Crime & Safety

How Safe Are CA Neighborhoods? Here’s What New FBI Crime Data Shows

A pair of FBI crime reports show that violent crime is continuing to decrease nationwide while apparently spiking in California.

CALIFORNIA — As violent crime declines nationwide, California experienced a spike in violent crime in 2023, according to a pair of new FBI crime reports.

Nationwide, violent crime declined January-June 2024 continuing the 2023's trend in falling crime rates. State-by-state statistics for 2024 aren't yet available, but a separate FBI report released last month showed violent crimes rates falling nationwide in 2023 while spiking in California.

The preliminary report for January-June 2024 shows violent crime nationwide decreased by 10.3 percent compared with the same time period in 2022. Murders are down by 22.7 percent, rape by 17.7 percent, robbery by 13.6 percent, property crime by 13.1 percent and aggravated assault by 8.1 percent.

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The snapshot released Monday comes on the heels of the FBI report last month that showed violent crime rates continued to fall in 2023 after a coronavirus pandemic-era crime spike.

Violent crime was down 3 percent in 2023 from the year prior, and murders and negligent manslaughter dropped by nearly 12 percent. Even with the 2020 pandemic surge, violent crime is down dramatically from the 1990s, the agency said.

Find out what's happening in Across Californiafor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The most recent violent crime statistics in the Golden State are from 2023, and they are far more mixed, with murders declining significantly while robberies and assaults spiked.

FBI crime reports have an important limitation in that they rely on participation from police agencies. The 2023 year-end report shows that with 96.73 percent of agencies submitting data, violent crime in the Golden State was up 3.3 percent, compared with 2022. By category:

  • Murder: Decreased by 8.7 percent
  • Robbery: Increased by 12.4 percent
  • Aggravated assault: Increased by 3.4 percent
  • Property crime: Decreased by 3.7 percent

Monday’s preliminary report on violent crime trends in 2024 is based on reports from about 14,800 of just over 19,300 law enforcement agencies across the country. Among the data gaps are only partial figures from Chicago and no reporting for Los Angeles.

Also, police agencies have until the end of the year to correct any reporting errors or omissions before the FBI publishes its 2024 year-end report.

The report is almost certain to be viewed closely by both former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris as the 2024 presidential race enters the closing stretch. Crime has been a focal point of both, with Trump claiming violent crime has accelerated under Joe Biden’s administration, while Harris has highlighted her history as a prosecutor, including her work as California attorney general to bring down transnational criminal organizations.

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