The FBI released the below
information:
The Federal Bureau of
Investigation today released the 2016 edition of its Crime in the United States
(CIUS) report, a part of the FBI’s Uniform Crime Reports (UCR). The report,
which covers January-December 2016, reaffirms that the worrying violent crime increase
that began in 2015 after many years of decline was not an isolated incident.
The violent crime rate increased by 3.4 percent nationwide in 2016, the largest
single-year increase in 25 years. The nationwide homicide rate increased by 7.9
percent, for a total increase of more than 20 percent in the nationwide
homicide rate since 2014.
“For the sake of all
Americans, we must confront and turn back the rising tide of violent crime. And
we must do it together,” Attorney General Jeff Sessions said. “The Department
of Justice is committed to working with our state, local, and tribal partners
across the country to deter violent crime, dismantle criminal organizations and
gangs, stop the scourge of drug trafficking, and send a strong message to
criminals that we will not surrender our communities to lawlessness and
violence.”
The report released today
also adjusts and corrects numbers for 2015, showing that the violent crime rate
actually increased by 3.3 percent (as opposed to 3.1 percent, as previously
reported) in 2015. The violent crime rate increases in 2015 and 2016 each
represented the largest single-year increases in the violent crime rate since
1991. These increases were nationwide, with the average violent crime rate
increasing in cities over 250,000 in population, in cities under 10,000 in
population, in suburban areas, and in every size in-between. In addition to the
7.9 percent homicide rate increase in 2016, the corrected numbers show the
homicide rate increased by 11.4 percent in 2015, for a total increase of more
than 20 percent from 2014-2016. Rapes, robberies, and aggravated assaults also
each continued to increase nationwide in 2016.
You can read the full report
via the below report:
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