Uniform Crime Reports and Index of Crime in Los Angel in the State of Californi enforced by Los Angeles from 1985 to 2005
Number of Violent Crimes Reported by Los Angeles by Year and Total
Year  Population Murder/ Man-
slaughter
Rape Robbery Aggravated Assault Total Violent Crime
2005 3,871,077 489 1,105 13,797 16,376 31,767
2004 3,864,018 519 1,131 14,181 26,956 42,787
2003 3,838,838 517 1,226 16,577 30,506 48,826
2002 3,830,561 655 1,415 17,197 32,429 51,696
2001 3,763,486 588 1,409 17,166 33,080 52,243
2000 3,694,820 550 1,459 15,527 32,705 50,241
1995 3,466,211 852 1,590 29,134 38,945 70,521
1990 3,485,398 987 2,014 36,098 44,714 83,813
1985 3,186,459 778 2,318 27,938 21,799 52,833
1980 2,952,511 1,011 2,813 25,637 21,987 51,448
California Counties
In 1930, the FBI assumed responsibility for managing the Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) program, collecting data from 400 cities.  By 2006, over 15,000 law enforcement agencies submitted crime reports to the FBI, but since not all jurisdictions provide reports there is a possibility that you won't find complete data on some of our agency crime report pages.  In every case where the FBI has assigned a population to a jurisdiction, we are providing a page even though it may be blank. When a city located in a county starts submitting its own reports, the population assigned to the county is reduced to reflect that fact.  
Number of Property Crimes Reported by Los Angeles by Year and Total
UCR Crime Statistics prepared by the:
The Disaster Center
in association with the:
The Rothstein Catalog on Disaster Recovery
Index of the State of Californi Uniform Crime Reports 

Index of United State's Crime Reports
Year  Population Burglary Larceny
Theft
Vehicle Theft Total Property Crime
2005 3,871,077 22,592 65,972 28,721 117,285
2004 3,864,018 23,182 72,045 29,973 125,200
2003 3,838,838 25,115 77,111 33,555 135,781
2002 3,830,561 25,374 79,813 34,110 139,297
2001 3,763,486 25,695 79,521 31,819 137,035
2000 3,694,820 24,422 76,235 29,640 130,297
1995 3,466,211 41,325 108,149 46,212 195,686
1990 3,485,398 51,482 122,632 63,613 237,727
1985 3,186,459 63,963 125,968 51,641 241,572
1980 2,952,511 86,525 112,982 42,883 242,390
The UCR can be presented here because of the hard work of law enforcement statisticians who must classify and score each crime according to the strict criteria developed for the UCR.   Some agency's crime reports do not have a population associated with them, these may include: the highway patrol, state police, a drug enforcement agency, an environmental enforcement agency, a transportation utility, colleges, and others.  Areas may have many agencies performing the same or different law enforcement functions, and a population can only be assigned once, so it is not possible to formulate a crime rate for every agency.  
Violent Crime Index base upon 100,000 People
Year  Population Murder/ Man-
slaughter
Rape Robbery Aggravated Assault Total Violent Crime
2005 3,871,077 12.6 28.5 356.4 423.0 820.6
2004 3,864,018 13.4 29.3 367.0 697.6 1,107.3
2003 3,838,838 13.5 31.9 431.8 794.7 1,271.9
2002 3,830,561 17.1 36.9 448.9 846.6 1,349.6
2001 3,763,486 15.6 37.4 456.1 879.0 1,388.2
2000 3,694,820 14.9 39.5 420.2 885.2 1,359.8
1995 3,466,211 24.6 45.9 840.5 1,123.6 2,034.5
1990 3,485,398 28.3 57.8 1,035.7 1,282.9 2,404.7
1985 3,186,459 24.4 72.7 876.8 684.1 1,658.0
1980 2,952,511 34.2 95.3 868.3 744.7 1,742.5
Knowing the trend of the rate of crime can be an important measure of the social health of our communities.  An unusually high rate may be caused by an isolated tragic event, the location of the jurisdiction in an area with a large industrial zone or that serves as a tourist destination, and a low rate may be caused by the assignment of crimes to multiple agencies serving the same area, only one of which can be assigned the population, or an error in the number of crimes reported.
Property Crime Index per 100,000 People
Year  Population Burglary Larceny
Theft
Vehicle Theft Total Property Crime
2005 3,871,077 583.6 1,704.2 741.9 3,029.8
2004 3,864,018 599.9 1,864.5 775.7 3,240.2
2003 3,838,838 654.2 2,008.7 874.1 3,537.0
2002 3,830,561 662.4 2,083.6 890.5 3,636.5
2001 3,763,486 682.7 2,113.0 845.5 3,641.2
2000 3,694,820 661.0 2,063.3 802.2 3,526.5
1995 3,466,211 1,192.2 3,120.1 1,333.2 5,645.5
1990 3,485,398 1,477.1 3,518.5 1,825.1 6,820.7
1985 3,186,459 2,007.3 3,953.2 1,620.6 7,581.2
1980 2,952,511 2,930.6 3,826.6 1,452.4 8,209.6
The UCR does not include a record of every crime reported to law enforcement, and every agency does not submit data in the form that the FBI requests.  The most accurate number of crimes reported are those involving death.  The least accurate is the number of rapes that are reported. The the number of case of rape reported does not include attempted rapes.  Aggravated Assault does not include cases of simple assault, (which are the largest number of assaults reported to police) and so constitutes only a portion of the total number of reported assaults.  The number of Aggravated Assaults used here was arrived at by subtracting the number of Simple Assaults from the Total Assaults reported by each agency.  For a few agencies, this process resulted in the generation of a negative number (their UCR report wrongly indicates that there were more simple assaults than the total number of reported assaults).

The magnitude of a threat/risk is measured by its frequency and effect. By this definition crime may well constitute the single greatest risk/threat we face today.   If you have questions, comments, or suggestions, please see our FAQ page first at: http://www.disastercenter.com/UCR.html and feel free to post a message to host@disastercenter.com.  
 

National Criminal Victimization Survey, 1996 estimate that only  37% of rapes are reported to police

The Disaster Center provides online coverage of disasters in the United States, compiling and providing links to disaster related statistics and studies: US Crimes Data from 1960  Tornado, Nonfatal occupational Injuries and Illnesses, Fatal Occupational Injuries, Motor Vehicle Traffic Injury and Fatality Data,  Child Nursery Equipment and Toys: Accident Rates by Age, Sports & Recreational Equipment: Injuries by Age and Sex, Home, Heating, Plumbing, and Appliance: Injuries by Cause, Age, and Rate, Furniture, furnishings, household, and personal use items: Accident injury rates by AgeHome, Work Tools and Misc. Items: Accident Injury rates by Age. US Cause of Death Data US Anti--terrorism Threat/Risk Policy prior to September 11, 2001,  US Nuclear, Biological and Chemical Terrorism Policy prior to 9--11  Atlantic Hurricane pages and indexTotal student, Number of school--associated Violent Deaths and Number of Homicides and Suicides of Youth Ages 5–19, by Location: 1992–2002  Crimes and Indexes for USA Metropolitan Statistical Areas 


Index of the State of Californi Uniform Crime Reports ---- Index of United State's Crime Reports
The Disaster Center
CA01942