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'+. 4. 1. 4•4t4 ' tr• ■ •rrO.1+44- • 4 14 -1. :• -- /..1;.f... .4-„4„,4-444hO•4•O•Oi ''. •1•14 ...tit 1 -• • 1 • • • • ••• . • ... 0 • • • ■• , U WORM + 4 4,,. • . 44.4 . ....... 44.4.e444eft • 4f-1 4f • 4. 4 ••• • r • • • • .. • .. • • • •• • • • • . 444 ■ ,4 + . . -. t•+r + • „ , 4444-•••• .. ▪ -4 4-4-4- C RIME -• 4. • -.-...-.......•••••• ■ ••• •••••-•••••••••••••.••••••••••• •••• ••• •• R EPORT ...... •-•-• -- 4- + ------- ..... - ••-•-•+••-.1.4_4_,. • -. • • • -,-• .- + -•-• -•-•- 4-J, 1 f • ,.-• . . -::41I1 _ , _ . , ... ..... • . •••-+-•-, •-*-1.- -4-4• ++-4- 4" I-1.-f, r. • .• • -4. 4- 1--r..- . * 4 .--4-+ - — • .... . • • ....... ..... ••-...--- - - — . - . ... -•- ...... . - •• r • • - - •• . . . . - • ----•r r r...-r-or-1-4-4-4--f''--• •'" • + + i '-4--1-' -h.- . . . .- h-i- A- •-• -Orr. 4- 1 -.- . . - - -- . - - ...... - - - - - - - • - - . • ••• •-• r • ......... .... . - . • • ..... 4 4 •-•-• 4.- f, •1- -• 1 I . • • • ..- r- -• • r - t-4 i•• - ......-...-,.-,-- -- • - - - -. .. .... - — -- • •-•--r-4-.4-4- --+-4- . • • .•• . • -. • • • • • • . ..... ....... + -• • • • • 4- • -r • •-• • • + .. 4-14 • • r . • ...... • ..................... f - r r-r-+ . • • . ...... .. . • • • 1- 4. • 4. -4. • • 4, • 1- •• • -•-• • 44,444 ■ 4.4444-, • ........ ............. . ..... +. • 4„ • ... • 1 • • , 1- .._ 1 • 4 ............. : ...... e... .......... k • •4--1- r " • ... • /14•• rJ , .•rr&I-• I • .II.IIIII ...-.......itV o t • ............ 1 r • • r r .4. • 'i e .' '7.. .(1" 4". ..... . - - ...... ....... --g•:*- - * • 14 . 4640.••■•:, .77 .... . . . • . , . • 4 i- ' . • ... • • 4-4, • ...... . ...... • • I . r • ■ , • ..... • ..... .... .... • • 4-44_ • a r • O. fr ARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY 4-14 • • • • • • 1--+- 6 Dedicated to Law Enforcement Officers In Arizona who lost their lives in performance of their duties during 1988. Officer Kenneth L. Collings Phoenix Police Department May 27, 1988 Deputy Vernon P. Marconnet Maricopa County Sheriff's Office June 30, 1988 Officer James Andrew Ross Mammoth Police Department June 10. 1988 Officer Robert Lyle Hawk Tempe Police Department September 24, 1988 Officer Edward Rebel Arizona Department of Public Safety June 28, 1988 ARIZONA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY 2102 WEST ENCANTO BLVD. P. O. BOX 6638 PHOENIX, ARIZONA 85005-6638 (602) 223-2000 ROSE MOFFORD GOVERNOR RALPH T. MILSTEAD DIRECTOR Foreword The Department of Public Safety is pleased to participate in and serve as the coordinating agency for the Arizona Uniform Crime Reporting program. The purpose of the Arizona Uniform Crime Report 1988 is to provide data regarding the nature and extent of crime throughout the state. This report does not draw conclusions as to the causes of crime. However, it does provide the vital information necessary to assist law enforcement agencies, government, and the public in their approach to crime in our state. This report is the culmination of a joint effort by our State's law enforcement agencies to collect and organize crime data. The information contained in this report should provide a valuable overview of the crime problem. Sincere appreciation is expressed to all Arizona law enforcement agencies without whose cooperation this publication would not be possible. )-S Q cS\ a ‘nkr\ Ralph T. Milstead, Colonel Director ARIZONA UNIFORM CRIME REPORT 1988 An annual report compiled by the Arizona Criminal Justice Information System (ACJIS) Division Ralph T. Milstead Director Arizona Department of Public Safety Richard G. Carlson Assistant Director Telecommunications D.C. Britt Manager ACJIS Division Mary E. Peters Manager ACJIS Coordination Section Rhonda J. Robinson Supervisor, Operations Audit Team ACJIS Coordination Section Lynn C. Altmann Operations Auditor ACJIS Coordination Section Melinda M. Adamson Graphics Specialist Information Analysis Section Arizona Department of Public Safety, 2102 West Encanto Boulevard, P.O. Box 6638, Phoenix, Arizona 85005-6638 TABLE OF CONTENTS DEDICATION 1 ACKNOWLEDGEMENT 2 THE ARIZONA UNIFORM CRIME REPORTING SYSTEM History of Uniform Crime Reporting Objectives of Arizona UCR Considerations for Interpretation Population Grouping 4 4 4 6 SUMMARY OF STATE CRIME DATA Arizona Crime Clock Arizona Crime Cycle State Crime Summary Total Index Crimes by Month Index Crimes Cleared Index Crime Comparison Value of Property Loss by Index Crime Offense Type and Value of Property Stolen and Recovered PART I INDEX CRIMES Murder Definition and Summary Murder by Population Group Murder by Month Murder by Day of Week Murder by Time of Day Murder Distribution by Circumstance Murder by Type of Weapon Used Murder Distribution by Relationship Murder Victim by Age, Sex, Race and Ethnic Origin Rape Definition and Summary Rape by Population Group Rape by Month Robbery Definition and Summary Robbery by Population Group Robbery by Location and Value Robbery by Month and Weapon Used Aggravated Assault Definition and Summary Assault by Population Group Assault by Weapon Used Assault by Month Burglary Definition and Summary Burglary by Population Group Burglary by Location and Time Burglary by Month and Means of Entry 10 11 12 14 14 15 16 16 19 19 19 20 20 21 21 22 22 23 24 24 24 25 26 26 26 27 27 28 28 28 29 29 30 30 30 31 31 Acknowledgement Appreciation is expressed to the 94 law enforcement agencies listed below. The monthly Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) information submitted by these agencies served as the basis for this publication. Apache County Sheriff's Office Apache Junction Police Department Arizona Department of Public Safety AZ State University Police Department AZ Western College Police Department Avondale Police Department Benson Police Department Bisbee Police Department Buckeye Police Department Bullhead City Police Department Camp Verde Marshal's Office Casa Grande Police Department Central AZ College Police Department Chandler Police Department Chino Valley Police Department Clarkdale Police Department Clifton Police Department Cochise County Sheriff's Office Coconino County Sheriff's Office Coolidge Police Department Cottonwood Police Department Douglas Police Department Eagar Police Department El Mirage Police Department Eloy Police Department Flagstaff Police Department Florence Police Department Fredonia Marshal's Office Gila County Sheriff's Office Gilbert Police Department Glendale Police Department Globe Police Department Goodyear Police Department Graham County Sheriff's Office Greenlee County Sheriff's Office Guadalupe Police Department Hayden Police Department Holbrook Police Department Huachuca City Police Department Jerome Police Department Keamy Police Department Kingman Police Department La Paz County Sheriff's Office Lake Havasu Police Department Mammoth Police Department Maricopa County Sheriffs Office Mesa Police Department 4146.1ilili,■,, 2 Miami Police Department Mohave County Sheriff's Office Navajo County Sheriff's Office Nogales Police Department Northern AZ University Police Department Oro Valley Police Department Page Police Department Paradise Valley Police Department Parker Police Department Payson Police Department Peoria Police Department Phoenix Police Department Pima Comm. College Police Department Pima County Sheriff's Office Pima Police Department Pinal County Sheriff's Office Pinetop-Lakeside Police Department Prescott Police Department Prescott Valley Police Department Safford Police Department San Luis Police Department Santa Cruz County Sheriff's Office Scottsdale Police Department Show Low Police Department Sierra Vista Police Department Snowflake - Taylor Police Department Somerton Police Department South Tucson Police Department Springerville Police Department St. Johns Police Department Superior Police Department Surprise Police Department Tempe Police Department Thatcher Police Department Tolleson Police Department Tombstone Marshal's Office Tucson Police Department University of AZ Police Department Wickenburg Police Department Willcox Police Department Williams Marshal's Office Winslow Police Department Yavapai Comm. 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" IIIII! !III .. 0 SOSSOMSOS.. I....1III ..... mssummasmOsmosssmslimmess smillOSS 181 ligta SOOSSOSSOSESsOsssOSOSESS OSOSSOES 0 SSOSesse ensmosimmeSsOSSOSSOUSSOS SOMESSIMISS OSSOMOSS MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM sissmussessessessessmessmsm all tASS SemeSSO siesumms M seems so • • ummi • 0 i i- iii tHiligl HISTORY OF UNIFORM CRIME REPORTING 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 joined in this responsibility by the Committee on Crime Records of the National Sheriffs Association (NSA) in 1966. The Arizona Uniform Crime Reporting (AUCR) Section 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. OBJECTIVES OF ARIZONA UCR Due to increased attention being 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 the Arizona Uniform Crime Report 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 the Arizona Uniform Crime Report 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 4 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. CONSIDERATIONS FOR INTERPRETATION Statistics are tools 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 co ncl usions that the statistics simply do not support. We ask that great care be taken in analysis and interpretation. The following factors have a major influence on the statistics presented in this report: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. Crime figures are police statistics as distinguished from the findings of a court, coroner, jury or decision of a prosecutor. Density and size of community population. Variations in composition of the population, particularly age structure. Stability of population with respect to transient factors. Economic conditions, including job availability. Climate. Effective strength of law enforcement agencies; some police jurisdictions overlap. Attitudes of citizenry toward crime. Crime reporting practices of citizenry. Crime rates are based on census-fixed residential populations of police jurisdictions. Crimes committed on Indian reservations are not reported to the AUCR program, although their population is included in the state's population figures. There were six reporting agencies that were unable to provide complete data in 1988 one each in Coconino, Gila, Greenlee and Maricopa Counties and two in Pinal County. 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. 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 Property Crimes 5. 6. 7. 8. Burglary Larceny-Theft Motor Vehicle Theft Arson Part II offenses include: 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26, 27. 28. 29. Other Assaults-simple Forgery and Counterfeiting Fraud Embezzlement Stolen Property; Buying, Receiving, Possessing, Etc. Vandalism Weapons; Carrying, Possessing, Etc. Prostitution Sex Offenses (Except forcible rape and prostitution) Narcotic Drug Laws Gambling Offenses Against Family and Children Driving Under the Influence Liquor Laws Drunkenness (not reported In Arizona) Disorderly Conduct Vagrancy All Other Offenses (except traffic) Suspicion (not reported in Arizona Curfew and Loitering Law Violations (Juveniles) Runaways (Juveniles) Note: Only arrests are counted for Part ll 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. Counting of Offenses The number of offenses is collected only for Part I crimes and simple assault. The method of counting offenses 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 nonnegligent 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. 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 one 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. In cases when an arson occurs in conjunction with other Part I crimes, both are reported. Part I offenses are ranked according to seriousness and appear in order from most serious to least serious under "Classifications of OffensesTM. 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. 5 Property Stolen and Recovered POPULATION GROUPING 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 11 offenses as fraud, forgery or embezzlement. The crime statistics reported by an individual agency indicates what Is happening in one particular area. AUCR groups jurisdiction 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: 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. Reporting Variations and Procedures Arizona now receives Uniform Crime Reports from 94 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. An FBI UCR handbook is supplied to all contributors outlining reporting procedures in detail and is also complete with examples and illustrations. 6 Group No. 1. Over 250,000 population. There are four (4) cities and counties 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 three (3) cities and counties 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 fifteen (15) cities, towns, or counties that fall within this group. 6. 10,000 or less population. There are fifty-one (51) cities, towns, or counties that fall within this group. 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 of law enforcement agencies submitting crime data to the Uniform Crime Reporting Section. AGENCY Apache County S.O. Apache Junction P.D. Arizona DPS ASU DPS AZ Western College P.D. Avondale P.D. Benson P.D. Bisbee P.D. Buckeye P.D. Bullhead City P.D. Camp Verde M.O. Casa Grande P.D. Central AZ College P.D. Chandler P.D. Chino Valley P.D. Clarkdale P.D. Clifton P.D. Cochise County S.O. Coconino County S.O. Coolidge P.D. Cottonwood P.D. Douglas P.D. Eagar P.D. El Mirage P.D. Eloy P.D. Flagstaff P.D. Florence P.D. Fredonia M.O. Gila County S.O. Gilbert P.D. Glendale P.D. Globe P.D. Goodyear P.D. Graham County S.O. Greenlee County S.O. Guadalupe P.D. Hayden P.D. Holbrook P.D. Huachuca City P.D. Jerome P.D. Kearny P.D. Kingman P.D. Lake Havasu City P.D. LaPaz County S.O. Mammoth P.D. Marana P.D. Maricopa County S.O. POPULATION GROUP NO. 3 5 7 7 7 5 6 6 6 5 6 5 7 3 6 6 6 4 4 6 6 5 6 6 6 4 6 6 5 5 2 6 6 5 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 5 5 5 6 6 2 AGENCY Mesa P.D. Miami P.D. Mohave County S.O. Navajo County S.O. Nogales P.D. NAU P.D. Oro Valley P.D. Page P.D. Paradise Valley P.D. Parker P.D. Payson P.D. Peoria P.D. Phoenix P.D. Pima Comm. College P.D. Pima County S.O. Pima P.D. !Vial County S.O. Pinetop-Lakeside P.D. Prescott P.D. Prescott Valley P.D. Safford P.D. St. Johns P.D. San Luis P.D. Santa Cruz County S.O. Scottsdale P.D. Show Low P.D. Sierra Vista P.D. Snowflake - Taylor P.D. Somerton P.D. South Tucson P.D. Springerville P.D. Superior P.D. Surprise P.D. Tempe P.D. Thatcher P.D. Tolleson P.D. Tombstone M.O. Tucson P.D. U of A P.D Wickenburg P.D. Willcox P.D. Williams M.O. Winslow P.D. Yavapai Comm. Co. P.D. Yavapai County S.O. Youngtown P.D. Yuma P.D. POPULATION GROUP NO. 1 6 4 4 5 7 6 6 5 6 6 4 1 7 1 6 4 6 5 6 6 6 6 5 2 6 4 6 6 6 6 6 6 2 6 6 6 1 7 6 6 6 6 7 4 6 3 Note: Estimated population figures for these groups are furnished by the Population Statistics Unit, Arizona Department of Economic Security. The total population for the State of Arizona in 1988 was 3,594,300. 7 1i0 ttt ; 1 7 t mem lo mos 11 • "114":11 "1 t :IS: 111 Ia 11 11 1 11 . 1 I NM • • ••• SWINOmemeem immessom MOO -10•4 I !II' . 1 111 I In SI.. • 'Ills .nu. "ammo1111111111111111/r iiiiIIIIIi.lesull 111111,111111111111 III II ....... • mesa a • ammam a somm 1 11111Prl SUMMARY OF STATE CRIME DATA 1111111" I IMMUMME 111111111M MI11111111; unnuumumuni 1 1 11r MME1111 1111111111111111116 mme , "Iii" sammmmemme mmommu ili •• •• Ern 1- t -r-1 r-' mmill1111111 t+1' H 111:"" • 1- 4 gm" • ••• 4' • im WEN MOO MUM 11111111111 mom 111111 sim•msemmommassem 1111111111111111111 . .......m......s...s • H- 111:1111111111111 I: 1.41 11.41 I m 111 11111111111 •1=11: mo p s 4_111 47 114+ ±4 • ARIZONA CRIME CLOCK 1988 one MURDER every 30 hrs. 18 min. one FORCIBLE RAPE every 6 hrs. 33 min. one VIOLENT CRIME every 26 min. 11 sec. one ROBBERY every 1 hr. 51 min. one AGGRAVATED ASSAULT every 37 min. 2 sec. one MAJOR CRIME -4 every 2 min. 2 sec. one BURGLARY every 9 min. 42 sec. one PROPERTY CRIME every 2 min. 13 sec. one LARCENY-THEFT every 3 min. 10 sec. one MOTOR VEHICLE THEFT every 33 min. 20 sec. one ARSON every 4 hrs. 56 min. The crime clock should be viewed with care. Being the most aggregate representation of UCR data, it is designed to convey the annual reported crime experience by showing the relative frequency of occurrence of the Offenses. This mode of display should not be taken to imply a regularity in the commission of the Offenses; rather, it represents the annual ratio of crime to fixed time intervals. 10 ARIZONA CRIME CYCLE The following represents the approximate number of Crime Index Offenses that were reported to Arizona law enforcement agencies every 24 hours during 1988. 1 MURDER 4 RAPE 13 ROBBERIES 40 AGGRAVATED ASSAULTS 148 BURGLARIES 454 LARCENY-THEFTS 43 MOTOR VEHICLE THEFTS 5 ARSONS I 11 ▪•▪ STATE CRIME SUMMARY CRIME INDEX OFFENSES . There were 258,501 Crime Index Offenses reported In 1988. August recorded the highest incidence of offenses with 23,066 reported while April recorded the lowest incklence of offenses with 19,963 reported. The value of property stolen amounted to $206,457,930 in 1988. The value of property recovered amounted to $63,857,738 for a recovery rate of 31.0 percent. The crime rate for 1988 for Arizona was 71.9 crimes per thousand population. CRIME INDEX ARREST/CLEARANCES ▪ During 1988, a total of 58,549 persons were arrested for Index offenses. Adult Index arrests were 40,199 and juvenile arrests were 18,350. Males accounted for 76.4 percent of the Index arrests and females accounted for 23.6 percent. . A total of 61,087 clearances, representing 23.6 percent, of Index Offenses were reported In 1988. Juveniles represented 22.4 percent of this total. VIOLENT CRIME OFFENSES . A total of 20,872 violent crimes were reported in 1988. . Violent crimes accounted for 8.1 percent of the total Crime index. . The highest number of violent crimes was reported in August with 2,033 offenses while the lowest number was reported in February with 1,515 offenses. Aggravated assault accounted for the largest incidence of violent crimes with 14,514 offenses while homicide accounted for the smallest with 290 offenses. The value of property stolen was $ 3,764,825. ARRESTS/CLEARANCES . There were 8,796 arrests for violent crimes in 1988. . Adult arrests were 7,568 and Juvenile arrests were 1,228. Males accounted for 87.9 percent and females accounted for 12.1 percent. A total of 12,052 clearances, representing 57.7 percent, of violent crimes were reported in 1988. Juveniles represented 10.0 percent of this total. 12 PROPERTY CRIME OFFENSES A total of 237,629 property crimes were reported in 1988. Property crimes accounted for 91.9 percent of the total Crime Index. The highest number of property crimes was reported in December with 21,074 offenses while the lowest number was reported In April with 18,250 offenses. ▪ Larceny-theft accounted for the largest incidence of property crimes with 165,880 offenses while arson accounted for the smallest with 1,787 offenses. ▪ The value of property stolen was $ 202,693,105. ARRESTS/CLEARANCES ▪ There were 49,753 arrests for property crimes in 1988. ▪ Adult arrests were 32,631 and juvenile arrests were 17,122. ▪ Males accounted for 74.3 percent and females accounted for 25.7 percent. ▪ A total of 49,035 clearances, representing 20.6 percent, of property crimes were reported in 1988. Juveniles represented 25.4 percent of this total. TOTAL ARRESTS . There were 224,236 persons arrested in 1988. ▪ Adult arrests were 177,311 and juvenile arrests were 46,925. • Males accounted for 81.0 percent and females accounted for 19.0 percent. ▪ Part I offenses accounted for 58,549 arrests. . Part II offenses accounted for 165,687 arrests. 13 TOTAL INDEX CRIMES BY MONTH r TOTALS INDEX CRIMES Murder Forcible Rape Robbery JAN FEB MAR 290 19 20 25 1,336 4,732 109 433 67 109 330 1,098 391 1,209 APR 29 101 349 1,234 MAY 13 137 368 1,241 JUN 30 116 320 1,255 JUL 26 AUG OCT SEP 33 NOV DEC 22 20 24 111 453 105 90 426 441 112 158 121 420 1,281 420 381 29 Arson 1,422 1,258 1,273 1,011 1,086 54,178 4,738 4,176 4,366 4,118 4,487 4,115 4,676 4,761 4,762 4,828 4,543 4,608 165,880 13,478 13,635 14,193 12,737 13,042 12,897 13,747 14,676 14,185 14,290 14,055 14,945 15,784 1,374 1,182 1,252 1,267 1,258 1,215 1,444 1,474 1,379 1,315 1,250 1,374 144 113 147 168 128 167 175 158 122 177 1,787 165 123 TOTALS 258,501 21,462 20,631 21,713 19,963 20,713 20,123 21,864 23,066 22,285 22,434 21,527 22,720 14,514 1,146 Aggravated Assault Burglary Larceny-Theft Motor Vehicle Theft INDEX CRIMES CLEARED rn f 1,336 4,732 14,514 54,178 165,880 15,784 1,787 0 F F E N S E S Murder Robbery Assault Burglary Motor Vehicle Theft Larceny-Theft Arson INDEX OFFENSES *Clearances may include offenses which were reported in prior years. 14 ACTUAL INDEX CRIME COMPARISON * NUMBER OF OFFENSES INDEX OFFENSES NUMBER OF PERCENT OF OFFENSES OFFENSES CLEARED CLEARED MURDER 1987 1988 Percent Change 248 290 +16.94 189 206 +8.99 76.21 71.03 -6.80 RAPE 1987 1988 Percent Change 1,384 1,336 -3.47 613 673 +9.79 44.29 50.37 + 13.73 ROBBERY 1987 1988 Percent Change 4,663 4,730 +1.44 1,466 1,516 + 3.41 31.44 32.05 +1.94 AGGRAVATED ASSAULT 1987 1988 Percent Change 14,206 14,465 +1.82 9,258 9,642 +4.15 65.17 66.66 +2.29 BURGLARY 1987 1988 Percent Change 54,406 54,109 -.55 7,264 7,481 +2.99 13.35 13.83 +3.60 LARCENY-THEFT 1987 1988 Percent Change 152,231 165,756 +8.88 36,204 37,719 +4.18 23.78 22.76 -4.29 MOTOR VEHICLE THEFT 1987 1988 Percent Change 14,180 15,774 +11.24 3,078 3,464 +12.54 21.71 21.96 +1.15 ARSON 1987 1988 Percent Change 1,748 1,776 +1.60 346 347 +.29 19.79 19.54 -1.26 1987 1988 Percent Change 243,066 258,236 +6.24 58,418 61,048 +4.50 24.03 23.64 -1.62 TOTAL INDEX CRIME ... * For the purposes of this comparison chart only, statistics from six agencies have been excluded. These agencies were unable to provide complete reports for a full twelve months in 1987 and/or 1988. These six agencies are located in the following counties: Coconino, Gila, Greenlee, Maricopa and Pinal. (Figures for 1987 may have been updated and therefore may vary from previously published statistics.) 15 VALUE OF PROPERTY LOSS BY INDEX CRIME OFFENSE STATE TOTALS The table below reflects the amount of property stolen by offense category. Motor vehicle theft accounted for the highest property loss, $82,438,192, or 40 percent of the total. The next highest category was burglary with $64,949,888, or 31 percent of the total. Number of Offenses Dist. Value of Property Stolen Dist. Average Value 290 0.12% $44,715 0.02% $154.19 Rape 1,336 0.55% 58,964 0.03% 44.13 Robbery 4,732 1.95% 3,661,146 1.77% 773.70 Burglary 54,178 22.37% 64,949,888 31.46% 1,198.82 165,880 68.49% 55,305,025 26.79% 333.40 15,784 6.52% 82,438,192 39.93% 5,222.90 242,200 100% $206,457,930 100% $825.43 OFFENSE Murder Larceny-Theft Motor Vehicle Theft* TOTALS I • ■ *Motor vehicles that were stolen in conjunction with a more 'serious' index offense such as robbery or burglary are not included in this count. This count represents only those instances in which motor vehicle theft was the only or most 'serious' offense committed. The total value shown here reflects the value of all property stolen during the commission of the offense (i.e., not just the value of each vehicle). TYPE AND VALUE OF PROPERTY STOLEN AND RECOVERED - STATE TOTALS The table below reflects the amount of property stolen and recovered by property type. Locally stolen motor vehicles accounted for the property loss in a single category with $85,431,349. Locally stolen motor vehicles were also the most easily recovered property with a recovery rate of 64 percent or $54,628,676. TYPE OF PROPERTY Currency and Notes Dist. $ 9,797,406 4.75% 27,423,578 Value Recovered $ Percent Recovered 744,221 7.60% 13.28% 1,411,784 5.15% 3,445,760 1.67% 474,701 13.78% 85,431,349 41.38% 54,628,676 63.94% 4,847,505 2.35% 409,135 8.44% 22,169,903 10.74% 1,037,665 4.68% Firearms 3,113,160 1.51% 323,256 10.38% Household Goods 6,739,344 3.26% 417,399 6.19% Consumable Goods 1,422,013 0.69% 225,648 15.87% 666,742 0.32% 84,375 12.65% 41,401,170 20.05% 4,100,878 9.91% $ 206,457,930 100.0% $ 63,857,738 30.93% Jewelry and Precious Metals Clothing and Furs Locally Stolen Motor Vehicles Office Equipment TVs, Radios, Cameras, Etc. Livestock Miscellaneous TOTAL 16 Value Stolen 11111 11111111 IIIMMIll MOSE • • OOMOOMI SIMBOW11:72! 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Wirossullini Nossimoms pi 11 I NelmoNNEON I . II N1S111112221111 SNIMIIMOMM • Om 1 1 NONONNIMISMS SIMS 011011 NN 111111111WANNN o•NoNNWENErnomMeSSOWNS INIMUILI::::::::: lowmoselmmalsollOOMOW11 a NONNoommismoNNENNINismism NolosmallowSONSWONEN MMMMMMMMMMMM wows MMMMM oommiwwimmommlems MMMMM all aWN 4111 MoNsammaissONESMNO M SMENNIIMIONENNOININE NOM OWN EOM • 4 ANINNNO we mormoss • MS11 :II ft VIOLENTCRIMES • Murder • Rape • Robbery • Aggravated Assault PROPERTYCR1MES • Burglary • Larceny-Theft • Motor Vehicle Theft • Arson 18 MURDER AND NONNEGLIGENT MANSLAUGHTER DEFINITION The willful (nonnegligent) killing of one person by another. Attempted murders and assaults to murder are classified as aggravated assaults. Suicides, traffic fatalities, accidental deaths, negligent manslaughters, and Justifiable homicides are not counted under this classification. SUMMARY . There were 290 murders reported during 1988. . Murders accounted for 0.1 percent of the total Index offenses and 1.4 percent of the total violent crimes. . August recorded the highest number, with 33, while May recorded the lowest with 13. . Monday reported the highest incidence of murders, with 50, while Thursday was the lowest with 32. . The time period of 6:01 PM - 2:00 AM recorded the highest number of murders, with 105, while 2:01 AM 10:00 AM was the lowest with 74. . Firearms were used in 61.4 percent of the murders. . In murders where the relationship between the victim and offender was known, 24.1 percent were acquaintances. ARRESTS/CLEARANCES . A total of 202 persons were arrested in 1988. . Adults accounted for 185 arrests and juveniles accounted for 17 arrests. . Males accounted for 93.6 percent and females accounted for 6.4 percent. . There were a total of 206 clearances for murder reported in 1988. Juveniles represented 5.8 percent of this total. MURDER BY POPULATION GROUP Population Group Murder Distribution 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 172 49 8 31 18 12 -- 59.3% 16.9% 2.8% 10.7% 6.2% 4.1% -- 19 M CD Z M 110 8 g 8 •• • -""\ C \s„ z • "‘" aim rrrr C C ' 3M J • AVO AsEl • mom MURDER BY TIME OF DAY //I 74 2:01 AM - 10:00 AM Z T 10:01 AM - 6:00 PM M E 105 6:01 PM - 2:00 AM UNKNOWN OFFENSES MURDER DISTRIBUTION BY CIRCUMSTANCE RAPE C 16 ROBBERY R C U M S T A N C E BURGLARY NARCOTIC DRUG LAWS OTHER FELONY LOVERS TRIANGLE 24 BRAWL - ALCOHOLJDRUGS ARGUMENT MONEY/PROPERTY 59 OTHER ARGUMENT 40 OTHER UNABLE TO DETERMINE r • l118 4.4 /■am■/r■ / / alMII I I■I r ■1 I 1 1 = mimi 1 1 1 1 1 Ii• im Gm 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 111.111■11o's MIMI=ei 1 '1 :r1 -• • OFFENSES 21 MURDER BY TYPE OF WEAPON USED RIFLE 9 (3.1%) STRANGULATION 5 (1.7%) PERSONAL WEAPONS 19 (6.5%) SHOTGUN 15 (5.2%) KNIFE/CUTTING INSTRUMENT 44 (15.2%) HANDGUN 137 (47.2%) ALL OTHER 18 (6.2%) BLUNT OBJECT 26 (9.0%) FIREARM (NOT STATED) 17 (5.9%) MURDER DISTRIBUTION BY RELATIONSHIP OTHER FAMILY 29 (10.0%) FRIEND 26 (9.0%) ACQUAINTANCE 70 (24.1%) WIFE 14 (4.8%) STRANGER 41 (14.1%) OTHERS 9 (3.1%) [Known to victim] HUSBAND 4 (1.4%) UNKNOWN 97 (33.5%) 22 MURDER VICTIM BY AGE, SEX, RACE & ETHNIC ORIGIN AGE NUMBER DISTRIBUTION SEX MALE FEMALE' WHITE RACE* BLACK INDIAN ETHNIC ORIGIN• HISPANIC NOT HISPANIC ASIAN Infant 4 1.4% 2 2 3 -- -- 1 1 3 1-4 7 2.4% 4 3 6 1 -- -- 1 6 5-9 4 1.4% 2 2 3 1 -- -- 1 3 10-14 8 2.8% 4 4 7 1 -- -- -- 8 15-19 23 7.9% 17 6 15 6 2 -- 9 14 20-24 32 11.0% 18 14 . 29 3 -- 10 22 25-29 46 15.9% 35 11 36 7 2 -- 10 35 30-34 29 10.0X 23 6 23 5 1 -- 5 24 35-39 36 12,4% 29 7 32 4 -- -- 8 28 40-44 27 9.3% 21 6 22 3 1 1 6 21 45-49 14 4.8% 12 E 13 1 -- -- 1 13 50-54 16 5.5% 10 6 13 -- 2 1 2 14 55-59 11 3.8% 6 5 10 1 -- -- 2 9 60-64 6 2.1% 4 2 .6 -- -- -- -- 6 65-69 7 2.4% 6 1 5 2 -- -- -- 7 70-74 3 1.0% 1 2 3 -- -- .- -- 3 75 and Over 4 1.4% 3 1 3 1 -- -- -- 4 13 4.5% 9 4 8 1 -- -- 1 6 290 -- 206 84 237 37 8 3 57 226 71.0 29.0 81.7 12.8 2.8 1.0 19.7 77.9 -7- Unknown TOTAL -- 100.0% 244 84.1% JUVENILE 33 11.4% UNKNOWN 13 4.5% Distribution ADULT *There were 7 murder victims where the race and/or ethnic origin could not be determined. 23 RAPE DEFINITION The carnal knowledge of a female through the use of force or threat of force. Assaults or attempts to commit forcible rape are also included; however, statutory rape (without force) and other sex offenses are not counted In this category. SUMMARY ▪ There were 1,336 rapes reported during 1988. ▪ Rapes accounted for 0.5 percent of the total Index offenses and 6.4 percent of violent crimes. August recorded the highest number, with 158, while February recorded the lowest with 67. Of the total rapes, forcible accounted for 1,006 and attempts accounted for 330. ARRESTS/CLEARANCES A total of 315 persons were arrested In 1988. Adults accounted for 278 arrests and juveniles accounted for 37 arrests. ▪ There were a total of 673 clearances for rape reported in 1988. Juveniles represented 6.7 percent of this total. RAPE 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 Rape by Force 676 154 34 56 40 46 — Attemped Rape 242 27 12 17 15 16 1 TOTALS 918 181 46 73 55 62 1 68.7% 13.6% 3.4% 5.5% 4.1% 4.6% 0.1% Population Group Distribution 24 RAPE BY MONTH RAPE BY FORCE TOTAL OFFENSES 25 ROBBERY DEFINITION The taking or attempting to take anything of value from the care, custody, or control of a person by force or threat of force and/or by putting the victim in fear. SUMMARY . There were 4,732 robberies reported during 1988. . Robberies accounted for 1.8 percent of the total Index offenses and 22.7 percent of the violent crimes. ▪ October recorded the highest number, with 453, while June recorded the lowest with 320. ▪ Robberies occurring on highways (streets, alleys, and sidewalks) recorded the highest number, with 2,219, or 46.9 percent of all robberies. ▪ Gas or service station robberies had the lowest number, with 117, or 2.5 percent of all robberies. ▪ Robberies occurring on highways (streets, alleys, and sidewalks) had the highest total dollar loss, with $1,766,161. ▪ Bank robberies had the highest dollar loss per robbery, with $3,283. ▪ Firearms represented the most common weapon used in 1,898 robberies, or 40.1 percent. ARRESTS/CLEARANCES A total of 1,216 persons were arrested in 1988. Adults accounted for 984 arrests and Juveniles accounted for 232 arrests. Males accounted for 90,5 percent and females accounted for 9.5 percent. There were a total of 1,517 clearances for robbery reported in 1988. Juveniles represented 11.9 percent of this total. ROBBERY 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 Robbery 3,649 537 134 118 126 163 5 Distribution 77.1% 11.4% 2.8% 2.5% 2.7% 3.4% 0.1% Population Group 26 ROBBERY BY LOCATION & VALUE TOTAL DOLLAR NUMBER OF LOCATION OFFENSES Highway AVERAGE DOLLAR VALUE STOLEN VALUE STOLEN DISTRIBUTION S 796 2,219 46.9% $1,766,161 Commercial House 754 15.9% 536,344 711 Gas or Service Station 117 2.5% 31,625 270 13.3% 83,830 133 10.1% . . 546,956 1,142 . Convenience Store 628 Residence 479 .. ... . ... Bank 162 3.4% 531,784 3,283 Miscellaneous 373 7.9% 164,446 441 4,732 100.0% 53,661,146 TOTAL S 774 ROBBERY BY MONTH & WEAPON USED WEAPON TOTAL DIST JAN FEB . MAR APR MAY JUN JUL AUG SEP OCT NOV DEC Firearm 1,898 40.1% 231 145 158 135 141 125 133 146 122 170 200 192 682 14.4% 27 46 56 61 67 51 66 54 51 76 63 64 394 8.3% 30 30 32 24 35 19 34 41 33 46 29 41 Strong Arm 1,758 37.2% 145 109 145 129 125 125 187 179 175 161 134 144 TOTAL 4,732 -- 433 330 391 349 368 320 420 420 381 453 426 441 9.1% 7.0% 8.2% I 7.3% 7.8% 6.8% 8.9% 8.9% 8.1% 9.6% 9.0% 9.3% Knife or Cutting Instrument Other Dangerous Weapons Distribution -- 100.0% Afinfln LibFuy 27 AGGRAVATED ASSAULT DEFINITION The unlawful attack by one person upon another for the purpose of inflicting severe bodily injury usually accompanied by the use of a weapon or other means likely to produce death or serious bodily harm. SUMMARY There were 14,514 aggravated assaults reported during 1988. Aggravated assaults accounted for 5.6 percent of the total Index offenses and 69.5 percent of the violent crimes. . August recorded the highest number, with 1,422, while November recorded the lowest with 1,011. Firearms represented the most common weapon used in 4,503 aggravated assaults, or 31.0 percent. There were 32,940 simple assaults reported in 1988. Simple assault is primarily differentiated from aggravated assault by the seriousness of the injury and the weapon used. Simple assault is not a Crime Index offense but is reported here for the purpose of showing the total assault violence. ARRESTS/CLEARANCES A total of 7,063 persons were arrested in 1988. Adults accounted for 6,121 arrests and juveniles accounted for 942 arrests. Males accounted for 86.7 percent and females accounted for 13.3 percent. There were a total of 9,656 clearances for aggravated assault reported In 1988. Juveniles represented 10.6 percent of this total. 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 Assault 9,410 1,642 598 1,059 859 896 50 Distribution 64.8% 11.3% 4.1% 7.3% 5.9% 6.2% 0.4% Population Group 28 ASSAULT BY WEAPON USED KNIFE 2,718 (16.7%) PERSONAL WEAPONS (hands, Oats, feet, Mc.) 3,365 (23.2%) FIREARM 4,503 (31.0%) OTHER WEAPON 3,928 (27.1%) 29 ▪ BURGLARY DEFINITION The unlawful entry of a 'structure' to commit a felony or theft. The use of force to gain entry is not required to classify the crime as burglary. A structure is considered to include the following, but not limited to: dwelling houses, apartments, public buildings, offices, barns, cabins, etc. Burglary is broken down into three subclassifications: forcible entry, unlawful entry where no force is used, and attempted forcible entry. SUMMARY ▪ There were 54,178 burglaries reported during 1988. ▪ Burglaries accounted for 21.0 percent of the total Index offenses and 22.8 percent property crimes. ▪ October recorded the highest number, with 4,828, while June recorded the lowest with 4,115. ▪ Forcible entry was used in 34,387, or 63.5 percent of the total burglaries. Residential burglaries accounted for 40,378, or 74.5 percent of the total burglaries. . in burglaries where the time of occurrence was known, 18,470, or 34.1 percent occurred between the hours of 6 AM - 6 PM. ▪ Residential burglaries accounted for the highest property loss, $48,820,498. ARRESTS/CLEARANCES . A total of 7,705 persons were arrested in 1988. ▪ Adults accounted for 4,375 arrests and juveniles accounted for 3,330 arrests. Males accounted for 87.9 percent and females accounted for 12.1 percent. ▪ There were a total of 7,488 clearances for burglary reported in 1988. Juveniles represented 22.7 percent of this total. BURGLARY BY POPULATION GROUP 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Population Group 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 34,544 7,425 2,069 3,159 3,945 2,671 365 Distribution 63.8% 13.7% 3.8% 5.8% 7.3% 4.9% 0.7% 30 BURGLARY BY LOCATION & TIME LOCATION NUMBER OF OFFENSES DISTRIBUTION VALUE STOLEN AVG. VALUE STOLEN " RESIDENCE Night (6PM-6AM) 10,056 18.6% $ 10,611,895 $1,055 Day (6AM-6PM) 16,226 29.9% 19,172,640 1,182 Unknown 14,096 26.0% 19,035,963 1,350 SUBTOTAL 40,378 74.5% $ 48,820,498 S 1,209 Night (6PM-6AM) 5,160 9.5% 5,046,111 978 Day (6AM-6PM) 2,244 4.1% 1,347,797 601 Unknown 6,396 11.8% 9,735,482 1,522 SUBTOTAL 13,800 25.5% S 16,129,390 S 1,169 TOTAL 54,178 100.0% 5 64,949,888 5 1,199 NON-RESIDENCE BURGLARY BY MONTH & MEANS OF ENTRY Y DIST ENTRY TYPE TOTAL Forcible Entry 34,387 63.5% Unlawful Entry No Force 16,002 Entry TOTAL JAN FEB MAR . APR MAY JUN JUL AUG SEP OCT NOV DEC 3,110 2,606 2,689 2,588 2,818 2,562 2,968 2,957 2,993 3,083 2,899 3,114 29.5% 1,321 1,272 1,346 1,241 1,374 1,197 1,359 1,479 1,465 1,399 1,311 1,238 3,789 7.0% 307 298 331 289 295 356 325 304 346 333 256 54,178 -- Attempted Forcibie Distribution -- 100.0% 4,738 4,176 4,366 4,118 4,487 4,115 8.7% 7.7% 8.1% 7.6% 8.3% 7.6% 349 4,676 4,761 8.6% 8.8% 4,762 4,828 4,543 4,608 8.8% 8.9% 8.4% 8.5% 31 LARCENY-THEFT DEFINITION The unlawful taking or stealing of property or articles without the use of force, violence, or fraud. This crime category does not include embezzlement, fraud, and worthless checks. SUMMARY ▪ There were 165,880 larceny-thefts reported during 1988. • Larceny-thefts accounted for 64.2 percent of the total Index offenses and 69.8 percent of the property crimes. ▪ December recorded the highest number, with 14,945, while April was the lowest with 12,737. ▪ Larceny-thefts in the under $50 category reported the highest number of incidents, with 77,510, or 46.7 percent. ▪ Shoplifting accounted for 39,730 larceny-thefts or 24.0 percent. ARRESTS/CLEARANCES ▪ A total of 39,677 persons were arrested in 1988. ▪ Adults accounted for 27,047 arrests and Juveniles accounted for 12,630 arrests. ▪ Males accounted for 71.0 percent and females accounted for 29.0 percent. ▪ There were a total of 37,731 clearances for larceny-theftreported in 1988. Juveniles represented 25.7 percent of this total. LARCENY-THEFT BY POPULATION GROUP 1 2 3 4 5 6 Population Group 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 105,557 25,882 7,095 8,020 9,218 7,492 2,616 63.6% 15.6% 4.3% 4.8% 5.6% 4.5% 1.6% Distribution 32 7 LARCENY-THEFT BY TYPE BY MONTH i CLASSIFICATION TOTAL DIST JAN FEB MAR APR MAY JUN JUL AUG SEP OCT NOV DEC Pocket Picking 269 0.2% 24 19 24 25 17 22 18 21 24 23 22 30 Purse Snatching 692 0.4% 77 60 43 44 44 52 66 53 63 60 62 68 Shoplifting 39,730 24.0% 3,274 3,407 3,559 2,999 2,842 2,898 2,990 3,288 3,375 3,413 3,567 4,118 From Motor Vehicles 24,099 14.5% 2,063 2,106 1,940 1,840 1,819 1,857 2,021 Motor Vehicle Parts/Access. 26,467 16.0% 2,302 2,196 2,248 1,943 2,031 Bicycles 14,022 8.4% Buildings 13,935 8.4% 1,162 1,125 From Coin Operated Machines 1,296 ALL Other 45,370 2,105 2,102 2,067 2,063 2,116 2,010 2,353 2,566 2,308 2,271 2,143 2,096 997 1,047 1,218 1,093 1,142 1,204 1,144 1,297 1,377 1,366 1,134 1,003 From TOTAL Distribution 165,880 -- 0.8% 93 96 1,183 1,224 1,169 1,091 93 150 127 27.3% 3,486 3,579 3,885 3,419 3,851 -- 115 1,099 1,242 1,130 1,117 1,138 1,255 150 91 81 75 111 114 3,648 3,906 4,013 3,725 3,898 3,815 4,145 13,478 13,635 14,193 12,737 13,042 12,897 13,747 4,676 14,185 4,290 14,055 4,945 100.0% 8.1% 8.2% 8.6% 7.7% 7.9% 7.8% 8.3% '8.8% 8.5% 8.6% 8.5% 9.0% NOV DEC LARCENY-THEFT BY VALUE BY MONTH JAN MAR APR MAY JUN JUL AUG SEP OCT TOTAL DIST Over $200 48,649 29.3% $50 to $200 39,721 24.0% 3,213 3,116 3,434 3,217 2,904 3,397! 3,295 3,303 3,519 3,337 3,443 3,543 Under $50 77,510 46.7% 6,246 6,478 6,752 5,796 6,255 5,848 6,194 6,828 6,474 6,736 6,657 7,246 VALUE TOTAL Distribution 165,880 -- -100.0% FEB 4,019 4,041 4,007 3,724 3,883 3,652 4,258 4,545 4,192 4,217 3,955 4,156 13,478 13,635 14,193 12,737 13,042 12,897 13,747 14,676 14,185 14,290 14,055 14,945 8.1% 8.2% • 8.6% 7.7% 7.9% 7.8% 8.3% 8.8% 8.5% 8.6% 8.5% 9.0% 33 LARCENY-THEFT BY CLASSIFICATION & VALUE CLASSIFICATION BY VALUE OF PROPERTY STOLEN NUMBER OF OFFENSES TOTAL VALUE STOLEN AVERAGE VALUE PERCENT DISTRIBUTION (VALUE) $200 and Over 48,649 $49,635,838 $1,020 89.7% $50 to $200 39,721 4,300,736 108 7.8% Under $50 77,510 1,368,451 18 2.5% 165,880 $55,305,025 $333 100.0% TOTAL ADDITIONAL ANALYSIS CLASSIFICATION NUMBER OF OFFENSES Pocket-Picking 269 Purse-Snatching TOTAL VALUE STOLEN $ AVERAGE VALUE PERCENT DISTRIBUTION (VALUE) 56,081 $208 0.1% 692 123,480 178 0.2% Shoplifting 39,730 2,265,990 57 4.1% From Motor Vehicles 24,099 11,130,094 462 20.1% Motor Vehicle Parts and Accessories 26,467 7,750,238 293 14.0% Bicycles 14,022 2,835,912 202 5.1% From Buildings 13,935 9,100,914 653 16.5% 1,296 136,163 105 0.3% 45,370 21,906,153 483 39.6% 165,880 $55,305,025 $333 100.0% ) From Coin Operated Machines All Other TOTAL 34 MOTOR VEHICLE THEFT DEFINITION The unlawful taking or stealing of a motor vehicle Including attempts and Joyriding. This definition excludes taking for temporary use by those persons having lawful access to the vehicle. SUMMARY . There were 15,784 motor vehicle thefts reported during 1988. . Motor vehicle thefts accounted for 6.1 percent of the total Index offenses and 6.6 percent of the property crimes. ▪ August recorded the highest number, with 1,474, while February recorded the lowest with 1,182. ▪ Autos represented the highest single category of motor vehicle theft, with 7,903, or 50.1 percent. ▪ Recovered motor vehicles that were locally stolen amounted to 12,052 or a 76.4 percent recovery rate. ▪ The total dollar loss amounted to $85,431,349. Of that amount, $54,628,676 was recovered. The recovered amount reflects the value of the vehicle when recovered and may be lower than the value when stolen because of missing parts or damage. ARRESTS/CLEARANCES . A total of 2,025 persons were arrested in 1988. . Adults accounted for 1,092 arrests and juveniles accounted for 933 arrests. . Males accounted for 86.3 percent and females accounted for 13.7 percent. . There were a total of 3,467 clearances for motor vehicle theft reported in 1988. Juveniles represented 25.4 percent of this total. MOTOR VEHICLE THEFT BY POPULATION GROUP 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Population Group 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 10,395 2,615 573 755 835 507 104 Distribution 65.8% 16.6% 3.6% 4.8% 5.3% 3.2% 0.7% 35 MOTOR VEHICLE THEFT BY MONTH 0 14, FT 12, , F 0 Eu A o. 06 SN fl 06, OA 00 JUL JUN MONTH AUG - -13 SEF'"--- STOLEN VEHICLES BY TYPE AUTOMOBILES 7,903 (50.1%) OTHER VEHICLES 1,388 (8.8%) MOTORCYCLES 1,651 (10.4%) TRUCKS & BUSES 4,842 (30.7%) 36 MOTOR VEHICLE RECOVERY INFORMATION SITUATION TOTAL JAN FEB MAR APR MAY JUN JUL AUG SEP OCT NOV DEC Stolen LocallyRecovered Locally 8,154 822 627 654 652 639 605 733 793 721 635 620 653 Stolen LocallyRecovered by Other Agencies in State 3,284 281 267 254 259 290 287 277 293 286 269 245 276 614 57 55 60 44 41 49 62 78 36 54 46 32 12,052 1,160 949 968 955 970 941 1,072 1,164 1,043 958 911 961 2,431 211 168 246 185 203 150 225 261 239 167 178 198 870 79 66 85 66 77 59 76 77 82 70 59 Stolen LocallyRecovered by Other Agencies out of State SUBTOTAL Stolen out of TownInstateRecovered Locally Stolen out of stateRecovered Locally 74 ■ I SUBTOTAL . 3,301 TOTALS 15,353 290 234 331 251 280 -1,183 1,299 1,206 1,250 .4. 1,450 209 P. 301 338 321 237 237 272 1 1,150 1,373 1,502 1,364 I 1,195 1,148 1,233 37 ARSON DEFINITION Arson is defined by the national Uniform Crime Reporting Program to include any willful or malicious burning or attempts to bum, with Of without Intent to defraud, a dwelling house, public building, motor vehicle or aircraft, personal properly of another, etc. Fires of suspicious or unknown origins are excluded. SUMMARY • There were 1,787 arsons reported during 1988. ▪ Arsons accounted for 0.7 percent of the total Index offenses and 0.8 percent of the property crimes. • September recorded the highest number, with 177, while November recorded the lowest with 113. • Structural arson accounted for 686 offenses or 48.5 percent. • Motor vehicle arson accounted for the highest single knowncategory, with 372, while Industrial/manufacturing arson was the lowest with 6. ARRESTS/CLEARANCES • A total of 346 persons were arrested in 1988. • Adults accounted for 117 arrests and juvenles accounted for 229 arrests. • Males accounted for 89.3 percent and females accounted for 10.7 percent. • There were a total of 349 clearances for arson reported in 1988. Juveniles represented 49.0 percent of this total. ARSON BY POPULATION GROUP 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 T Population Group Arson Distribution 38 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 929 256 300 99 88 98 17 52.0% 14.3% 16.8% 5.5% 4.9% 5.5% 1.0% ARSON BY PROPERTY CLASSIFICATION MOBILE 429 (24.0%) ALL OTHER 492 (27.5%) STRUCTURAL 866 (48.5%) VALUE OF PROPERTY DAMAGED STRUCTURAL $16,555,518 (91.7%) ALL OTHER $96,699 (0.5%) MOBILE $1,401,148 (7.8%) 39 ARSON OFFENSES BY PROPERTY TYPE BY MONTH VALUE OF PROPERTY DAMAGE TOTAL JAM FEB MAR APR MAY JUN JUL AUG SEP OCT NOV DEC Single Occupency Residential: souses, Townhouses, Duplexes, Etc. 343 28 28 29 26 39 21 32 21 33 25 32 29 S4,579,773 Other Residential: Apartments, Motets, Motels, DOnlitOtiell, 'cording Mouses, Etc. 120 6 4 7 9 8 12 14 15 11 13 9 12 857,820 S6 5 3 3 10 5 8 4 3 3 3 2 7 551,883 6 1 .. Other Commercial: Stores, Restaurants, Offices, Etc. 128 18 9 8 6 10 12 9 17 13 13 6 7 7,453,986 Community/Public: Churches, Jails, Schools, Etc. 100 9 16 13 5 4 5 14 8 6 10 4 6 1,799,713 Construction, Etc. 113 6 5 16 9 15 17 9 7 7 7 8 7 167,042 SUBTOTAL 866 73 65 77 65 81 75 83 71 75 72 61 68 16,555,518 372 52 25 37 28 34 31 37 26 28 21 28 25 1,099,498 57 4 4 5 6 11 2 2 5 5 8 2 3 301,650 SUBTOTAL 429 56 29 42 34 45 33 39 31 33 29 30 28 1,401,148 ALL OTHER Crops, Timber, Fences, Signs, Etc. 492 36 29 49 29 41 67 36 20 69 43 22 51 96,699 1,787 165 123 PROPERTY CLAfStF1CATtCH STRUCTURE Store's: Barns, Garages, Uarehouset, Etc. indottrial/Menufecturing 1,145,301 All Other: Monuments, Wilding. under MOBILE Motor Vehicles: Autos, Trucks, Buses, Motorcycles, Etc. All Other: Trailers, Recreational Vehicles, Airplanes, Boats, Etc. TOTAL 40 168 128 167 175 158 122 177 144 113 147 118,053,365 p' p am minsmospeg ag MOOMOgagagaaagOOMMO gagglagagOO MagaggagaggeggeggOOMO - pp pp SO U MOOM g OgOa g I COLATY OFFENSE AM) SUPPLEMENTAL DATA 441k Mk. MOOOMID.. OWOOOMMOOOMMOOOMOWOOMMMOOMOWOOOw • • Ma Mei ■ MO •$ I • m imammamminmammommaimmamma• MM + gni.. 4_4 laMOMONO11•••••11111OMMONO l rn 111•1111111111111M11111/110•11111WIMMIM minalmmiammammminamemimmord 6-4 4-1 1 . t+Lt-k ••■■:r mama a r r r? I MMMMMM■AMMOMMINO frn- if III TIIFT111 I 171- 1 I INDEX CRIMES BY COUNTY Apache 509 Coconino 5,736 Mohave 5,481 Navajo 2,562 Yavapal 4,411 La Paz 864 Gila 760 Maricopa 156,921 Greenlee 111 Yuma 5,574 Graham 613 Pinal 6,531 0111111111■1111=■•••111111.1 Pima 62,679 Cochise 4,044 nta Cruz 1,705 ARIZONA 258,501 42 INDEX CRIMES BY COUNTY . INDEX OFFENSES MURDER FORCIBLE RAPE Rape by Force Attempts to Commit ROBBERY Firearm Knife/Cutting Instrument Other Dangerous Weapons Strong Arm ASSAULT Firearm Knife/Cutting Instrument Other Dangerous Weapons Physical Force BURGLARY Forcible Entry Unlawful Entry-No Force Attempted Forcible Entry LARCENY-THEFT MOTOR VEHICLE THEFT Autos Trucks and Buses Motorcycles Other Vehicles ARSON TOTALS APACHE COCHISE COCONINO GILA GRAHAM GREENLEE LA PAZ MARICOPA MOHAVE NAVAJO ._ 4 3 1 1 -5 174 8' 4 -7 -788 2 25 16 13 2 22 2 19 10 2 6 -610 18 9 --178 4 -1 6 6 -4 2 25 2 1 9 3,425 3 42 27 45 1 14 13 1 --4 1,181 15 6 1 -2 6 --3 512 6 2 1 -4 -1 --330 3 1 __ 9 2 -22 1 2 1,402 18 18 57 191 478 82 75 14 137 8,473 305 177 8 2,309 26 31 3 -15 64 10 18 8 60 13 2 21 1 5 1,780 35 28 10 30 58 11 2 20 2,979 8 60 29 97 31 114 1,405 329 i 48 11 146 62 102 743 124 115 1,001 77 29 164 34,595 1,695 612 75 750 348 46 17 99 77 21,631 919 416 33 204 320 10,880 43 28 12 65 680 146 4 3 --7 47 50 2,084 96 75 321 489 2,514 4,198 506 425 65 97,272 3,059 1,618 10 250 217 31 26 2 11,030 324 100 57 4 129 13 126 15 5,710 41 1 26 182 4 79 1 12 3,709 63 9 3 66 43 1 29 9 7 6 -8 1,172 50 7 1 19 -4 -13 11 439 26 9 1 34 36 12. --3 1,164 26 11 509 4,044 111 864 156,921 5,736 613 5,481 760 2,562 PIMA 56 369 262 107 920 596 116 SANTA PINAL CRUZ YAVAPAI 22 1' 6 48 1 22 1 21 31 17 -1 14 111 22 33 8 3 13 7 -- YUMA 5 21 15 6 84 23 14 30 16 1 2 5 178 3,130 1,735 457 355 583 10,875 7,441 2,279 1,155 44,251 2,724 1,081 579 282 782 354 62,679 49 568 109 118 146 195 11 84 2 12 8 62 4 260 58 48 42 483 115 130 154 84 1,050 613 334 103 1,579 506 895 613 71 3,821 303 58 448 12 46 902 185 126 50 35 1 174 8 36 4 79 6,531 4 1,705 58 96 1,013 612 353 48 2,853 3,586 208 92 66 317 183 100 28 16 18 22 35 28 4,411 5,574 it ANALYSIS OF ROBBERY, BURGLARY, AND LARCENY-THEFT BY COUNTY OFFENSES ROBBERY APACKE CCCNISE 25 2 1 COCONINO 4S GILA GRAHAM 3 2 1 1 9 2 .. 9 4 2 .. 1 10 2 1 1 7 2 1 20 -1 --- 115 1,001 743 124 81 9 14 58 34 11 4 19 658 369 141 148 343 218 26 99 424 123 139 162 319 140 62 117 LARCENY - THEFT 321 2,514 4,198 $200 and Over S50 to $200 Under 850 120 92 109 . 546 669 1,299 Hfighwey Commercial House Get or Service Station Convenience Store Residence Bank Miscellaneous BURGLARY Residence Night, 6PM-6AM Day, 6414-6PN Unknown Non-Residence Night, 6PM-64M Day, 648-6PN Unknown -.. -- -- 1 ENLIE LA PAZ NARICOPA 1 9 3,425 -.. 6 .. -P. 1 ... MOHAVE NAVAJO 42 27 PIMA 920 PINAL 111 34 11 9 20 12 5 20 1,662 568 69 403 350 108 265 10 5 1 3 13 1 9 17 1 1 4 1 3 435 146 29 159 80 43 28 SANTA CRUZ 22 YAVAPAI 14 84 8 2 -10 5 1 1 2 2 2 1 28 14 4 12 12 -14 2 ... 77 29 164 34,595 1,695 612 10,875 1,579 506 1,013 1,050 52 32 14 6 25 22 1 2 29 13 3 13 ---- 112 25,901 13 5,258 22 9,230 77 11,413 52 8,694 25 2,482 909 10 17 , 5,303 1,089 357 263 469 606 275 126 205 347 157 24 166 265 198 17 50 8,847 2,719 5,355 773 2,028 946 818 264 1,012 376 274 362 567 262 111 194 383 167 177 39 123 95 27 1 571 155 156 260 442 314 37 91 795 285 389 121 255 148 88 19 506 425 65 489 97,272 3,059 1,618 44,251 3,821 902 2,853 3,586 1,125 1,044 2,029 118 141 247 128 123 174 23 18 24 168 148 173 31,423 23,782 42,067 1,151 762 1,146 360 389 869 10,746 9,727 23,778 1,058 1,060 1,703 228 261 413 836 653 1,364 619 852 2,115 146 330 24,264 16,059 6 11 369 342 8 28 366 166 63 191 10,314 4,968 9 17 866 501 9 17 342 61 7 24 499 536 2 8 851 438 77 : 23 25 29 47 24 8 15 Pocket-Picking Purse Snatching Shoplifting From Motor Vehicle Motor Vehicle Parts and Accessories Bicycles From Buildings Coin-Operated Machines Alt Other 1 12 33 30 1 7 15 576 226 8 28 921 576 1 4 135 68 4 104 48 ... 8 16 3 82 64 I 24 15 61 5 140 i 249 233 284 72 852 268 547 1,410 130 310 38 35 66 3 156 22 43 54 4 145 4 5 12 -20 35 39 61 12 192 17,958 9,520 6,940 569 21,486 204 165 529 39 1,394 167 115 212 17 539 6,178 2,280 3,373 379 16,505 365 337 318 26 1,382 147 109 46 1 170 244 168 487 15 873 564 411 82 24 1,206 TOTAL 438 3,540 4,986 633 504 95 662 135,292 4,796 2,257 56,046 5,511 1,430 3,880 4,720 VALUE IN DOLLARS, PROPERTY STOLEN BY CRIME BY COUNTY OFFENSES APACHE COCHISE COCONINO GILA GRAHAM GREENLE: MURDER 169 FORCIBLE RAPE 50 50 ------- 16,249 12,418 690 -1,058 318 1,458 307 71,380 51,291 2,884 8,511 39,896 20,089 11,926 1,281 6,882 794,064 559,778 300,004 96,836 162,938 234,286 106,857 30,351 97,078 12,407 21,938 2 4,861 397 21,856 --1,560 -50 80 850 -4,689 5,286 -1,205 ---4,081 -- 150 PIMA 15,000 27,390 2,300 25 -- -- -- -- 26,817 31,630 53 -- 295 -- 554,313 553,093 __ 20 -1,200 --- 2,313,682 930,453 464,606 13,800 52,584 334,823 415,652 101,764 568,504 197,825 30,520 12,711 22,684 178,182 98,792 27,790 47,105 17,253 2,055 1,065 1,843 3,012 990 20,887 4,553 858 --782 80 -2,833 14,175 2,298 -860 424 953 9,423 217 79,435 41,602 13,652 2,263 1,933 18,390 -1,595 12,637,984 1,138,116 9,080,682 755,000 3,176,545 194,071 205,946 3,917,287 1,986,850 354,983 383,116 3,557,302 156,274 1,374,893 172,679 51,571 2,009,730 175,271 234,571 207,508 83,167 116,492 7,849 27,063 22,650 3,667 746 710,230 479,519 114,723 104,979 259,817 230,711 149,618 13,388 67,705 799,530 557,243 175,777 291,645 89,821 242,287 97,489 131,699 13,099 218,521 1,137,468 183,917 1,050,782 26,211 67,491 8,393 19,195 1,299 476 3,363 3,841 12,214 16,789 23,676 221,496 903,783 711,939 142,117 49,727 200 1,258 41,267 354,270 16,659 3,824 1,063 -497 9,868 538 869 6,640 1,624 300 906 465 --3,345 577,047 65,853 32,019 20,330 259,839 30,683 23,473 20,330 56,135 4,258 11,993 3,909 88,340 9,652 11,153 1,030 115,364 16,773 327 15,391 317,208 35,170 8,546 -154,171 13,672 7,013 --37,122 3,578 1,453 125,915 17,920 80 -- 145,784 45,406,614 1,937,123 115,928 34,957,849 1,477,789 8,100 6,026,067 373,853 20,568 13,891,499 396,176 87,260 15,040,283 707,760 29,856 10,448,765 459,334 10,259 2,683,840 157,334 6,446 818,360 69,943 13,151 6,946,565 232,057 379,243 243,586 80,409 12,526 150,651 135,657 100,115 6,259 29,283 616,612 1,339,687 121,100 102,738 15,651 531,604 1,171,034 102,873 86,828 13,275 66,223 131,510 14,800 13,328 1,840 18,785 37,143 3,427 2,582 536 -982 560 15 100 -2,595 3,261 353 148 20,808 112,552 1,505 2,439 115 86,250 225,290 26,352 13,128 2,553 327,658 36,304,384 1,615,976 307,154 32,952,975 1,523,426 17,451 2,568,296 75,130 3,053 783,113 17,420 1,300 30,776 1,064 45 51,285 2,264 3,700 1,341,866 12,162 51,544 7,040,128 222,707 452,480 10,731,306 1,298,174 403,466 9,330,526 1,157,614 113,631 37,891 1,015,322 385,458 11,123 26,929 1,152 16,882 1,195 47,767 3,268 2,349 6,343 668,500 24,812 58,516 2,572,421 221,812 78,036 33,851 119,420 3,150 271,520 60,490 9,033 5,919 223,520 534,966 42,303 19,015 275 160,033 35,345 4,345 5,100 28,793 740 47,945 312 830 5,000 -6,841 8,380 5,046 85,802 1,951 169,890 5,218,221 1,748,864 4,834,887 53,799 15,984,558 24,793 16,729 116,797 1,002 223,880 MOTOR VEHICLE THEFT 6:91196,773 26:5- 927,399 135,650 82,200 22,000 593,939 58,352,055 1,129,735 TOTAL 17,486 2,623,867 2,856,540 344,541 '22,243 58,131 ROBBERY Highway Commercial House Gas or Service Station Convenience Store Residence Bank Miscellaneous BURGLARY Residence Night, 6PM-6AM Day, 6AM-6PM Unknown Non-Residence Night, 6P11-6AM Day, 6AM-6PM Unknown LARCENY-THEFT 119,487 $200 and Over 108,425 $50 to $200 9,495 1,567 Under $50 80 Pocket-Picking Purse Snatching 1,683 918 Shoplifting 9,951 From Motor Vehicle Motor Vehicle Parts 7,251 and Accessories 1,776 Bicycles From Buildings 11,571 3,514 Coin-Operated Machine 82,743 All Other -150 SANTA CRUZ MARICOPA MOHAVE NAVAJO PINAL LA PAZ 58,034 31,962 395,752 6,299 885,732 1,990,894 574,208 2,188,030 27,545 2,645,059 72,393 46,364 240,779 2,519 685,951 YAVAPAI YUMA 37,771 21,509 34,713 2 83,974 72,054 47,037 447,700 14,145 313,930 108,231 73,197 14,401 2,207 308,752 651,755 13,933,953 1,329,752 1,943,034 750,652 ,362,726 ,636,694 142,430,942 4,699,493 1,490,118 37,905,677 L,813,225 2,400,679 2,612,820 L,145,474 TYPE AND VALUE, IN DOLLARS, OF PROPERTY STOLEN AND RECOVERED ft BY COUNTY STOLEN APACNE COGNISE Currency/Notes/Etc. 19,793 10,128 1,428 149,129 235,627 36,227 Jewelry/Precious metal Clothing and furs COCONINO GILA LA PAZ MARICOPA NONAVI 42,581 5,789,006 624,694 18,043,080 26,105 2,352,557 496,951 566,701 59,869 GRAHAM GREENLE 286,710 56,888 31,025 2,193 162,081 29,575 12,517 1,297 1,230 92r 41 184,201 Locally Stolen Vehicle 29,719 1,301,853 931,899 135,650 82,200122,000 -1,736 45,082 136,114 17,688 1,199 Office Equipment 12,087 197.4901 232,144 25,524 20,523 2,234 Stereos/1V's/Camers* 10,166 19,570 58,108 48,493 Consumable Goods 2,446 15,611 . . _. 26,750 5,778 90,813 11,720 31,101 2,828 ______ - 106 -- 8,551 63,654 9,514 2,018,188 4,892,957 872,060 1,900 116,107 298,643 243,118 42,666 SANTA CRUZ YAVAPAI TUNA 77,331 105,028 23,486 213,285 261,632 59,844 370,232 327,171 95,145 658,635 14,176,809 1,384,604 1,941,079 749,754 1,392,564 78,390 7,630 135,077 416,488 27,003 11,378 90,063' 286,483 317,618 95,483 5,475,449 354,084 f 106,562 169,519 29,836 -- 560,925 34,806 61,077 1,032,981 11,657t 366,020 111,771 184,867 28,402 . i 1,300 132,308 8,233 402,337 115,699 322,241 6,327,628 1,129,834 8,225 --, 14,1081 87,158 56,100 98,072 3,334 54,716 21,120 4,992 23,213 • ..... 80 432,118 2,680 695,622 -- 4,010 miscellaneous 110,413 532,037 TOTAL STOLEN 217,486 r,623,867 !,856,540 344,541 222,243 58,131 1,636,696 142,430.942 ,699,493 1,490,118 37,905,677 3,813,2252,400,679 2,612,820 3,145,474 Livestock 6,065 9,596 4,593 4,518 3,053 2,478, 735 __ PINAL PIMA 106,643 1,856,776 62,760 6,737,969 9,739 552,295 610,430 60,796,568 1,217,756 29,417 12,450 3,927,853 14,611,892 386,406 62,423 -.1.--- Firearms Household Goods NAVAJO 768,662 57,660 57,154 21,985 174,383 29,010,874 1,628,251 RECOVERED Currency/Notes/Etc. Jewelry/Precious metal Clothing and Furs 1,611 953 608 20,176 44,972 10,880 Locally Stolen Vehicle Office Equipment Stereos/TV's/Camerss __ 26,419 974,885 13,506 5,056 27,136 8,099 3,495 244 6,846 84 67 ---- 785 5,000 55 278,302 960,444 299,473 140,554 34,095 4,893 377,300 38,608,367 644,430 809,212 738 26,383 firearms Household Goods Consumable Goods Livestock Miscellaneous 280 4,025 203 300 250 -- 2,412 31,987 23,729 3,016 5,504 455 2,530 14,168 1,919 998 2,774 -- 155,757 306,696 26,854 7,397 1,300 321 -13,021 5,681 2,619 --600 r2,2ci 6,333 5,686 2,165 66,142 626 1,550 1,122 327,405 -4,205, --L 1,010 885 3 149 142,659 3,435 106 --7,226 10,952 5,875 -6,381 20,097 2,699,940 25 369,524 1,181 1,469 ... TOTAL RECOVERED 49,455 1,182,422 757,309 151,785 87,802 12,455 103,292 23,068 9,995 25,746 10,122 10,985 t 893,379 599,079 2,949 10,798 115,217 277,609 90,966 + --4 605,434 106,600 58,200 5,000 5,284 11,279 1,650 395,770 44,443,570 1,423,110 4. 532,594 9,755,102 62,994 25 201,169 , 11,006 _4_ 4 19,797 21,618 6,446 1,477 38,887 5,006 13,989 11,303 * 545,791 ' 731,314 5,507 2,982 20,599 13,085 i 15,682 5,778 27,282 30 44,454 26,261 10,718 93' 407 4,380 . 4,341 ! 2,296 4,682 52,590 536,660 "T 1,017: 157,309 .- i 14,1421 1,400. 43,274 80 45,599 •,' , t 9,840 4,276 58,834 48,503 3,524 -1 6,295 52,404 638,17711,244,098 1,292,685i 674,351 i 678,596 i 846,153 +4 • IBS= is• • • • 111 s ■ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ill • • • • ▪ • • • •• • •• •• •• • •• •• rt• • ID • • • ▪ 1 •• • • • STATE AND COLATY ARREST DATA • • • • . • • ■ • • • • • I i • 4 ••••• MOMS • NNW • f 1- ARREST SUMMARY ▪ There were a total of 224.238 arrests reported in 1988, . Arrests for Part 1 offenses amounted to 58.549, or 26.1 percent. ▪ Arrests for Part H offenses amounted to 165,887, or 73.9 percent. Adult arrests were 177,311, or 79.1 percent, and *wile arrests were 46,925, or 20.9 percent. Males accounted for 181,718 arrests, or 81.0 percent, and females accounted for 42,518 arrests, or 19.0 percent. Arrests for adults between the ages of 25-29 recorded the highest number with 37,544, or 21.2 percent of the total aduft arrests. ▪ Arrests for juveniles age 12 and under were 5.978. or 12.7 percent of the total juvenile arrests. ▪ Larceny-theft recorded the highest number of arrests with 39,677, or 17.7 percent of the total. ARREST BY AGE GROUP PART I OFFENSES ARRESTS JUVENILE DISTRIBUTION Murder/Manslaughter 185 0.5% 17 0.1% Forcible Rape 278 0.7% 37 0.2% Robbery 984 2.4% 232 1.3% Aggravoted Assault 6,121 15.2% 942 5.1% Burglary 4,375 10.9% 3,330 18.1% 27,047 67.3% 12,630 68.8% 1,092 2.7% 933 5.1% Arson 117 0.3% 229 1.3% TOTAL 40,199 100.0% 18,350 100.0% Larceny-Theft Motor Vehicle Theft 48 ARRESTS ADULT DISTRIBUTION /7g ARREST BY OFFENSE, RACE & ETHNIC ORIGIN NUMBER OFFENSE CLASSIFICATION of ARRESTS DISTR1BUTION WHITE BLACK 202 315 1,216 7,063 0.09% 0.14% 0.54% 3.15% 167 249 762 5,722 29 7,705 3.44% 39,677 2,025 346 58,549 17.69% 0.90% 0.15% 26.11% 6,489 32,801 1,764 312 48,266 53 379 959 905 4,100 3,323 319 -2,020 130 244 20 157 523 307 -1,006 18 28 -87 3 1 1 32 313 61 1 28 9 NOT HISPANIC ASIAN HISPANIC 5 1 12 72 351 285 2,525 59 14 1 49 91 3 31 268 1,793 5,270 26 251 6 -- 2,063 8,691 498 71 13,524 5,642 30,986 1,527 275 45,025 6 4,448 141 155 38 285 1,450 596 269 418 8 14,391 793 364 230 61 76 814 851 1,794 110 504 -230 2,123 5,421 504 INDIAN PART 1 Murder/Nonneg. Manslaughter Forcible Rape Robbery Aggravated Assault Burglary Larceny-Theft Motor Vehicle Theft Arson PART I SUBTOTAL 196 20 6,641 . 153 224 948 PART 11 Manslaughter by Negligence Other Assaults - Simple 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 All Gambling Offenses Against Family/Children Driving Under the Influence Liquor Laws Disorderly Conduct Vagrancy All Other, Except Traffic Curfew/Loitering (juveniles) Runaways (juveniles) PART II SUBTOTAL TOTAL 14 0.01% 18,839 934 1,844 8.40% 0.42% 0.82% 264 0.12% 1,229 6,591 2,330 1,789 2,532 0.55% 2.94% 1.04% 0.80% 1.13% 1,293 2,197 434 60 2 177 152 6 1,178 767 249 333 0.53% 0.34% 0.11% 0.15% 914 707 228 259 43 20 16 5 16 1 -1 -- 3 1 2,974 1.33% 3.22% 2,391 25 260 4 3 10 -- 50 1 105 2,162 3,250 -13 74 54 1,490 349 2,772 69 47 3 83 10 87 33 898 21,375 21,894 12,469 1,188 27,168 3,012 4,092 485 12,320 804 15,643 0.36% 6.98% 33,781 131,906 47,305 21.10% 176,931 7,215 614 1,817 14 1,207 26,282 0.27% 0.81% 0.01% 0.54% 11.72% 11.90% 7.01% 0.63% 15.23% 1.64% 2.22% 73.89% 100.00% 26,694 15,728 1,419 34,147 3,693 4,990 165,687 224,236 Distribution 14 15,726 783 1,557 242 1,039 5,727 1,953 313 6,435 582 1,564 11 996 23,356 22,031 12,900 904 28,247 3,429 4,661 140,200 188,466 84.04% 555 510 28 202 2 93 690 1,359 1,291 163 3,045 185 209 12,682 19,323 8.62% 15 1 4,907 4,800 3,259 3 231 6,979 681 1,689 226 944 5,141 1,734 1,520 2,114 537 188 257 1,313 14 977 78.90% 49 TOTAL ARRESTS BY AGE uNDER to 10-12 13-14 °Mall CLASSIFICATION PAST I --Nurdermonnea. Manslaughter -4 9 forcible Rape -49 7 20 Robbery 212 39 88 Aggravated Assault 400 858 165 Soratary 597 1,923 3,523 Larcany-Theft 11 39 234 Motor Vshicte Theft 64 53 67 Arson PART I SUBTOTAL 883 2,527 4,952 PART II -1 2 Nansloughtar by Magligence 649 95 269 Other Assaults - Staple .. forgery end Counterfeiting 2 15 11 4 Fraud 3 1 -tabeettement 12 3 64 Stolen Property Vandalism 412 590 236 Mappens: Carrying, Possessing 8 15 66 Prostitution and Calm. Vice 2 -al!, Offenses 15 62 103 MUSS, SALE OR OFg. .. Opium, Cocaine, Derivatives 9 1 19 Marijuana 1 S .. ... 1 Synthettc Narcotics . Other Dangerous MonnercotIcs -5 MUSS, POSSESSION il Opium, Cocaine, Derivatives 3 21 Marijuana 6 50 181 Synthetic Narcotics -1 5 IS 65 Other Dangerous Nonnercotics 5 All 6se4ing -1 -Offenses Against Family/Child ---Driving Under the Influence 1 5 3 liquor taw' 40 28 443 Disorderly Conduct 73 129 395 .. -Vagrancy 8 Alt Other, Except Traffic 105 332 1,051 Curfeu/toitering (juveniles) 19 169 924 tunamays (juveniles) 75 355 1,620 ART II SUBTOTAL 660 IAN 6,254 At 1,563 4,413 11,206 _... . _ 50 15 16 3 5 39 131 on 2,118 249 17 3,251 6 8 47 225 637 2,227 196 14 3,360 1 443 16 20 -67 276 71 5 58 . 456 29 17 12 84 304 as 3 53 6 24 9 7 17 36 2 5 TOTAL ustiER 18 19 8' 17 11 37 70 232 942 247 S81 3,330 2,242 12,630 933 204 229 14 3,377 18,350 17 8 81 252 513 2,118 146 7 3,142 11 11 61 286 395 1,729 107 8 2,608 513 40 43 19 80 303 97 13 46 5 2,425 102 98 32 310 2,121 342 23 337 1 534 67 54 18 83 251 124 69 76 1 562 39 67 19 76 233 118 90 70 -590 49 76 18 65 219 104 76 74 -705 37 79 12 58 256 91 79 81 40 42 8 a 73 127 20 25 39 35 11 11 61 48 14 17 55 36 5 15 54 29 6 22 175 154 143 135 1,122 458 384 399 17 28 64 29 91 88 295 126 _ -5 ---25 31 35 564 695 796 383 5,838 3,266 2,998 2,221 589 1,745 635 666 46 48 62 36 4,179 1,467 1,667 1,555 ---3,693 --- ' , 4,990 28,575 8,159 8,155 7,264 46,925 11,301 10,763 9,444 140 383 29 101 .. 1 .- 71 17 52 399 294 192 14 30 14 49 85 76 2 1 1 ---20 97 257 837 1,652 2,838 296 416 436 11 7 20 744 918 1,029 764 $96 921 1,230 , 1,086 624 5,179 6,621 7,955 8,430 9,981 11,332 20 21 18 17 O4 , 6 5 16 11 59 58 294 249 250 281 1,478 1,257 89 62 3 1 2,180 • 1,939 43 1,047 774 695 39 1,538 --6,300 8,239 22 23 24 8 14 53 298 245 1,240 60 3 1,921 7 8 60 306 232 1,204 59 6 1,882 13 17 58 307 197 1,110 44 5 1,751 1 693 44 61 15 56 253 90 106 71 -856 32 78 14 53 257 110 94 81 65 31 5 13 25-29 41 30-34 35-39 ,-40-44 45-49 50-54 55-59 60-64 65 AND OVER TOTAL OVER 18 TOTAL ALL AGES 83 250 1,398 915 5,322 219 32 8,260 26 59 170 1,125 651 4,159 155 25 6,370 11 24 65 706 362 2,629 85 6 3,888 17 11 37 390 171 1,610 35 10 2,281 10 7 17 217 85 985 17 5 1,343 5 5 4 141 43 680 6 4 888 1 -4 69 17 490 5 1 587 2 2 3 42 10 395 1 1 456 5 185 202 2 278 315 4 984 1,216 41 6,121 7,063 8 4,375 7,705 641 27,047 39,677 2 1,092 2,025 -117 346 703 40,199 58,549 -887 45 82 20 48 232 106 109 94 1 4,219 193 404 56 189 1,089 421 564 462 1 3,105 166 324 20 132 719 348 348 389 1 1,914 87 226 14 77 461 215 134 262 1 1,060 30 145 11 34 213 117 39 186 -593 25 79 10 21 133 60 24 120 1 310 12 26 2 9 67 40 12 79 -167 3 26 1 10 38 18 7 55 -98 1 10 1 3 25 12 9 43 1 9 14 121 16,414 18,839 2 832 934 9 1,746 1,844 1 232 264 5 919 1,229 24 4,470 6,591 14 1,988 2,330 6 1,766 1,789 52 2,195 2,532 69 30 9 14 54 31 9 17 309 158 72 81 214 110 47 44 95 68 32 38 60 35 6 17 18 12 9 8 6 9 1 3 4 4 2 4 1 3 1 2 154 368 29 94 -57 1,049 581 648 46 1,520 -. 154 385 31 94 -56 1,247 566 674 27 1,479 -- 161 396 27 84 -54 1,256 518 701 40 1,541 -- 761 1,551 145 366 2 299 6,059 2,121 3,140 219 6,403 -- 511 904 93 230 1 254 4,655 2,136 2,398 259 4,824 -- 23 34 9 3 1 31 826 607 319 47 727 -- 5 18 5 4 -14 528 456 172 35 513 -- 4 12 2 5 1 9 341 272 129 22 279 -- -6,050 7,971 -6,410 8,292 285 99 63 527 181 90 14 53 37 149 69 14 1 1 2 53 77 155 3,102 2,103 1,331 918 1,863 1,360 977 528 1,581 139 101 231 3,111 1,902 1,158 ---------6,512 29,284 22,232 14,682 8,899 , 5,384 8,263 37,544 28,602 - 18,570 11,180 6,727 -3,204 4,092 -2,089 2,676 -1,285 1,741 1 1 -2 1,105 640 229 308 1,178 767 249 333 7 2,799 2,974 3 6,093 7,215 614 550 2 4 1,522 1,817 -14 9 12 1,207 1,207 300 25,899 26,282 199 20,856 26,694 131 13,983 15,728 22 1,373 1,419 284 29,968 34,147 --- 3,693 4,990 --1,203 137,112 165,687 1,906 177,311 224,236 51 1 JUVENILE MALE ARRESTS OFFENSE CLASSIFICATION PART 1 Nurderpeonneg. manslaughter Forcible Rape Robbery Aggravated Assault turgiory Larcenv-Theft Motor Vehicle Theft Arson PART I SUBTOTAL PART 11 Manslaughter by Negligence Other Assaults - Slagle Forgery and Counterfeiting Fraud Emb6tHament Stolen Property Vandalise Weeping - Carrying, P4tssm8ine Prostitution and Comm. Vice Sex Offenses DIMS, SAtE OR N.G. Opium, Catalina, Derivative* Marijuana Synthetic Narcotics Other Dangerous lionnercotice amuck POSISSSION Opium, Cocaine, Derivatives Marijuana Synthetic Narcotics Other Dangerous Nonnsrcotict All Geetting Offenses Against Fasily/Children Driving Under the Influence Liquor Leas Disorderly CondUct Vagrancy All Other, Except Traffic Curfew and Loitering Runaways PART II SUIITOTAL TOTAL 52 UNDER 10 --6 36 136 477 7 62 724 -- 83 -3 1 3 217 8 -15 " 1 15 16 17 TOTAL JUVENILE -6 35 171 771 2,540 194 52 3,771 3 5 37 114 630 1,599 196 17 2,601 6 8 42 202 572 1,611 167 14 2,622 8 11 68 215 531 1,619 186 13 2 651 17 36 204 810 2,996 9,261 778 204 14,306 2 424 6 1 308 11 -335 20 1 413 26 5 1,775 64 10-12 AGE 13-14 4 16 72 358 1,415 28 46 1,939 1 212 1 1 -10 369 13 -59 a 16 17 31 76 -60 540 62 1 97 -61 236 67 1 51 10 80 275 81 2 50 8 67 266 94 3 45 19 281 1,903 325 7 317 1 3 .. 6 17 -- 5 23 7 5 15 33 2 4 33 37 7 6 60 114 16 17 13 151 14 32 39 244 14 60 54 348 24 59 130 927 55 211 .. .. 17 531 227 9 540 524 520 3,372 5,973 78 1,196 325 6 705 656 SOS 4,753 7,375 -224 2,180 355 16 832 725 302 6.157 8,808 -326 4,218 1,370 37 3,152 2,672 2,175 20,257 34,565 2 5 -• 4 10 42 -3 24 65 -94 18 57 603 1,327 -.. 1 11 25 107 -265 127 195 1,454 3,393 12 137 2 45 -4 262 291 6 716 622 596 3.918 7,689 JUVENILE FEMALE ARRESTS OFFENSE CLASSIFICATION PART I Murder/Nonneg. Manslaughter Forcible Rape Robbery Aggravated Assault Burglary Larceny-Theft Motor Vehicle Theft Arson PART 1 SUBTOTAL PART 11 Manslaughter by Negligence Other Assaults - Simple 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 10-12 --1 --4 3 29 120 4 2 159 16 42 508 11 7 588 -12 -57 -- 1 1 2 --19 ---- -2 43 2 -3 ----- -2 -- 1 1 1 15 16 17 TOTAL JUVENILE -- - -- -- -- 1 -- -- -- 1 14 41 87 2 17 59 519 53 -650 5 23 65 616 29 -738 2 32 50 623 18 28 132 332 3,369 155 25 4,042 -135 4 -121 9 -- -6 40 2 4 29 4 4 7 4 AGE 13-14 983 40 15 1,181 -225 9 3 -4 50 4 1 6 3 2 1 3 1 8 9 44 Synthetic Narcotics Other Dangerous Nonnarcotics -1 -4 3 20 All Gambling Offenses Against Family/Children Driving Under the Influence ---4 8 -- --- --- Marijuana Liquor Laws Disorderly Conduct Vagrancy All Other, Except Traffic Curfew and Loitering Runaways PART It SUBTOTAL * UNDER 10 TOTAL 1 1 11 1 15 22 __ 67 42 181 104 2 335 302 18 77 236 160 432 1,020 1,024 2,336 3,517 1 726 1 -100 14 12 11 13 37 3 10 3 1 2 3 -- 7 5 1 2 4 13 17 41 -- 50 -25 51 6 17 --19 456 91 1 213 240 581 1,868 --33 658 81 4 5 1 1 2 2 17 --3 306 69 2 204 240 710 1,807 2,457 2,606 1 197 196 322 1,798 2,524 -650 38 22 13 29 218 17 16 20 13 13 4 8 45 195 9 84 --57 1,620 375 9 1,027 1,021 2,815 8,318 12,360 53 ta ADULT MALE ARRESTS 19 18 OFFENSE CLASSIFICATION PART I 11 16 murder/Monne/9. Manslaughter 11 8 Forcible Rope 76 60 Robbery 249 Aggravated Assault 227 480 348 Rurality 1,620 1,279 larceny-Theft 134 99 Motor Vehicle Theft 7 8 Arson 2,568 2 065 PART I SUBTOTAL PART II Manslaughter by Negligence 475 440 Other Assaults - Simple 44 25 Forgery and Counterfeiting 44 52 Fraud 12 9 Embezzlement 79 73 Stolen Property 211 227 Vandalism 117 110 Weapons - Carrying, Possessin 16 10 Prostitution and Cot. vice 71 61 Sex Offenses DRUGS, SALE OR MFG. 51 37 Opium, Cocaine, Derivatives 46 33 Marijuana 11 12 Synthetic Narcotics 13 10 rout Nonnercotics Other 0 DRUGS, POSSESSION 124 108 Opium, Cocaine, Derivatives 345 397 Marijuana 14 25 Synthetic Narcotics 107 80 Other Dangerous Norinarcotics All Gambling 24 21 Offenses Against Family/Child 621 505 Driving Under the Influence 2,657 2,496 Liquor Laws 562 531 Disorderly Conduct 32 47 Vagrancy 1,283 1,406 All Other, Except Traffic .. 6,842 6,836 . PART II SUBTOTAL V 9,404 8,907 TOTAL 21 20 22 23 - 24 AGE 25-29 '30-34 3S-39 40-44 SS-59 45.49 ' 50.54 60-64 6S-Over TOTAL ADULTS 37 5 7 11 6 7 14 17 83 8 11 16 226 48 53 ' 48 54 SS 1,189 265 223 253 259 275 773 159 1 216 211 203 257 1,078 857 876 800 752 i 3,666 189 36 51 80 51 55 28 3 6 S i 3 1 1,717 1,453 1,469 1,403 1,293 6,191 25 59 154 967 553 2,910 135 24 4,829 10 23 59 617 301 1,900 80 6 2,996 17 11 33 343 136 1,102 30 6 1,678 8 7 16 190 67 665 IS 4 972 S 5 3 122 39 452 6 2 1 -4 63 16 304 5 1 2 2 3 39 8 249 1 1 172 4 2 277 4 896 34 5,315 8 3,777 387 18,897 969 2 105 -441 30,408 1 769 3,665 128 31 48 266 15 42 162 43 200 916 382 98 17 96 as i 419 1 2,735 97 221 11 118 620 327 64 3S8 1 1,706 51 148 9 69 391 198 33 243 1 931 18 91 9 26 180 105 19 175 -306 19 51 9 19 111 52 11 116 1 268 9 17 1 56 37 12 78 -143 3 20 1 9 33 17 7 55 -86 1 5 1 3 21 9 1 9 97 14,252 531 1 7 1,171 1 153 824 S 23 3,833 12 1,834 365 6 51 2,020 258 137 51 60 178 89 43 35 82 62 24 30 53 32 6 15 14 11 S 7 3 3 1 3 1 7 3 3 614 1,385 124 294 1 237 5,331 1,874 2,590 400 806 237 472 42 130 1 125 2,703 1,679 1,317 211 2,687 12,651 15,647 85 161 30 61 -71 1,840 1,261 815 127 1,613 7,725 9,403 55 77 11 11 2 45 1,164 19 31 4 11 2 7 3 2 3 1 30 734 5 18 3 3 .. 859 380 443 97 1,003 4,700 5,672 268 45 641 2,862 3,496 491 35 57 10 62 178 100 17 67 604 20 55 7 53 224 88 18 73 592 26 40 10 51 223 80 18 59 744 23 49 6 44 219 102 13 68 43 34 5 11 43 26 6 18 56 28 3 8 SI 25 6 12 114 364 27 74 .. 120 342 25 90 .. 122 330 25 81 .. 114 346 27 81 .. t 32 41 915 924 693 507 527 469 565 31 27 36 1,326 1,335 1,301 4-17,1r2-4 5,379 5,089 7,869 6,832 6,558 . 26 711 1,880 38 1,109 504 567 22 1,272 5,442 6,845 46 1 28 i 6 15 123 337 21 69 .. 37 1,105 448 584 189 32 1,286 5,410 5,443 24,632 6,736 30,823 83 183 -202 4,049 1,901 1,976 228 4,118 18,843 23,672 8 8 41 1 7 8 '-. 13 478 427 138 31 460 1,874 2,268 1, -11 8 280 3061 199 266 117 1110 20 21 256 250 1,175 1,100 1,480 1,541 922 564 182 242 2,251 5,425 469 1,275 6 961 22,775 18,231 11,605 1,196 25,649 116,745 147,153 ADULT FEMALE ARRESTS OFFENSE CLASSIFICATION PART I Murder/Nonneg. Manslaughter Forcible Rape Robbery Aggravated Assault Burglary Larceny-Theft Motor Vehicle Theft Arson PART I SUBTOTAL PART 11 Manslaughter by Negligence Other Assaults - Simple 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 All Gambling Offenses Against Family/Children Driving Under the Influence Liquor Laws Disorderly Conduct Vagrancy All Other, Except Traffic PART II SUBTOTAL TOTAL 18 19 20 22 21 23 AGE TOTAL 25-29 30-34 35-39 40-44 45-49 50-54 55-59 60-64 65-Over ADULTS 24 1 -5 25 33 498 12 -574 --1 37 47 450 8 -543 --4 26 24 400 9 -463 -4 41 34 400 7 -486 1 -5 39 34 364 9 -452 --7 31 29 404 8 -479 2 4 1 ---10 24 16 42 209 158 38 142 96 358 1,656 1,249 8 30 20 -4 1 458 2,069 1,541 1 1 6 89 61 729 5 -892 --4 47 35 ' 508 , 5 . 4 603 -94 23 10 9 4 24 7 53 5 -87 14 15 7 3 22 8 80 9 -99 14 19 8 3 41 4 59 7 -101 17 24 5 5 32 3 61 8 -101 18 21 5 5 30 10 88 12 -112 9 29 8 9 38 8 81 13 -118 14 34 5 5 32 8 92 9 -554 65 138 14 27 173 39 468 43 -370 69 103 9 14 99 21 284 31 -208 36 78 5 8 70 17 101 19 2 2 -1 10 2 2 4 12 2 -4 11 3 -4 9 3 2 5 18 5 3 2 8 3 3 2 51 21 21 21 36 21 4 9 13 6 8 8 2 -1 27 18 320 2 1 371 --1 19 4 228 -2 254 ---6 1 186 --193 ---3 2 146 --151 1 --7 -254 --262 13 1 806 598 8,150 123 12 9,791 -129 12 54 2 8 33 12 20 11 -87 6 28 1 2 22 8 13 4 -42 -24 -12 9 1 1 11 3 -1 6 -1 5 i 1 : -- ' -- 5 --4 3 1 2 -24 1 2 --. 1 2 -1 -2,162 301 575 79 95 637 154 1,401 175 7 3 -2 4 1 2 1 1 2 1 -- 1 1 1 1 ---2 -1 --- 183 76 47 66 30 35 21 20 32 40 38 147 111 48 14 8 61 39 35 41 38 39 59 166 98 55 20 13 4 3 4 4 1 4 6 21 10 11 7 3 11 13 13 19 11 14 15 72 47 19 8 3 --------1 1 -1 4 7 9 13 16 18 17 62 52 30 6 8 59 74 85 132 125 138 151 728 606 399 263 167 609 502 341 81 74 62 70 247 235 184 99 59 104 130 121 104 100 107 117 550 422 264 162 85 15 16 5 12 10 5 8 30 31 20 12 4 184 259 229 203 219 207 255 993 706 424 289 155 1,323 1,313 1,112 921 961 968 1,069 4,652 3,389 2,031 1,174 684 1,897 1,856 1,575 1,407 1,413 1,447 1,527 6,721 4,930 2,923 1,777 1,055 4 3 1 --1 92 27 51 2 86 342 596 --- 1 -- 1 -1 50 29 34 4 53 215 408 1 -1 35 6 13 1 23 110 261 --1 20 -14 2 34 103 365 668 81 247 3 246 3,124 2,625 2,378 177 4,319 20,367 30,158 88 `41 TOTAL ARRESTS BY COUNTY OFFENSE CLASIIIFIcolgo PART I Murder/100meg. Manslaughter Forcible Rape Robbery Aggravated Assault (tutelary larceny-Theft Motor Vehicle Theft Arson PART I SUBTOTAL PART II Manslaughter by Negligence Other Assaults - Simple Forgery and Counterfeiting Fraud Emberzlement Stolen Property Vandalism Weapons - Carrying, Possessing Prostitution and Comm. Vice Sex Offenses DRUGS, SALE ON MFG. Opium, Cocaine, Derivatives Marijuana Synthetic Narcotics Other Dangerous Nonnarcotics DRUGS, POSSESSION Opium, Cocaine, Derivatives Marijuana Synthetic Narcotics Other Dangerous Nonnarcotics All Gambling Offenses Against Family/Children Driving Under the Influence Liquor Laws Disorderly Conduct vagrancy All Other, Except Traffic Curfew/Loitering (juveniles) Runaways (juveniles) PART II SUBTOTAL TOTAL APACHE OOCNISE COCONINO GILA 1 4 56 26r 64 1 -152 -24 1 1 -2 39 3 5 4 5 2 1 36 3 2 -34 74 87 70 5 102 15 21 ¶36 688 4 5 79 229 860 104 13 1,297 8 9 22 231 210 1,432 3$ 29 1,979 1 2 S6 51 215 20 3 348 205 6 56 1 58 175 36 .. 29 -550 40 55 -11 311 59 -92 84 6 2 -3 25 4 2 15 31 62 11 2 7 12 3 2 26 255 12 8 223 541 241 372 2 1,101 184 211 3,848 5,145' 6 11 2 16 6 69 188 1 15 17 --27 126 1,174 388 332 859 204 1,447 -146 1,860 257 3 16 49 198 7,204 1,497 9,183 1,845 I GNANAMAREENLEE A PAZ MANICOPA MONATE NAVAJO 4 5 27 44 163 6 1 250 -28 4 -•I . 11: 3; 11 --25 4 3 28 27 84 9 -153 -33 1 28 11 - 23 -11 1 2 3 19 2 6 7 91 231 145 3 75 24 40 712 962 2 5 -16 -29 -3 62 81 -605 15 -32 -• 313 19 -- 122 119 1,693 586 361 432 -42 181 49 -51 59 88 -154 16 27 11 2 12 10,670 554 1,103 115 814 3,547 1,430 1,426 1,663 -• 365 19 30 2 30 69 37 70 135 7 9 -35 68 15 -43 986 427 173 96 32 35 20 48 30 14 -- 7 78 35 61 1 326 15 16 678 831 211 16,607 15,981 6,893 862 19,260 2,729 1,368 93,734 128,594 8 .... SANTA 1 CRUZ YAVAPAI .1 -10 62 78 433 11 -5 10 6 21 246 190 544 73 91 ,099 2,029 4,104 462 264 PINAL 45 21 5 14 76 6, 217 35 6 70 1,562 251 118 1,062 313 447 8,337 1,015 76 33 625 95 23 3 688 12,019 1,748 100 179 827 3,939 4.798 24,036 837 144 34,860 S 19 1 PIMA -5,469 169 TLMA S 2 7 8 6 53 177 268 169 387 649 1,387 60 132 8 18 ,081 . 5 -1 -2 --- -. 291 31 86 3 16 128 24 -52 2 344 81 161 21 89 304 73 -65 -2 --- 26 46 7 14 8 12 1 3 74 11 671 24 10 114 54 1,712 158 64 11 30 13 -4 6 , -23 5 1,430 --1 129 46 36 63 606 126 727 362 4,285 498 -456 5,761 924 81 545 587 209 4,062 2 58 6 -293 106 875 4,767 1,270 1,277 -374 70 100 11 163 50 1,966 259 -425 4,907 2,516 34,929 4,509 6,006 3,204 46,948 6,257 1,020 31 132 21 25 -149 70 291 39 27 -153 630 1,031 510 29 1,587 147 357 6,035 8,290 SOS 258 526 12 1,275 5 349 4,095 5,176 ADULT ARRESTS BY COUNTY 3.< APACHE COCHISE COCONINO OFFENSE CLASSIFICATION PART I 3 7 -Murder/Nonneg. Manslaughter 1 3 8 Forcible Rape 18 4 3 Robbery 55 210 43 Aggravated Assault 71 125 13 Burglary 958 371 26 Larceny-Theft -48 18 Motor Vehicle Theft 14 --Arson 87 554 1,358 PART I SUBTOTAL PART II ---Manslaughter by Negligence 12 134 450 Other Assaults - Simple 1 4 29 Forgery and Counterfeiting 56 46 1 Fraud -1 -Embezzlement 32 11 1 Stolen Property 69 219 6 Vandalism 43 1 23 Weapons - Carrying, Possessing ---Prostitution and Comm. Vice 84 4 21 Sex Offenses DRUGS, SALE OR MFG. 7 30 4 Opium, Cocaine, Derivatives 12 5 54 Marijuana 9 2 -Synthetic Narcotics 2 2 -Other Dangerous Nonnarcotics DRUGS, POSSESSION 13 24 1 Opium, Cocaine, Derivatives 163 31 193 Marijuana 12 7 2 Synthetic Narcotics 12 2 8 Other Dangerous Nonnarcotics ---All Gambling 126 34 223 Offenses Against Family/Children 1,147 68 539 Driving Under the Influence 118 495 30 Liquor Laws 49 307 1,321 Disorderly Conduct 146 5 2 Vagrancy 1,368 54 790 All Other, Except Traffic ---Curfew/Loitering (juveniles) ---Runaways (juveniles) 2,651 5,701 313 PART Il SUBTOTAL 400 3,205 7,059 TOTAL GREENLEE LA PAZ MARICOPA MOHAVE 2 -2 23 11 50 5 93 95 153 674 3,445 2,942 16,975 412 51 24,747 10 6 11 217 84 341 34 2 705 --- -31 -2 -6 9 9 -4 7 9,540 509 1,043 99 627 2,546 1,254 1,407 1,490 --- -3 --- -4 7 9 -16 --- 5 15 1 3 -7 76 19 53 -288 --548 641 GILA GRAHAM -1 52 23 96 11 -3 5 21 9 102 4 1 1 -- -- 185 145 13 -66 5 2 -2 12 4 2 13 -19 4 7 --5 -2 ------ 1 -- -6 4 9 2 -- -- 3 54 1 1 ---11 1 1 -- 1 1 -- --27 384 154 187 -224 --1,155 1,340 4 --86 142 115 2 43 --452 597 --2 5 -13 -26 --51 64 NAVAJO PIMA PINAL 4 4 3 63 56 298 13 442 35 73 183 1,344 566 5,617 384 37 8,239 21 13 24 215 125 613 36 5 1,052 -319 18 27 2 18 43 30 -61 -109 7 9 -25 44 12 -32 -4,708 147 295 109 97 1,158 498 357 351 -496 13 19 -28 102 40 -36 933 373 160 90 27 22 17 47 2 13 14 -- 51 76 -140 15 20 11 1 1,935 3,610 419 219 3 211 16,394 12,877 6,283 832 17,569 --80,430 105,177 71 79 28 18 -129 713 657 479 -1,090 --3,895 4,600 11 41 3 3 -63 358 272 186 57 792 --2,053 2,495 616 1,390 9 1,211 6 46 4,218 4,957 3,562 285 4,245 --28,532 36,771 - 1 22 109 13 1 -36 594 253 450 6' 1,043 --3,308 4,360 SANTA CRUZ YAVAPAI YUMA 5 5 6 146 62 348 22 2 596 45 224 233 955 . 98 3 1,568 -2 --- -228 22 85 3 6 72 18 -41 2 272 73 154 18 65 185 53 -52 -2 --- 25 38 6 14 7 8 1 3 4 51 ---1 123 -74 -100 --386 801 28 107 18 22 -149 581 133 455 9 1,105 --3,165 3,761 66 234 36 19 -153 613 749 449 29 1,231 --4,472 6,040 1 -5 52 54 296 7 -415 -28 ---1 2 8 co JUVENILE ARRESTS BY COUNTY OFFENSE CLASSIFICATION PANT I Murder/Nonneg. Manslaughter forcible Rape Robbery Aggravated Assault Burglary Larceny-Theft Motor Vehicle Theft Arson PART I SUSTOTAL PAR/ 11 Manslaughter by Negligence Other Assaults - Simple Forgery and Counterfeiting Fraud Embezzlement Stolen Property Vandalism Views - Carrying, Possessing Prostitution and Comm. Vice Sex Offenses DRUGS, SALE OR MFG. Opium, Cocaine, Derivatives Marijuana Synthetic Narcotics Other Dangerous horinarcotics DRUGS. POSSESSION Opium, Cocaine, Derivatives Marijuana Synthetic Narcotics Other Dangerous Nonnercotics All Gambling Offenses Against Family/Children Driving Under the Influence Liquor Laws Disorderly Conduct Vagrancy All Other, Except Traffic Curfew/Loitering (juveniles) IlUne neen PART II SUBTOTAL TOTAL S) APACHE -13 13 38 1 -. 12 .. -• 1 33 2 1 COCNISE COCONINO 2 24 158 489 56 13 1 1 4 21 85 474 20 1$ -71 2 -• .. 26 106 13 . .. 100 11 9 8 8 -92 16 ._ ----5 1 ] -- , --- , 6 57 21 , -48 i 15 i 21 223 268 8 2 2 62 2 123 65 -311 184 211 1,197 1,90 1 3 25 8 5 --27 364 126 -492 16 198 1,503 2,124 NONAVE NAVAJO GILA GUINAN GUM f LA PAZ MARICOPA --1 4 28 119 9 2 .. 18 1 -.. 1 13 --• 2 2 2 -- 3 15 ----4 178 17 -33 3 49 342 503 --6 35 61 2 -- 2 10 -• S 16 34 5 26 153 494 1,856 7,061 425 93 -- --• -- 3 1 3 .. -. .. .. -- .. 5 89 30 1 32 24 40 260 365 2 4 3 3 11 23 2 16 8 1 38 15 16 130 190 -1 11 36 las 402 40 18 S 10 24 117 4 -- -31 107 301 38 6 8 44 154 432 34 IS .. .. 4 -.. .. -72 6 ---- .. 63 9 1 -10 56 6 -. 11 3 24 119 20 -13 --- 1 8 1 4 1 -- ,. -• 3 25 3 3 4 57 3 8 .. 9 26 ---10 24 3 -11 53 54 13 6 5 13 3 1 .. 17 --- 8 12 -14 94 494 43 45 3 35 2 5 -13 1 2 55 . 322 2 49 6 13 219 5 -- -213 3,104 610 30 1,691 2,729 1,306 13,304 23,417 -14 267 108 2 187 100 163 1,012 1,406 --4 67 12 184 804 245 500 95 23 8 -1 83 502 227 11 374 70 50 1,966 259 463 6,397 1,201 709 10,177 1,897 -3 -7 ., r --3 ... 10 3 34 218 496 2,720 241 58 .. 761 22 15 13 22 535 88 4 81 5 1,130 45 60 16 187 1,001 176 19 173 2 2 3 7 62 149 20 2 COU2 YAVAPAI 1111.41111111:21Mil 1111=1 .. 9 .. -... -18 .. .. -10 29 106 203 39 7 1 PIMA PINAL 4b 1 3 .. 12 26 7 -- 109 2 --14 79 9 -15 1 7 / •- 6 --39 219 7 ... -. --7 17 125 282 71 61 3 -170 356 147 5 349 357 930 1,563 1,415 2,250 POLICE DISPOSITION OF JUVENILES COUNTY TOTAL Handled within Department and Released APACHE 288 35 250 -- 3 -- COCHISE 1,956 104 1,833 7 7 5 COCONINO 2,123 26 2,097 -- -- -- GILA 505 27 475 -- -- 3 GRAHAM 364 10 349 -- 2 3 23 2 21 __ -- -- 194 16 171 1 1 5 MARICOPA 23,582 2,489 19,338 8 240 1,507 MOHAVE 1,409 254 1,145 -- 9 1 NAVAJO 710 26 682 -- 2 -- GREENLEE LA PAZ Referred to Juvenile Court or Prob. Dept. Referred to Welfare Agency Referred to Other Police Agency Referred to Criminal or Adult Court PIMA 10,184 1,280 8,898 -- -- 6 PINAL 1,948 411 1,520 5 5 7 219 7 211 -• 1 __ YAVAPAI 1,468 147 1,306 3 10 2 YUMA 3,257 332 2,235 121 566 3 STATE TOTAL 48,230 5,166 40,531 145 846 1,542 SANTA CRUZ 59 + IIMMOMILIMM OBOOMMOOMMOMOOMME MOMOMMOOR .... MOMMOMMOMOMM MMMMM MIMIOMMEMMOU MMMMMMMMMMM omoommmommoommommoomm000mmommoommmoima 111I II111 IF 1 1 1 moo m m MOO MN * MO II 1 I I 11 ASSAULTS ON LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICERS 1 I • ....... I 1 • IF • o moor oomoomoommommoonor semoomomoomoroomo msommassmommern. IIIIIIr is. t.1 MINIUMMOMMEMIIMMAMM OMMINIMMUIIIMMEMMEM MOM! 4 I •••••1111•••••••••••••••••••••••• •••• I 7111-1- 1Thirl-111111-TririTilllifil ; ••••• ••••••••••••••••■••••••• • • MMINOMMOM MOMM ■ Itt ic 1910111"1m Dio 101 • """1"11 ........ allimlii uill POLICE OFFICER ASSAULTS DEFINITION All assaults on sworn officers resulting in serious injury or in which a weapon was used that could have caused serious injury or death. Also included are assaults not causing injury which involved more than mere verbal abuse or minor resistance to arrest. SUMMARY • There were a total of 2.187 police officers assaulted statewide in 1988. ▪ Personal weapons, such as hands, fists, and feet. were used in 1,828 assaults, or 83.6 percent. • The time period of 10:01 PM to 12:00 AM recorded the highest incidence of assaults with 419, or 19.2 percent_ ▪ The highest number of assaults, 731, or 33.4 percent. occurred when officers were responding to disturbance calls. . Personal injuries were sustained in 415 assaults, or 19.0 percent. CLEARANCES . There were a total of 2.115 clearances for assaults on police officers. This represents a clearance rate of 96.7 percent. INJURY VS. NONINJURY INJURY 415 (19.0%) NONINJURY 1,772 (81.0%) 62 WEAPONS USED FIREARMS 93 (4.3%) PERSONAL WEAPONS 1,828 (83.6%) KNIFE/CUTTING INSTRUMENT 77 (3.5%) THER DANGEROUS WEAPONS 189 (8.6%) TIME OF DAY 450 400 A S S A U L T S 350 300 250 200 150 100 so 0 2201-Mid night_ 1801-2000 1401-1600 1001-Noon 0601-0800 0201-0400 0001-0200 2001-2200 1601-1800 1201-1400 0801-1000 0401-0600 TIME 63 OFFICERS ASSAULTED FREQUENCY DISTRIBUTION TYPE Of ACTIVITY TOTAL ASSAULTS SY WEAPON mum 731 42 ...-Responding to odisturbanceo cells TYPE Of WEAPON WIFE OR OTHER OTNER CUTTING DANCER!NSW OUS MENT WEAPON 36 42 TYPE Of ASSIGNMENT DETECTIVE OR r SPECIAL ASSIGN. ONE-MAN VEHICLE NMS D FISTS, TWO MAN FEET, ETC. VESICLE 277 611 DINER ASSISTED POLICE ASSAULTS CLEARED ALONE ASSISTED um ASSISTED ALONE 206 230 3 4 4 7 T03 1 ... -. 19 _ _. Surglaries in progress or pursuing burglary suspects 19 -- -- 7 12 11 4 3 Robberies in progress or pursuing robbery suspects 9 2 -- 2 5 1 2 5 -- 9 1 _--_ -Attempting other arrests 466 5 6 41 1e4 414 145 105 1 8 '1 12 453 _.... Civil disorder (Riot, mess disobedience 27 -- 1 26 15 2 10 -- -- -- -- 27 'fondling or transporting of prisoners 255 1 5 16 Z33 42 99 52 4 2 '9 37 248 Investigating suspicious persons or circumstances 257 14 9 19 215 92 102 49 3 4 3 4 253 5 1 -- 2 2 1 4 ... .. .. .. 55 11 14 3 27 18 17 18 -- -- 1 47 Traffic pursuits and stops 232 7 3 34 188 79 82 63 1 1 3 229 All Other 131 10 4 22 95 44 34 36 3 6 1 123 2,187 93 77 189 1,828 764 697 571 15 26 65 2,115 415 9 15 51 340 1,772 84 62 138 1,488 Ambush - No warning Mentally deranged TOTAL Number with personal injury Number without personal injury 4 OFFICERS ASSAULTED DISTRIBUTION BY COUNTY COUNTY NUMBER OF ASSAULTS WITH INJURY WITHOUT INJURY PERCENT DISTRIBUTION CLEARANCE __, APACHE 1 COCHISE 18 COCONINO GILA 1 0.1% 1 6 12 0.8% 18 23 5 18 1.1% 23 18 7 11 0.8% 18 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 5 2 3 0.2% 3 1,395 290 1,105 63.8% 1,375 MOHAVE 24 7 17 1.1% 24 NAVAJO 12 5 7 0.5% 12 PIMA 437 51 386 20.0% 418 PINAL 52 11 41 2.4% 48 7 6 1 0.3% 7 25 6 19 1.1% 20 170 19 151 7.8% 148 2,187 415 1,772 100.0% 2,115 GRAHAM GREENLEE LA PAZ MARICOPA SANTA CRUZ YAVAPAI YUMA TOTAL 65 .IF. . .... . . .......... 11 111 1 11 1 1 11 111111 1 1 1 1 1 1111 1 1 1 1 1 ,1 1 1 : FILL-TIME LAW ENFORCEMENT EMPLOYEES 11111111111111E bPs■ 111111111111111111111111111 16 111101111111111011111111111111111116. 1 1 11111 III I "-1 I tT He I 1 II illiiihrini 1 Ii i in ot l ibilltil 11„. di IF IE. ORB 1 HJIIM li li I I I I 1 III Min ••11• 1•1 11••Lf• :Us 1 FULL-TIME LAW ENFORCEMENT EMPLOYEES DEFINITION The following chart reflects 011-time law enforcement personnel employed as of October 31, 1988. These figures include kill-time sworn personnel with full arrest powers, however they do not include persons performing guard or protection duties, such as school crossing guards. nor reserve officers. Civilian employees include clerks, dispatchers, secretaries, etc. who are employed full-time and are paid from law enforcement funds or budget. DISTRIBUTION OF EMPLOYEES SWORN MALE 6,621 (55.8%) SWORN FEMALE 494 (4.2%) CIVIUAN MALE 2,095 (17.6%) CIVILIAN FEMALE 2,666 (22.4%) 68 NUMBER OF EMPLOYEES BY AGENCY SWORN DEPARTMENT MALE APACHE COUNTY APACHE JUNCTION AVONDALE SO 17 PD PD CIVILIAN FEMALE MALE FEMALE TOTAL POPULATION 1 5 8 31 53,600 30 1 2 14 47 15,950 20 0 2 5 27 13,270 3,975 BENSON PD 8 1 2 4 15 BISBEE PD 13 9 2 2 5 22 8,065 1 1 5 16 4,350 47 3 13 68 21,590 BUCKEYE PD BULLHEAD CITY CAMP VERDE CASA GRANDE CHANDLER CHINO PD MO PD PD VALLEY CLARKDALE PD PD CLIFTON PD COCHISE COUNTY SO COCONINO COUNTY COOLIDGE PD COTTONWOOD DOUGLAS EAGAR EL PD PD FLORENCE 59 17,600 91 9 4 16 35 146 86,195 0 0 4,565 5 0 6 2,035 6 1 0 4 0 13 0 1 7 4,215 56 2 40 34 132 33,945 71 14 4 21 0 1 5 110 24 41,250 18 1 1 1 13 5,575 33 1 3 7 44 14,105 7 0 0 2 9 4,600 1 16 4,925 7,720 PD 10 1 16 1 3 2 22 7,345 PD 64 2 3 24 93 42,580 11 1 1 45 0 0 0 17 18 4 6,890 3 5 1 24 86 22,690 33 1 1 13 48 21,905 52 256 142,260 6,435 PD FREDONIA MO COUNTY So GILA GILBERT 6,125 0 6 20 15 0 4 PD FLAGSTAFF 0 39 10 PD MIRAGE ELOY SO 8 5 1 PD 1,355 164 16 24 PD 13 2 0 5 20 GOODYEAR 11 1 1 4 17 5,685 11,625 GLENDALE GLOBE PD PD COUNTY GRAHAM GUADALUPE HAYDEN PD PD HUACHUCA CITY JEROME KEARNY PAGE 8 1 9 4,665 4 0 0 1,085 1 20 6,045 3 0 0 1 1 5 5 14 4 8 2,160 0 3 2 9 500 2,805 17 7 47 11,560 41 11,655 3 0 9 50 20,050 1 5 2,010 2 12 2,330 540 1655 224,525 133 546 270,155 0 1 11 2,545 27 3 0 PD 28 SO CITY PD PD COUNTY COUNTY COUNTY So SO 4 0 PD 394 17 332 25 56 10 0 36 2 3 16 3 17 57 63 28,200 11 19,595 6,370 VALLEY PD 48,300 30 1 3 6 40 22 2 1 6 31 3 1 7 23 7,190 6 4 36 12,390 12 PD 0 5 0 704 32 SO PD VALLEY PARADISE 38 1 0 10 PD NOGALES ORO 5,285 0 PD PD NAVAJO 21 0 0 0 PD MOHAVE 22 1 0 MAR ICOPA MIAMI 6 8 2 MAMMOTH MESA 3 1 2 HAVASU MARANA 1 11 4 COUNTY PAZ PD 12 PD KINGMAN LAKE SO PD HOLBROOK LA SO COUNTY GREENLEE 25 1 69 NUMBER OF EMPLOYEES BY AGENCY (CONTINUED) SWORN MALE FEMALE DEPARTMENT PARKER Po PAYSON PO PEORIA PO PmolmIx PD PIMA COUNTY so PIMA PD FINAL COUNTY SO PINETOP/LAKESIDE PD PRESCOTT PD PRESCOTT VALLEY PO SAFFORD PD ST, JONNS PD SAN LUIS PD SANTA CRUZ COUNTY SO SCOTTSDALE PD SNOW LOW PD SIERRA VISTA PD SNOWFLAKE/TAYLOR PO SOMERTON PO SOUTM TUCSON PO SPRINGERVILLE PD SUPERIOR PD SURPRISE PD TENPE PD TNATCNER PO TOLLESON PO TOMBSTONE NO TUCSON PD WICXENSURG PD WILLCOX PD WILLIAMS NO WINSLOW PD YAVAPAI COUNTY SO YOUNGTOWm PD YuNA PD Alencias with no 11 15 45 1656 310 2 109 13 46 11 13 6 0 S 145 34 0 10 3 1 0 0 o 9 2 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 16 1 0 5 1 0 1 13 27 1 4 0 3 3 1 6 55 4 1 1 1 0 1 6 0 52 6 23 5 68 6 8 2 2 9 2 5 1 61 0 0 0 0 0 7 0 48 2 6 17 0 82 81 6 5 17 464 212 0 0 0 0 1 1 5 1 measurable 1 4 214 301 1 a a 0 1 19 159 13 31 10 23 6 9 IS 208 5 15 4 632 10 11 9 17 53 CIVILIAN FEMALE MALE 31 3 4 'TOTAL 18 21 71 2479 857 2 219 22 78 18 14 7 15 37 263 22 43 10 15 37 a 15 16 302 5 5 1 21 173 1 7 3 10 36 2 28 942 15 19 14 29 125 13 119 5 population _ Al DEPT PUBLIC SAFETY Al STATE UNIV OPS AZ WESTERN COLLEGE PO CENTRAL AZ COLLEGE PO NORTNERN AZ UNIV PO PIMA COMM COLLEGE PD UNIV OF AZ PO rAVAPAI COLLEGE PO 70 977 39 10 6 20 19 32 3 33 6 1 362 12 289 15 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 12 2 2 19 0 5 5 11 0 0 1663 72 11 6 37 25 64 5 POPULATION 2,645 7,745 36,500 951,755 263,945 1,935 45,120 2,800 22,920 7,100 7,755 4,070 2,955 10,605 125,530 5,600 34,290 5,900 4,680 6,770 2,130 4,860 7,715 145,690 3,485 4,970 1,815 405,885 4,620 4,045 2,425 8,955 49,180 2,295 50,005 I GLOSSARY ADULT For UCR, a person aged 18 or over. AMERICAN INDIAN A person having origins in any of the original peoples of North America, and who maintains cultural or ALASKAN NATIVE identification through tribal affiliation or community recognition. ASIAN or PACIFIC ISLANDER A person having origins in any of the original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, the Indian subcontinent, or the Pacific Islands. This area includes for example; China, India, Japan, Korea, the Philippine Islands, and Samoa. BLACK A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa, characterized by dark skin pigmentation. CLEARED BY ARREST An offense that is cleared (solved) when at least one person is arrested, charged with the commission of the offense, and turned over to the court for prosecution. CRIMES AGAINST PERSONS Includes the following Index offenses: Murder, rape, and aggravated assault. CRIMES AGAINST PROPERTY Includes the following Index offenses: Robbery, burglary, larceny-theft, motor vehicle theft, and arson. CRIME INDEX Total of eight offenses used to measure the extent, fluctuation, and distribution of crime in a given geographical area. The Crime Index includes: Murder, rape, robbery, aggravated assault, burglary, larceny-theft, motor vehicle theft, and arson. EXCEPTIONAL CLEARANCE An offense that is cleared when an offender has been identified, located, and there is sufficient information to charge but there is some reason beyond law enforcement control which prohibits bringing the offender to court. HIERARCHY RULE A UCR scoring practice used in multiple offense situations where only the most serious offense (as determined by the established crime index order) is counted. HISPANIC A person of Mexican, Cuban, Central or South American, or other Spanish culture or origin, regardless of race. JUVENILE For UCR, any person under the age of 18. JUVENILE CLEARANCE Offenses involving only persons under the age of 18 that are cleared by arrest or exceptional means. NONVIOLENT CRIME Any of the following Index offenses: Burglary, larceny-theft, motor vehicle theft, and arson. VIOLENT CRIME Any of the following Index offenses: Murder, rape, robbery, and aggravated assault. WHITE A person having origins in any of the original peoples of Europe, North Africa, or the Middle East. 71