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Graph and download economic data for Combined Violent and Property Crime Offenses Known to Law Enforcement in Orange County, NC (DISCONTINUED) (FBITC037135) from 2004 to 2021 about Orange County, NC; Durham; crime; violent crime; property crime; NC; and USA.
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Recognizing that violence can be an intractable problem in many communities and that there are numerous approaches to both an immediate violence problem and the range of root causes behind violence, the National Institute of Justice funded an investigation into what factors underlie violence and efforts being implemented to address those factors and potentially reduce violence at the community level. In this mixed methods study, the RAND Corporation drew on data from key informant interviews, community surveys, administrative data, and geographic data to examine specific factors that contribute to violence, as well as a range of anti-violence efforts that have been used to address violence levels in two U.S. communities: the Bullseye area of Durham, North Carolina, and the Northside (North Minneapolis) neighborhood of Minneapolis, Minnesota. Specifically, the research project aimed to answer the following questions: What are community level factors that can contribute to persistent violence? What are the key factors in both cities that distinguish high violent crime areas compared to low violent crime areas? This collection contains final analytic datasets for Durham (DS1) and Minneapolis (DS2), violent crime rate data (DS3), community survey data for Durham (DS4) and Minneapolis (DS5), and multiple datasets containing community-level contextual factors from the American Community Survey (ACS) and geographical data from the U.S. Census Bureau (2009-2018) that were used to build the final analytic datasets (DS6-DS11). Qualitative data from key informant interviews and GIS data are not available for download at this time. Access to Durham and Minneapolis community survey data is restricted.
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Graph and download economic data for Combined Violent and Property Crime Offenses Known to Law Enforcement in Person County, NC (DISCONTINUED) (FBITC037145) from 2004 to 2021 about Person County, NC; Durham; crime; violent crime; property crime; NC; and USA.
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Combined Violent and Property Crime Offenses Known to Law Enforcement in Durham County, NC was 629.00000 Known Incidents in January of 2021, according to the United States Federal Reserve. Historically, Combined Violent and Property Crime Offenses Known to Law Enforcement in Durham County, NC reached a record high of 1144.00000 in January of 2007 and a record low of 629.00000 in January of 2021. Trading Economics provides the current actual value, an historical data chart and related indicators for Combined Violent and Property Crime Offenses Known to Law Enforcement in Durham County, NC - last updated from the United States Federal Reserve on June of 2025.
Durham Crime Data
This data represents incident reports written to capture incidents of crime that are reported to law enforcement, based on the FBI’s UCR Program Data Collections for the Summary Reporting System (SRS). Historical data is available from 4/1/2006 to 9/30/2018, when the agency transitioned to the National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS). While the data collected is similar, it is not comparable across reporting systems. Available fields include:Case Number – Unique numerical identifier of the incident, which can be joined to the calls for service and arrests datasets.Report Date – The date when the crime was reported to police, which may or may not be when the crime occurred.Report Time – The time when the crime was reported to police, which may or may not be when the crime occurred.Status – The status of the case as of 9/30/2018.Sequence – This will always be ‘1’ as the SRS hierarchical method only reports the most serious offense.ATT/COM – Designation of whether the crime was attempted or committed.UCR Code – The FBI’s numerical identifier for the type of crime being reported.Address – The block number and street or intersection of the incident.X – Mapping coordinate of the incident, projected as NC State Plane (feet).Y – Mapping coordinate of the incident, projected as NC State Plane (feet).District – The patrol district where the incident occurred.Beat – The patrol beat where the incident occurred, which is a sub-division of the district.Premise – The type of location where the incident took place.Weapon – The primary weapon used in violent crimes, or tool used in property crimes.
Durham Crime Data
This data represents incident reports written to capture incidents of crime that are reported to law enforcement, based on the FBI’s UCR Program Data Collections for the National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS). It is similar to the DPD Incidents (UCR NIBRS Reporting) dataset found on this site, except it is limited to only shooting events where a firearm was criminally discharged (not accidental or self-inflicted). In addition, only the first [hierarchical] offense is listed, which may not have been the offense linked to the shooting activity in some instances. Historical data is available back to 10/1/2018. Available fields include:Case Number – Unique numerical identifier of the incident, which can be joined to the calls for service and arrests datasets.Report Date – The date when the crime occurred, or when it was reported to police, if the date of occurrence is not known.Report Time – The time when the crime occurred, or when it was reported to police, if the time of occurrence is not known.Status – The status of the case at the time the dataset was last updated.Sequence – This will always be ‘1’ as the SRS hierarchical method is being used for this dataset.ATT/COM – Designation of whether the crime was attempted or committed.UCR Code – The FBI’s alphanumeric identifier for the type of crime being reported.Address – The block number and street or intersection of the incident.X – Mapping coordinate of the incident, projected as NC State Plane (feet).Y – Mapping coordinate of the incident, projected as NC State Plane (feet).District – The patrol district where the incident occurred.Beat – The patrol beat where the incident occurred, which is a sub-division of the district.Tract – The census tract where the incident occurred, based on 2010 census data.Premise – The type of location where the incident took place.Weapon – The primary weapon used in violent crimes.This dataset is updated annually. However, other resources for incident data are available and updated nightly, including the DPD Crime dataset on the City and County of Durham Open Data Portal and Community Crime Map web site by LexisNexis. Tools for interacting with census data can be found on TIGERweb.
This data represents arrests of adults made by law enforcement, based on the FBI’s UCR Program Data Collections for the Summary Reporting System (SRS). Historical data is available from 4/1/2006 to 9/30/2018, when the agency transitioned to the National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS). While the data collected is similar, it is not comparable across reporting systems. Note: the age of adult criminal responsibility was 16 years old during this timeframe. Available fields include:Arrest Number – Unique identifier of the arrest.Case Number – Unique numerical identifier of the case, which can be joined to the calls for service and incident datasets.Name ID – Unique numerical identifier of the person arrested.Race – The race of the person arrested.Ethnicity – The ethnicity of the person arrested.Sex – The gender of the person arrested.Age – The age of the person arrested.Arrest Date – The date of the arrest.Arrest Time – The time of the arrest.Arrest Type – The type of arrest. Criminal summons and citations are non-custodial.Sequence – This is the sequence by order of severity based on the FBI’s UCR hierarchy, not North Carolina General Statutes.UCR Code – The FBI’s numerical identifier for the type of crime committed.Statute – The codified charge, usually by either the North Carolina General Statute or City Ordinance.Description – The description of the codified charge in the statute.F/M – Designation of whether the crime was a felony or misdemeanor.Counts – A multiplier of the number of counts for the same crime charged.Location of Arrest – The block number and street or intersection of the arrest.X – Mapping coordinate of the arrest, projected as NC State Plane (feet).Y – Mapping coordinate of the arrest, projected as NC State Plane (feet).District – The patrol district where the arrest occurred.Beat – The patrol beat where the arrest occurred, which is a sub-division of the district.
In anticipation of the FBI transitioning to NIBRS by January 2021, the Raleigh Police Department was one of the first agencies in North Carolina to convert from the Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) program Summary Reporting System (SRS) to the UCR - National Incident Based Reporting System (NIBRS) in June 2014.NIBRS now collects each offense, victim, offender, property, and arrestee information on 52 unique offenses and up to 10 offenses per incident. These new categories can be more defined and increasingly vary at the local level. As a result, these differences can make it difficult to compare statistics.For more information about NIBRS, go to FBI website: https://ucr.fbi.gov/nibrs-overviewUpdate Frequency: DailyTime Period: Previous Day
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https://fred.stlouisfed.org/legal/#copyright-public-domainhttps://fred.stlouisfed.org/legal/#copyright-public-domain
Graph and download economic data for Combined Violent and Property Crime Offenses Known to Law Enforcement in Orange County, NC (DISCONTINUED) (FBITC037135) from 2004 to 2021 about Orange County, NC; Durham; crime; violent crime; property crime; NC; and USA.