Between 2018 and 2023, the crime rate in the metropolitan city of Milan stabilized around 7,000 reported felonies per 100,000 inhabitants. The index had a marked decrease during the COVID-19 outbreak due to the restrictive measures enacted to limit the expansion of the disease. After the pandemic, the rate surged to pre-COVID-19 levels. This trend is consistent with the total number of crimes reported by the police forces in the municipality of Milan. In fact, recorded felonies had a significant drop in 2020, but after three years they increased up to the 2018 level. The metropolitan city of Milan was the Italian administrative unit with the highest criminal rate compared to other provinces, confirmed by the index being constantly above the national average, 3,969.2 felonies per 100,000 inhabitants in 2023.
In 2023, 144,864 crimes were reported by police forces to the judicial authorities in Milan, of which almost 60 percent constituted by thefts. Damages represented another twelve percent of the total reported crimes and the second most frequent felony, followed by swindles and cyber frauds, accounting for eight percent of the total.
In 2023, the metropolitan city of Milan ranked first in terms of crime rate, as it recorded 7,100 felonies per 100,000 inhabitants. Furthermore, the provinces of Rome and Florence followed with around 6,000 cases reported. In Milan, burglaries in shops and thefts were much more common than in any other Italian provinces. Frequent car thefts The Southern province of Barletta-Andria-Trani, in the region of Apulia, was the place in Italy with the highest rate of stolen cars. Roughly 697 cases per every 100,000 residents were registered in 2019. Catania had the second-largest rate with about 656 reports. Nationwide, the three most frequently stolen car models belonged to Fiat, the leading Italian vehicle manufacturer. Moreover, a Lancia car model ranked fourth. This company was also part of the Fiat Group, which, however, only sells vehicles in Italy. Mafia associations In the last years, the number of mafia associations in Italy experienced a decline. However, there are still dozens of mafia-type organizations in the country. The Southern region of Campania was the place faced with the largest amount of crime associations. In total, 67 of such crimes were reported in Campania in 2019.
Between 2018 and 2023, the number of crimes reported by police forces to the judicial authorities in the municipality of Milan floated around 144,000 felonies per year. However, in 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, only 95,000 offenses were recorded, with a sharp decline compared with the previous year due to legal restrictions to mobility and confinement rules enforced to reduce the spread of the virus. After the medical emergency, the number decisively rose to pre-pandemic levels.
The most recent report of the Italian Ministry of the Interior reveals that between January 2023 and July 2024, 499 homicides were committed in Italy. The number of homicides has recorded a decreasing trend since 2011. Overall, about 2.3 million criminal acts were reported in Italy in 2023. Femicide Femicide, a homicide in which a woman is killed for gender-based reasons, poses a serious problem around the world. In 2018, roughly one in six Italians believed that femicide was on the rise. Women, victims of homicide, are often related to the culprit; in 2022, 74 women in Italy were killed by their partner. Crime in Italy In 2023, the most common crime in Italy was theft. Law enforcement corps reported one million cases of this delinquency to the juridical authority, with the highest theft rate in the Metropolitan city of Milan.
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The dataset contains the list of real estate units confiscated from organized crime, transferred to the assets of the Municipality of Milan pursuant to art. 48 of Legislative Decree 159/2011 and intended for social and/or institutional purposes.
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In 2019, Rome was the Italian city with the largest number of minors reported to the judicial authority. That year, there were *** young Italians and *** young foreigners reported for crimes in the city of Rome. Overall, the Italian cities mostly hit by juvenile criminality in 2019 were Rome, Milan, Bologna, Naples, and Florence.
Florence was the first province for robbery rate in Italy in 2023. In Tuscany's largest city occurred more than *** robberies per 100,000 inhabitants. Milan ranked second, with *** cases. In Rome, only ** felonies were reported, significantly fewer than Florence and MIlan.
Between 2018 and 2023, the crime rate in the municipality of Venice stabilized around 7,000 reported felonies per 100,000 inhabitants. The index had a marked decrease during the COVID-19 outbreak due to the restrictive measures enacted to limit the expansion of the disease. After the pandemic, the rate surged to pre-COVID-19 levels. This trend is consistent with the total number of crimes reported by the police forces in the metropolitan city of Venice. In fact, recorded felonies had a significant drop in 2020, but after three years they increased up to the 2018 level. Among the biggest Italian municipalities, Venice ranks fourth in crime rate, ahead of Florence, Milan, and Turin.
In 2022, the northern Italian province of Imperia recorded the largest number of sexual violences compared to the population, with 23.55 cases per 100,000 inhabitants. Bologna followed with 21.65 violences per 100,000 residents, whereas Trieste, in the north-east, registered 18.85 cases every 100,000 inhabitants.
In 2023, Milan recorded the highest theft rate in Italy, with almost 4,000 felonies per 100,000 inhabitants. Rome and Rimini followed, with around 3,500 and 3,200 thefts per 100,000 residents, respectively.
Matteo Messina Denaro, a Mafia boss convicted of organizing a slew of reprehensible crimes, was arrested in January 2023 after spending almost 30 years on the lam and becoming one of the most wanted people in Europe. A chief of the Sicilian Cosa Nostra family, 60-year-old Messina Denaro was detained by police while receiving treatment in a private clinic in Palermo. The criminal was convicted in absentia of dozens of Mafia-related murders, including his involvement in the 1992 assassinations of anti-Mafia prosecutors Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino. The Mafia chief was awarded his most recent life sentence in 2020 for his role in deadly bombings that beset Milan, Florence, and Rome in 1993, as well as for the kidnapping, torture, and murder of the 12-year-old son of an enemy who testified against Cosa Nostra.Messina Denaro's arrest came almost 30 years to the day since police detained Cosa Nostra's "boss of bosses" Salvatore "Totò" Riina, who was nabbed in a Palermo apartment after spending 23 years on the run. Riina eventually died in prison in 2017, having never repented.The Cosa Nostra boss who set the record for the longest time on the run was Bernardo Provenzano, who spent 38 years as a fugitive before being caught in a farmhouse near Sicily's Corleone in 2006. Provenzano died in jail in 2016, and similarly to Riina, never chose to collaborate with investigators. The decline of Cosa Nostra and the rise of the Calabrian Mafia With the clampdown that began against Cosa Nostra in the 1990s, the Sicilian Mafia began to lose its dominance in Italy, amid the rise of other organized crime syndicates on the mainland. The 'Ndrangheta syndicate, based in the southern region of Calabria, has since then surpassed Cosa Nostra in both reach and influence. The 'Ndrangheta has supplanted Cosa Nostra in the drugs trade and has become one of the leading cocaine traffickers in the world. The Calabrian crime syndicate is estimated to rake in as much as 60 billion U.S. dollars per year – more than the GDP of countries such as Lebanon and Uruguay – and has a tight clan-like structure that is more difficult to penetrate than that of Cosa Nostra. Organized crime: controlling one-tenth of Italy's economy Organized crime has been reported to be the biggest business in Italy, controlling an estimated nine percent of the country's economy. The value of assets seized from mafia organizations in Italy between 2020 and 2021 amounted to almost two billion euros. In addition to the 'Ndrangheta and Cosa Nostra, the mafia groups of Camorra and Sacra Corona Unita – based in the southern regions of Campania and Puglia, respectively – complete the top four of Italy's main crime syndicates.
Livorno and Milan were the leading provinces for burglary rate in commercial establishments in Italy in 2020. According to data, the Central Italian city of Livorno ranked first for non-residential burglaries, with *** cases per 100,000 inhabitants.
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Between 2018 and 2023, the crime rate in the metropolitan city of Milan stabilized around 7,000 reported felonies per 100,000 inhabitants. The index had a marked decrease during the COVID-19 outbreak due to the restrictive measures enacted to limit the expansion of the disease. After the pandemic, the rate surged to pre-COVID-19 levels. This trend is consistent with the total number of crimes reported by the police forces in the municipality of Milan. In fact, recorded felonies had a significant drop in 2020, but after three years they increased up to the 2018 level. The metropolitan city of Milan was the Italian administrative unit with the highest criminal rate compared to other provinces, confirmed by the index being constantly above the national average, 3,969.2 felonies per 100,000 inhabitants in 2023.