208 60 40 33 13 490 195 152 56 40 20 30 10 28 5 11 2 2,699 756 111 114 124 31 1,038 297 212 1,152 326 86 33 311 37 14 7 53 39 19 7 49 42 14 6 62 12 4 3 12 4,585 1,277 467 733 511 296 1,338 920 1,425 902 330 217 247 483 73 87 77 230 80 117 110 426 117 82 95 217 32 31 31 202 30,723 10,921 2,167 2,114 1,721 1,310 20,091 8,270 2,362 8,870 911 1,140 1,267 687 204 1,414 493 207 1,113 517 91 892 318 100 67,253 22,405 5,248 4,583' 3,426 2,679 6,906 • 297 267 REGION 3 CRIMINAL HOMICIDE Murder and Nonnegligent Manslaughter FORCIBLE RAPE Rape By Force Attempt to Commit ROBBERY Firearm Knife or Cutting Instrument Other Dangerous Weapon Strong-Arm (Hands, Fist, Feet, Etc.) ASSAULT Firearm Knife or Cutting Instrument Other Dangerous Weapon Hands, Fist, Feet, Etc. - Aggravated BURGLARY Forcible Entry Unlawful Entry- No Force Attempted Forcible Entry LARCENY-THEFT MOTOR VEHICLE THEFT Autos Trucks And Buses Motorcycles Other Vehicles TOTALS MANSLAUGHTER BY NEGLIGENCE OTHER ASSAULTS - SIMPLE 2,409 446 592 3,787 1,616 1,184 319 1,233 625 488 63 252 114 63 17 259 125 133 75 155 62 71 9 119 86 50 12 112,981 38,013 8,508 8,197 8,122 4,809 2 - 4 - 3 - 5,805 301 841 465 566 328 a VALUE, IN DOLLARS, OF PROPERTY STOLEN BY CRIME BY JUSTICE PLANNING REGION INDEX OFFENSES HOMICIDE FORCIBLE RAPE ROBBERY REGION 1 REGION 2 REGION 3 REGION 4 REGION 5 REGION 6 1,415 0 0 14,255 0 200 17,328 5,214 0 7,282 1,097 200 1,151,970 223,322 90,991 77,725 24,764 15,531 2,582 8,942 1,021 323 128 0 2,535 212,853 459,053 57,275 33,548 179,595 133,975 75,671 113,486 34,440 11,377 16,724 36,359 6,725 4,211 40,185 29,296 1,669 1,557 2,459 13,790 2,035 10,250 2,092 2,114 1,805 57,957 1,690 1,817 7,990 8,136 1,401 1,547 3,465 0 2,225 16,742,027 6,415,721 899,116 983,557 727,582 669,950 Residence Night, 6 PM - 6 AM Day, 6 AM - 6 PM Unknown 11,563,921 3,190,292 4,155,331 4,218,298 4,737,872 2,127,726 2,049,895 560,251 511,647 193,807 68,218 249,622 705,899 334,496 104,819 266,584 434,509 167,810 82,348 184,351 402,248 203,280 87,339 111,629 Non-Residence Night, 6 PM - 6 AM Day, 6 AM - 6 PM Unknown 5,178,106 2,548,480 297,329 2,332,297 1,677,849 1,089,248 287,543 301,058 387,469 246,679 40,675 100,115 277,658 161,526 23,014 93,118 293,073 165,915 16,659 110,499 267,702 214,128 10,055 43,519 12,559,482 3,629,810 1,072,699 1,090,280 798,927 517,057 $200 And Over $50 To $200 Under $50 9,900,596 2,139,310 519,576 2,571,365 861,842 196,603 850,938 185,576 36,185 891,175 168,638 30,467 650,936 120,566 27,425 400,263 94,848 21,946 Pocket-Picking Purse Snatching Shoplifting From Motor Vehicle Motor Vehicle Parts and Access. Bicycles From Buildings Coin-Operated Machines All Other 41,399 31,629 278,124 2,489,675 1,615,524 789,424 2,047,207 29,765 5,236,735 16,354 11,052 71,333 910,200 438,469 289,589 766,830 9,773 1,116,210 4,087 7,168 20,368 210,496 104,396 51,281 240,509 7,165 427,229 4,993 1,535 6,891 225,189 81,232 36,772 172,749 2,146 558,773 3,325 669 9,589 154,717 73,496 30,559 100,566 1,586 424,420 806 827 9,629 75,951 39,771 32,045 116,481 1,027 240,520 17,323,024 5,170,830 1,268,403 1,574,412 660,607 802,219 15,444,897 3,331,209 3,747,511 2,212,977 2,005,157 Highway Commercial House Gas Or Service Station Convenience Store Residence Bank Miscellaneous BURGLARY LARCENY-THEFT MOTOR VEHICLE THEFT 4 TOTAL STOLEN 47,795,248 TYPE AND VALUE, IN DOLLARS, OF PROPERTY STOLEN AND RECOVERED BY JUSTICE PLANNING REGION STOLEN REGION 1 REGION 2 REGION 3 REGION 4 REGION 6 REGION 9 Currency, Notes, Etc. Jewelry/ Precious Metals Clothing and Furs 2,480,896 5,488,113 740,061 935,775 1,704,377 234,889 302,862 329,863 58,574 324,797 403,355 47,392 157,862 160,842 26,833 126,320 221,038 37,847 Locally Stolen Vehicles Office Equipment Stereos/1V's/Cameras 17,920,498 649,425 5,667,935 5,390,684 207,770 2,180,199 1,296,143 48,698 279,417 1,565,654 10,215 242,031 675,105 17,012 185,401 811,139 16,983 151,840 953,317 1,217,643 294,719 312,610 434,074 182,316 104,085 99,352 24,233 67,936 80,104 17,759 81,652 74,518 30,892 43,917 59,446 12,588 38,683 12,343,956 6,215 3,855,988 20,745 767,247 4,690 983,578 5,132 797,728 3,490 520,549 47,795,240 15,444,897 3,331,209 3,747,511 2,212,977 2,006,157 82,590 371,305 61,344 133,504 53,520 20,790 103,582 99,929 13,143 36,729 56,664 29,349 14,926 58,558 3,146 24,866 17,592 9,606 12,749,438 41,545 237,651 3,312,802 4,968 49,867 1,033,496 38,732 40,180 749,875 3,260 29,922 452,240 3,408 20,494 460,662 1,299 20,921 60,091 42,018 32,619 10,668 7,245 6,921 29,511 17,523 6,898 7,299 9,285 2,523 13,477 5,995 3,941 4,934 2,736 1,856 1,771 1,984,907 600 153,227 17,173 123,990 8,575 138,816 1,400 292,572 60 143,888 Firearms Household Goods Consumable Goods Livestock Miscellaneous TOTAL STOLEN RECOVERED Currency, Notes, Etc. Jewelry/Precious Metals Clothing and Furs Locally Stolen Vehicles Office Equipment Stereos/TV's/Cameras Firearms Household Goods Consumable Goods Livestock Miscellaneous •• TOTAL RECOVERED . , ._,,, _. . 15,685,279 8,754,112 1,524,167 1,072,297 . 870,157 185,420 It 43 PERSONS ARRESTED SUMMARY ANALYSIS The number of arrests are primarily a measure of police activity. The number of arrests also provides a useful indicator of criminal involvement of perpetrators by age, sex and race, particularly for those crimes which have a high-solution rate. The reporting proCedures used in the UCR program require that an arrest be counted on each separate occasion a person is taken into custody, summoned or cited, except for traffic violators other than DWI. Arizona law enforcement officers arrested a total of 116,339 persons in 1978. This is 880 less or .8 of one percent from 1977. There were 29,111 persons arrested for Part I offenses. This is an increase of .4 of one percent over the 28,988 persons arrested in 1977. Adults accounted for 70 percent of the total arrests and Juveniles 30 percent. Male arrests accounted for 97,809 or 84 percent and females 18,530 or 16 percent. Of the 35,137 Juveniles arrested in 1978, 19,450 or 55 percent were 15 years or younger, this is a 1 percent decrease over 1977. As to race, Whites accounted for 84 percent of the total arrests, Indians 9 percent and Negros 7 percent. ARREST BY AGE GROUP JUVENILE Murder Rape Robbery Aggravated Assault Burglary 58.4% Larceny-Theft 57.2% Motor Vehicle Theft 61.4% 44 ADULT ARREST BY OFFENSE Et RACE OFFENSE Murder and nonnegligent manslaughter Number of Arrests Distribution Rate Per 1,000 Population White Negro Indian • Chinese Japanese Other - 168 .14% .07 137 24 6 1 - 71 .06% .03 66 1 3 - - 344 .30% .15 264 60 20 - - Robbery 1,284 1.10% .55 912 300 70 1 - 1 Aggravated assault 3,094 2.66% 1.31 2,455 417 209 3 - 10 Burglary 6,227 5.35% 2.65 5,336 644 233 11 1 2 16,262 13.98% 6.91 13,776 1,482 944 25 2 33 1,661 1.43% .71 1,477 93 89 2 - - 29,111 25.02% 12.37 24,423 3,021 1,574 43 3 47 4,167 3.58% 1.77 3,4414 414 303 - - Arson 280 .24% .12 256 17 7 Forgery and counterfeiting 419 .36% .18 351 59 7 1 - 1,161 1.00% .49 1,012 89 55 2 - 200 .17% .08 189 9 1 - - Stolen property; buying, receiving, possessing Vandalism 1,080 2,769 .93% .46 922 123 31 2.38% 1.18 2,507 141 104 13 Weapons: carrying, possessing, etc. 1,792 1.54% .76 1,439 289 57 4 3 - Prostitution and commercial vice 1,104 .95% .47 767 295 30 3 - 9 Sex Offenses, (except forcible rape and prostitution) 1,312 1.13% .56 1,078 120 111 - - 3 192 4 - 20 1 Manslaughter by negligence Forcible rape Larceny-theft Motor vehicle theft SUBTOTAL - PART II Other assaults, simple ' Fraud Embezzlement Drug abuse violations Gambling Offenses against family and children Driving under the influence Liquor laws Disorderly conduct Vagrancy 7,603 6.54% 3.23 6,885 502 44 .04% .02 37 7 193 .16% .08 157 26,769 23.00% 11.37 23,043 6,069 5.22% 2.58 4,262 10,362 8.91% 4.40 - 29 - - 1 842 2,839 6 1 38 160 1,638 1 2 8 17 7,719 770 1,852 2 59 - - 21 515 .44% .22 394 15,052 12.94% 6.39 12,361 1,143 1,510 16 1 Curfew and loitering laws (juveniles) 1,584 1.36% .67 1,490 45 44 2 - Runaways (juveniles) 4,753 4.09% 2.02 4,268 138 339 3 37.06 87,228 74.98% 49.42 116,339 Race Distribution 72,581 97,004 83.38% 5,231 8,252 7.09% 9,208 10,782 9.27% SUBTOTAL TOTALS 3 - - 62 All other offenses (except traffic) - 57 100 .09% 5 8 11 .01% 143 190 .16% 45 MALE JUVENILE MALE ARRESTS AGE 10 AND UNDER OFFENSE CLASSIFICATION PART I Murder and Nonneg. Manslaughter Manslaughter By Negligence Forcible Rape Robbery Aggravated Assault Burglary Larceny-Theft Motor Vehicle Theft PART II Other Assaults - Simple Arson Forgery And Counterfeiting Fraud Embezzlement Stolen Property Vandalism Weapons - Carrying, Possessing Prostitution And Comm. Vice Sex Offenses 13 -14 16 18 17 9 2 16 71 145 663 1,172 236 3 4 15 107 192 586 1,089 191 315 543 3,352 6,565 923 - - - 1 1 15 192 509 9 14 17 342 863 52 7 50 83 1,857 22$ 4 1 11 72 91 660 1,075 207 727 1,288 3,134 2,121 2,314 2,187 11,771 210 34 6 13 1 258 19 13 21 4 84 241 74 1 31 291 14 18 404 50 35 191 20 8 9 2 65 198 62 31 1,091 182 46 86 18 382 1,575 298 4 152 - PART I SUBTOTAL TOTAL JUVENILE 11 - 12 se - 909 16 8 49 53 57 2 9 260 3 9 38 1 3 2 26 241 7 13 - - 1 8 1 12 - 5 30 - 2 34 4 2 Opium, Cocaine, Derivatives Marijuana Synthetic Narcotics Other Dangerous Nonnarcotics 2 4 32 3 8 2 201 4 11 4 256 4 5 3 419 7 12 5 528 3 20 14 1,444 23 60 Bookmaking - Horse, Sport Book Numbers and Lottery All Other Gambling - - - - 1 1 2 1 3 26 123 9 64 2 12 39 3 206 38 167 4 10 163 153 9 538 255 562 2 25 312 183 9 498 295 485 5 141 637 274 10 554 353 477 343 833 313 5 658 332 319 11 522 1,960 998 36 2,577 1,282 2,074 929 2,786 2,878 3,674 4,249 14,926 2,217 6,899 4,797 6,988 8,438 28,087 90 38 9 108 231 102 3 33 DRUGS, SALE OR MFG Opium, Cocaine, Derivatives Marijuana Synthetic Narcotics Other Dangerous Nonnarcotics 8 84 4 3 DRUGS, POSSESSION 8 Offenses Against Family And Children Driving Under The Influence Liquor Laws Disorderly Conduct Vagrancy All Other, Except Traffic Curfew And Loitering Runaways PART II SUBTOTAL 833 , . TOTALS I- 1,380 . ADULT MALE ARRESTS AGE OFFENSE CLASSIFICATION 18 19 20 22 21 23 24 2E-29 30-34 35-39 40-44 46-49 50-64 55-59 80-64 85-OVER TOTAL ADULTS PART I Murder and Nonneg. Manslaughter Manslaughter By Negligence Forcible Rape Robbery Aggravated Assault Burglary Larceny-Theft Motor Vehicle Theft PART I SUBTOTAL 13 3 20 128 164 452 563 138 7 4 23 80 184 340 473 66 7 5 28 90 153 280 413 64 5 2 20 77 155 194 326 51 8 6 25 53 127 145 253 30 3 2 26 61 123 118 209 25 10 3 10 46 119 116 228 28 22 8 56 162 418 350 769 95 12 4 42 82 249 179 439 38 14 3 17 39 208 90 275 27 8 4 11 25 117 45 249 15 4 4 9 10 94 22 194 12 9 3 4 3 84 22 116 6 3 1 1 4 37 21 115 4 2 1 2 25 5 83 1 4 1 1 23 4 105 131 53 294 862 2,280 2,383 4,810 600 1,481 1,177 1,040 830 647 587 560 1,880 1,045 873 474 349 247 168 119 138 11,413 183 3 25 34 8 84 130 112 12 26 191 6 18 32 4 76 106 113 12 35 141 1 16 56 11 56 79 93 23 30 167 8 21 54 6 53 69 82 16 41 140 3 13 43 6 52 50 70 20 46 121 8 10 41 6 30 43 61 18 44 139 10 40 10 25 48 63 19 57 492 8 55 170 26 80 160 258 90 211 344 13 31 129 22 43 109 160 75 165 212 7 18 70 13 37 49 102 57 113 132 8 15 48 10 24 34 69 22 105 94 3 9 41 8 13 28 43 25 67 62 7 4 31 3 12 17 46 16 58 40 6 6 25 3 6 12 28 9 24 23 2 15 2 2 7 15 1 26 24 2 7 1 4 12 5 15 2,505 83 253 836 138 594 945 1,327 420 1,063 5 43 1 5 5 43 4 7 12 59 - 16 56 15 30 5 1 16 31 1 2 64 100 2 10 29 39 1 5 26 20 4 2 10 5 1 1 13 6 1 - - - - 6 1 - 1 2 4 20 41 2 5 238 476 22 42 14 503 5 17 20 508 5 15 18 453 5 19 14 338 2 14 12 305 3 17 16 262 4 12 13 237 1 13 53 619 7 38 27 232 7 16 16 116 10 8 40 1 5 2 17 1 1 3 6 6 2 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 _ 219 3,640 42 185 - - - 2 - 3 - 2 1 1 3 6 1 1 4 1 3 1 3 2 1 1 1 3 2 32 11 884 680 501 27 758 14 1,159 154 584 23 964 13 1,337 124 574 19 853 10 1,266 110 493 17 857 7 1,229 81 422 13 738 3 1,053 97 403 13 617 6 1,013 86 402 12 562 21 4,206 321 1,486 63 2,009 18 3,100 308 911 61 1,082 8 2,228 310 624 62 757 11 1,848 251 497 45 551 3 1,576 240 369 34 386 3 1,303 204 304 30 265 2 798 193 199 24 177 1 488 98 136 16 89 1 423 81 121 5 98 132 23,911 3,338 8,026 464 10,763 4,073 4,098 3,995 3,714 3,340 2,914 2,808 10,553 6,933 4,867 3,745 2,983 2,389 1,560 928 801 59,699 5,654 5,275 5,035 4,544 3,987 3,481 3,388 12,433 7,978 5,540 4,219 3,332 2,636 1,748 1,047 939 71,112 PART II Other Assaults - Simple Arson Forgery And Counterfeiting Fraud Embezzlement Stolen Property Vandalism Weapons - Carrying, Possessing Prostitution And Comm. Vice Sex Offenses DRUGS, SALE OR MFG Opium, Cocaine, Derivatives Marijuana Synthetic Narcotics Other Dangerous Nonnarcotics - DRUGS, POSSESSION Opium, Cocaine, Derivatives Marijuana Synthetic Narcotics Other Dangerous Nonnarcotics Bookmaking - Horse, Sport Book Numbers And Lottery All Other Gambling Offenses Against Family And Children Driving Under The Influence Liquor Laws Disorderly Conduct Vagrancy All Other, Except Traffic PART II SUBTOTAL TOTALS JUVENILE FEMALE ARRESTS AGE .• OFFENSE CLASSIFICATION 10 AND UNDER TOTAL JUVENILE 11-12 13-14 16 16 17 — — — 14 18 90 846 37 — — — 10 12 47 498 26 1 — —. 7 14 69 484 14 — — — 10 15 51 449 13 — 42 -61 286 2.730 97 PART I 1 Murder and Nonneg, Manslaughter Manslaughter By Negligence Forcible Rape Robbery Aggravated Assault Burglary Larceny-Theft Motor Vehicle Theft — — 1 14 117 1 — — — 1 1 15 336 6 PART I SUBTOTAL 133 359 1,0116 593 589 638 3,217 5 1 — — — — 21 — — — 21 1 1 2 — 1 25 — — — 85 2 5 5 3 5 51 6 1 1 as — 7 5 2 13 23 5 5 1 57 1 2 2 1 11 15 6 9 2 50 1 9 5 1 9 21 5 12 8 267 6 24 19 7 39 156 22 27 12 — — — — — — — — 2 2 — — 1 1 — — — 2 — — — 2 — 1 3 7 1 — 1 — — — 4 — — — 53 4 1 1 67 3 2 — 74 3 2 3 100 — 2 4 299 10 7 — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — 1 2 3 — 16 2 20 — — 5 9 — 27 12 109 2 1 40 — 172 89 894 1 4 10t 40 3 135 85 738 2 19 131 53 1 135 66 570 2 28 138 49 1 129 48 348 7 53 459 194 5 614 302 2,679 72 217 1,506 1,292 1,164 972 5,223 1,510 3,440 — PART II Other Assaults - Simple Arson Forgery And Counterfeiting Fraud Embezzlement Stolen Property Vandalism Weapons - Carrying, Possessing Prostitution and Comm. Vice Sex Offenses DRUGS, SALE OR MFG Opium, Cocaine, Derivatives Marijuana Synthetic Narcotics Other Dangerous Non narcotics DRUGS, POSSESSION Opium, Cocaine, Derivatives Marijuana Synthetic Narcotics Other Dangerous Nonnarcotics Bookmaking - Horse, Sport Book Number And Lottery All Other Gambling Offenses Against Family And Children Driving Under The Influence Liquor Laws Disorderly Conduct Vagrancy All Other, Except Traffic Curfew And Loitering Runaways PART II SUBTOTAL 82 , . ■ I TOTALS 206 579 2,511 1,186 1,753 ADULT FEMALE ARRESTS AGE 65-OVER TOTAL ADULTS — — — — 2 1 43 — — — — — — — 72 — 20 10 1 65 210 206 2,157 41 72 46 72 2,710 4 1 1 6 — 2 1 2 1 — 2 — — 1 — 1 — 2 — — 2 — — — 2 — — 304 9 96 220 37 65 93 145 653 85 — — — — — 59 90 6 10 — — 1 — — — — 55 501 19 28 — — — — — — 5 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25-29 30-34 35-39 40-44 45-49 50-64 55-59 60-64 Murder And Nonneg. Manslaughter Manslaughter By Negligence Forcible Rape Robbery Aggravated Assault Burglary Larceny-Theft Motor Vehicle Theft — 1 — 12 13 26 198 10 — — — 11 12 20 183 4 — 1 — 6 10 22 169 1 1 3 1 5 11 16 138 2 3 — — 4 11 13 122 2 1 — — 4 12 10 118 2 2 — — 1 8 20 114 3 2 — — 11 45 38 322 10 4 3 — 5 35 16 183 5 2 2 — 4 17 7 140 — — — — 1 14 13 116 4 — — — 10 2 80 — 1 — — — 9 — 92 1 — — — 1 1 2 67 1 PART I SUBTOTAL 260 230 209 177 155 147 148 428 251 172 144 96 103 , 12 — OFFENSE CLASSIFICATION PART I . . PART II Othcr Assaults - Simple Arson Forgery And Counterfeiting Fraud Embezzlement Stolen Property Vandalism Weapons - Carrying, Possessing Prostitution And Comm. Vice Sex Offenses 25 -3 13 1 5 7 7 64 4 16 — 9 7 3 7 8 15 77 3 25 — 11 12 4 4 10 9 73 3 15 — 10 6 5 7 4 9 101 9 20 2 8 13 2 5 6 18 86 19 17 1 5 11 1 3 4 6 69 8 11 1 14 19 1 3 2 8 52 7 54 2 16 44 8 11 18 26 100 15 39 — 8 37 2 7 15 13 16 7 24 2 2 21 5 8 5 13 8 5 24 — 5 10 3 2 5 7 6 3 15 — 4 12 1 1 6 8 — 4 8 — 8 1 — 9 11 1 — 5 12 2 2 2 4 1 3 5 7 — — 5 11 7 11 — 1 3 3 — — 13 14 1 4 3 — — — 2 1 — — 4 50 1 4 2 64 1 5 7 54 1 1 8 51 1 2 4 35 3 3 9 27 1 1 7 90 5 4 8 30 3 2 — 11 1 1 5 1 — 1 2 — 1 DRUGS, SALE OR MFG Opium, Cocaine, Derivatives Marijuana Synthetic Narcotics Other Dangerous Nonnarcotics 1 — — — — DRUGS, POSSESSION 5 73 1 1 Opium, Cocaine, Derivatives Marijuana Synthetic Narcotics Other Dangerous Nonnarcotics Bookmaking - Horse, Sport Book Numbers And Lottery All Other Gambling — 1 — — — Offenses Against Family And Children Driving Under The Influence Liquor Laws Disorderly Conduct Vagrancy All Other, Except Traffic 3 68 89 56 2 75 3 115 16 58 4 116 13 78 73 96 — — 2 100 14 85 — 91 TOTALS — 3 1 5 1 — — — — 1 — — 1 — — — — 1 3 105 10 58 — 74 11 346 40 228 1 203 3 318 28 137 1 114 5 254 27 105 — 81 5 216 17 73 3 55 — 194 14 50 1 44 1 136 5 32 — 28 68 9 20 — 14 — 29 3 18 — 9 — 27 2 10 1 7 43 2,283 312 1,154 10 1,098 423 1,262 808 584 448 361 225 132 66 53 7,380 571 1,690 1,069 756 692 457 328 204 111 125 10,090 — — — — — 1 2 105 15 77 — 72 1 86 10 69 '1 62 ... , PART II SUBTOTAL 8 1 2 515 478 551 542 522 411 776 708 780 719 877 568 51 NUMBER OF FULL TIME LAW ENFORCEMENT EMPLOYEES BY AGENCY AS OF OCTOBER 31, 1978 ._. DEPARTMENT POPULATION EMPLOYEES RATE PER 1000 POP. TOTAL SWORN FEMALE MALE CIVILIAN MALE FEMALE Apache County S.O. Avondale P.D. Benson P.D. Bisbee P.D. Buckeye P.D. 39,403 * 6,852 4,036 9,615 2,787 .61 2.48 3.96 3.12 3.58 24 17 16 30 10 13 14 8 21 6 1 0 0 2 0 5 3 3 1 2 5 0 5 6 2 Casa Grande P.D. Chandler P.D. Clarkdale P.D. Clifton P.D. Cochise County S.O. 15,805 23,065 1,153 5,395 18,656 2.78 2.38 2.60 1.66 5.03 44 55 3 9 94 29 31 2 6 59 1 1 1 1 2 3 9 0 0 10 11 14 0 2 23 Coconino County S.O. Coolidge P.D. Cottonwood P.D. Douglas P.D. Duncan P.D. 29,264 " 6,996 4,036 12,508 1 ,009 3.07 3.43 3.71 3.19 1.98 90 24 15 40 2 57 17 8 31 2 8 0 1 1 0 0 1 3 2 0 25 6 3 6 0 Eagar P.D. El Mirage P.D. Eloy P.D. Flagstaff P.D. Florence P.D. 2,210 3,652 6,675 32,195 3,071 1.80 4.38 2.99 2.20 3.25 4 16 20 71 10 3 8 13 50 9 0 2 1 0 1 0 1 1 5 0 1 5 5 16 0 Fredonia P.D. Gila Bend P.D. Gila County S.O. Gilbert P.D. Glendale P.D. 817 2,307 14,165 * 4,084 76,884 2.44 3.90 3.60 2.69 1.78 2 9 51 11 137 2 ' 5 35 10 107 0 0 14 0 4 0 1 0 0 9 0 3 2 1 17 Globe P.D. Gocidyear P.D. Graham County S.O. Greenlee County S.O. Hayden/Winkelman P.D. 7,626 2,638 8,760 " 4,360 2,552 3.01 4.16 1.25 3.66 2.35 23 11 11 16 6 16 6 7 11 6 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 3 4 0 6 4 1 1 0 Holbrook P.D. Huachuca City P.D. Jerome P.D. Kearny P.D. Kingman P.D. 5,286 2,258 601 2,561 8,116 4.35 3.54 8.31 4.68 3.94 23 8 5 12 32 17 4 5 7 18 4 0 0 0 3 0 0000 2 4 0 5 11 2,148 1,754 130,974 * 124,937 3,763 1.39 5.13 5.48 1.63 3.45 3 9 718 204 13 2 3 313 144 9 1 1 4 5 0 0 0 236 28 2 0 5 165 27 2 36,285 * 41,478 * 11,283 1,442 4,133 3.25 1.25 2.39 3.46 3.62 118 52 27 5 15 84 30 26 5 10 5 2 0 0 0 7 6 0 0 2 22 14 1 0 3 Mammoth P.D. Marana M.O. Maricopa County S.O. Mesa P.D. Miami P.D. Mohave County S.O. Navajo County S.O. Nogales P.D. Oro Valley P.D. Page P.D. 52 NUMBER OF FULL TIME LAW ENFORCEMENT EMPLOYEES BY AGENCY AS OF OCTOBER 31, 1978 DEPARTMENT POPULATION EMPLOYEES RATE PER 1000 POP. TOTAL SWORN MALE FEMALE CIVILIAN T MALE FEMALE . Paradise Valley P.D. Parker P.D. Patagonia P.D. Payson P.D. Peoria P.D. f 10,158 2,979 903 4,858 12,494 1.77 4.02 2.21 2.88 2.72 18 12 2 14 34 17 6 2 7 22 0 1 0 0 4 0 1 0 3 3 696,763 1,624 137,208 * 43;761 * 18,260 2.94 .61 3.49 2.76 2.30 2,051 1 479 121 42 1,486 1 251 88 32 42 0 8 3 0 193 0 132 12 3 330 0 88 18 7 Safford P.D. St. Johns P.D. Santa Cruz County S.O. Scottsdale P.D. Show Low P.D. 7,712 4,133 5,882 81,757 3,652 2.07 1.69 5.95 2.16 3.55 16 7 35 177 13 13 5 18 104 8 0 0 0 11 1 3 1 3 37 4 Sierra Vista P.D. Snowflake P.D. Somerton P.D. South Tucson P.D. Springerville P.D. 24,435 2,739 3,364 6,031 1,442 1.55 1.82 4.45 4.47 2.08 38 5 16 27 3 22 3 9 15 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 1 14 25 0 5 0 3 5 0 11 2 3 5 0 Superior P.D. Surprise P.D. Taylor P.D. Tempe P.D. Thatcher P.D. 5,382 3,268 1,624 102,607 3,239 2.78 2.14 .61 1.96 1.23 15 7 1 202 4 10 7 1 136 4. 1 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 25 0 4 0 0 38 0 Tolleson P.D. Tombstone M.O. Tucson P.D. Wickenburg P.D. Willcox P.D. Williams P.D. 3,738 1,725 309,200 3,167 3,171 2,979 3.47 5.79 2.31 2.84 4.41 4.36 13 10 716 9 14 13 8 7 508 8 8 9 0 0 30 0 0 1 2 2 49 1 2 1 3 1 129 0 4 2 20 55 6 65 74 6 5 1 0 1 0 9 2 6 1 1 9 3 16 9 6,518 4,307 187 848 1,176 1,342 49 6 15 838 34 5 9 7 4 0 1 267 9 0 4 230 2 1 1 2 27 11 88 2 16 9 41 0 0 1 1 0 7 0 32 0 4 1 14 Phoenix P.D. Pima P.D. Pima County S.O. Pinal County S.O. Prescott P.D. Winkelman P.D. Winslow P.D. Yavapai County S.O. Youngtown P.D. Yuma P.D. Yuma County S.O. TOTAL - Law enforcement is provided by Hayden P.D. 3.46 27 7,785 33,325 * 2.34 78 6.24 12 1,922 87 2.28 38,154 2.57 85 32,964 4 2,354,000 2.76 . 1 4 0 .4 5 Agencies with no measurable population: Arizona Department of Public Safety Arizona State University Arizona Western College Central Arizona College Eastern Arizona College Northern Arizona University Pima Community College University of Arizona * Includes Indians living within the county boundry. Most Indian tribes provide law enforcement for their reservation. 53 55 -fl)IY sHE„,pp 14) IN MEMORIAM TO THOSE OFFICERS WHO LOST THEIR LIVES IN THE PERFORMANCE OF THEIR DUTY James L. Epp Noah M. Merrill Maricopa County Sheriff's Department Department of Public Safety March 1, 1978 December 11, 1978 POLICE OFFICERS ASSAULTED SUMMARY ANALYSIS There were 1,277 reported assaults on Arizona law enforcement officers in 1978. This represents a 10% increase over the 1,164 assaults in 1977. The weapon most often used in the commission of the assault was hands, fists, feet, etc. This represents 80% of all law enforcement officers assaulted. The most dangerous activity was responding to disturbance calls (family quarrels, man with gun, etc.), with 400 or 31%. The highest incidents of assaults occurred between 2201 and 2400 hours with 273 or 21 %. Officers Assaulted by Month 1978 vs. 1977 1.,. 45 140 136 130 125 120 115 1 10 • •4% .....• 4'.4* 105 100 fir` 95 •. 0. • • • •• • •• ..., • . • . ,r . ♦ . • ••.4,• ... A• .• ..• • '....• 90 85 80 Key: JAN FEB MAR APR MAY JUN JUL AUG SEP OCT NOV DEC win 96 94 100 98 110 95 101 95 90 95 82 108 1978 95 83 85 101 101 83 125 103 129 145 112 115 57 OFFICERS ASSAULTED BY WEAPON 139 10.9% 89 7.0% 33 2.5% HANDS, FISTS Et FEET OTHER DANGEROUS WEAPONS ALL FIREARMS KNIFE OR CUTTING INSTRUMENT TIME OF ASSAULT P.M. A.M. 255 20.0% TIME 25 2.0% 157 12.3% 12:01 - 2:00 46 3.6% 32 2.5% 20 1.6% 2:01 - 4:00 105 8.2% 4:01 - 6:00 147 1.5% 21 166 13.0% 1.6% 30 2.3% TOTAL 515 40.3% 58 6:01 - 8:00 8:01 - 10:00 273 21.4% TOTAL 762 59.7% 10:01 - 12:00 OFFICERS ASSAULTED BY ACTIVITY Type of Weapon ACTIVITY Firearms Knife/ Cut. Inst. Responding to "disturbance" calls (Family quarrels, man with gun, etc.) 33 22 Type of Assignment Other Hands, Dang. Fists, Weapon Feet One Man Veh. Det. Spec. Assign Two Man Totals Vehicle Alone Assisted Alone Assisted Other Alone Police Assaults Assisted Cleared 39 306 400 132 76 177 2 5 1 7 393 3 6 11 2 2 5 — — 1 1 10 13 1 6 4 — 2 — — 13 180 33 47 85 3 4 1 7 176 Burglaries in progress or pursuing burglary suspects 2 Robberies in progress or pursuing robbery suspects 4 — 1 8 Attempting other arrests 2 2 17 159 ■ Civil disorder (Riot, mass disobedience) — 1 1 22 24 7 1 7 — 4 1 4 23 Handling, transporting, custody of prisoners 1 — 6 177 184 51 40 58 — 1 10 24 182 Investigating suspicious persons or circumstances 7 2 17 106 132 23 35 65 1 2 3 3 127 11 — — 12 6 1 3 — — 2 — 9 — 2 4 — — 1 — 7 Ambush - No warning 1 .., Mentally deranged — 1 2 4 7 9 2 33 170 214 45 72 87 1 2 4 3 205 All other 20 3 20 67 100 16 27 29 5 9 8 6 97 TOTALS 89 33 139 1,016 1,277 316 309 524 12 29 32 55 1,242 8 5 51 402 466 81 28 88 614 811 _— Traffic pursuits and stops Personal Injury No Personal Injury 61 Arizona Counties APPENDIX A 62 Arizona Justice Planning Regions APPENDIX B Glossary of Terms CRIME ANALYSIS - Statements relating to type and nature of crimes and rates of occurrence and distribution in Arizona, but not comparisons of agencies or causes. CRIME RATE - A figure which represents the number of crimes committed known to the police for each 1,000 population. A crime rate should be considered a victim risk rate in that it demonstrates the risk of becoming a victim of crime. CRIME INDEX - The sum total of seven major offenses used to measure the extent, fluctuation and distribution of crime in a given geographical area. Crime classifications used in the index are: (1) murder, (2) forcible rape, (3) robbery, (4) aggravated assault, (5) burglary, (6) larceny-theft and (7) motor vehicle theft. Each of these offenses is referred to as an "Index Offense." CLEARED BY ARREST OR EXCEPTIONAL MEANS For Uniform Crime Reporting purposes, an offense is cleared by arrest or solved when at least one person is (1) arrested, (2) charged with the commission of an offense and (3) turned over to court for prosecution. In certain situations police are not able to follow these three steps. In many instances police have exhausted all leads and have done everything else possible to clear a case. If the following four conditions can be met, the offense can be cleared exceptionally: (1) the investigation has definitely established the identity of the offender, (2) there is enough information to support an arrest, charge, and turning over to the court for prosecution, (3) the exact location of the offender is known so that he could be taken into custody and (4) there is some reason outside the police control that prevents the arresting, charging, and prosecuting of the offender. PART I OFFENSES - The first of two main categories of crime classes composing a universal crime classification system established for crime reporting purposes. Part I Offenses are by their nature more serious and/or occur most frequently, The monthly tabulation of Part I Offenses provides a count of "actual offenses." PART II OFFENSES - The second of two main categories of crime classes composing a universal crime classification system established for crime reporting purposes. Part II Offenses are generally less serious in nature and/or occur less frequently. JUVENILE - A person under the age of 18 years. ADULT - A person 18 years of age or older. APPENDIX C 64 Arizona Revised Statutes (41-1750 Criminal Identification Section; duties) A. There shall be a criminal identification section within the Department of Public Safety. 8. Provide information from its records relating to convictions for public offenses to licensing and regulatory agencies of the state or its political subdivisions upon request by the chief officer of such agency or his authorized representative, for the purpose of evaluating the fitness of prospective licensees. Such information shall be used only for the purpose of such evaluation. The criminal identification section shall: 1. Procure and maintain records of photographs, descriptions, fingerprints, dispositions and such other information as may be pertinent to all persons who have been arrested for or convicted of a public offense within the state. *2. Collect information concerning the number and nature of offenses known to have been committed in the state, of the legal steps taken in connection therewith, and such other information as shall be useful in the study of crime in the administration of justice. 3. Cooperate with the criminal identification bureaus in other states and with the appropriate agency of the federal government in the exchange of information pertinent to violators of the law. In addition, the criminal identification section shall provide for the rapid exchange of information concerning the commission of crime and the detection of violators of the law, between the law enforcement agencies of this state and its political subdivisions and the law enforcement agencies of other states and of the federal government. 4. Furnish assistance to peace officers throughout the state in crime scene investigations for the detection of latent fingerprints, and in the comparison thereof. 5. Provide information from its records to law enforcement agencies of the state or its political subdivisions upon request by the chief officer of such agency or his authorized representative. Such information shall be used only for purposes of law enforcement. 6. Provide information from its records to courts, prosecutors or correctional agencies of the state or its political subdivisions upon request by the chief officer of such agency or his authorized representative. Such information shall be used only for purposes of the criminal justice system. 7. Provide information from its records relating to convictions for public offenses to non-law enforcement agencies of the state or its political subdivisions upon request by the chief officer of such agency or his authorized representative, for the purpose of evaluating the fitness of prospective employees of such agency. Such information shall be used only for the purpose of such evaluation. 9. Provide information from its records relating to arrests or convictions for public offenses to the subject of such information, or to his attorney at the request of the subject, and when accompanied by proper identification. C. The chief officers of law enforcement agencies of the state or its political subdivisions shall provide to the criminal identification section such information concerning crimes and persons arrested for or convicted of public offenses within the state as the chief of the criminal identification section, with the approval of the director, shall deem useful for the study or prevention of crime and for the administration of justice. D. Any person who releases or procures the release of information held by the criminal identification section other than as provided by this section, or who uses such information for a purpose other than as provided by this section, is guilty of a misdemeanor. E. The chief of the criminal identification section may, with the written approval of the director and in the manner prescribed by law, remove and destroy such records as he determines are no longer of value in the detection or prevention of crime. F. The chief of the criminal identification section, subject to the approval of the director, shall make and issue rules and regulations relating to the procurement and dissemination of information, in the manner prescribed by law. G. All non-law enforcement agencies of the state or its political subdivisions may establish by rule, regulation or ordinance the need for fingerprint or background investigations for purposes of employment or licensing and may, thereafter, utilize the criminal identification section of the Department of Public Safety in accordance with subsection F. Added Laws 1968, Ch. 209, § 1, effective July 1, 1969, as amended Laws 1972, Ch. 39, § 1. `Sections B.2., C., and F. apply directly to UCR. APPENDIX D 65 ARIZONA UNIFORM CRIME REPORTING DATA FLOW CHART LAW ENFORCEMENT AGENCIES U.C.R. RETURNS D.P.S. U.C.R. STAFF VERIFIED FIELD REPRESENTATIVE INVESTIGATION ARIZONA U.C.R. REPORTS PUBLIC/ RESEARCH KEYPUNCH MAGNETIC TAPE FILE} DATA PRINTOUT GOVERNOR LEGISLATURE APPENDIX E 66 CRIMINAL JUSTICE AGENCIES