Team D: Alfreda Simmons, Kelly Ashbrook, Lucas Burrington, and Kiavonni Jones
CJA/204 Introduction to Criminal Justice
December 8, 2014
Mary Ellen De Frias
Measuring Crime
The Department of Justice uses two types of programs to measure crime in the United States. The two types of programs are the Uniform Crime Reporting Program (URC) and National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS). Which both have valuable details about the crime problems that are going on in the world.Since both programs are used to do different things and methods, both do focus on different crimes and there aspect. The data that they produce together is used for comprehensive crime problems that are going on in the world.
The UCR program is directed by the FBI and collects different data on crimes like, murders, no negligent manslaughter, forcible rape, robbery, aggravated assault, burglary, larceny theft motor vehicle theft, and arson. Which the law enforcers reports the crime and arrest data for other crimes categories. The data is updated on a monthly basis. The programs compare monthly reports and counts the crimes; it counts the world’s crimes as a whole. The National Crime Victimization Survey provides details and photos of the crimes and victims. It collects information on rapes, sexual assaults, person robberies, and simple assault home burglary, thefts and many other types of crimes. The NCVS collects information about the different crimes that have been cause in their own household even if the law enforcement do not report it or not. If a victim gives a report the survey data provides about your (sex, age, race, ethnicity, marital status, income educational, and criminal history. Basically it summarize why victims give there information.
There are a few major crime reporting programs, one of the most common and run by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) is the Uniform Crime Reporting Program (UCR). The FBI has made some major changes to the UCR and now
References: University of Phoenix. (2011). Chapter 1 - Myth v. Reality [Multimedia]. Retrieved from University of Phoenix, CJA/204 website. Criminal Justice Glossary. (2014). Retrieved from http://plsinfo.org/healthysmc/12/glossary.html