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In 2017, 6,998 law enforcement agencies, whose jurisdictions covered more than 105.6 million U.S. inhabitants, submitted NIBRS data to the UCR Program.
Victim types, collected for all reported NIBRS offenses, include individuals, businesses, institutions, or society as a whole. For 2017, the data regarding victims who were individuals revealed the following:
A little more than half (50.9 percent) were female, 48.3 percent were male, and the gender of 0.8 percent of victims was unknown.
In 2017, law enforcement identified and reported information on 5,266,175 known offenders, meaning some aspect of the suspect—such as age, gender, or race—was known.
By gender, most offenders (62.4 percent) were male, 25.5 percent were female, and gender for 12.1 percent was unknown.
Concerning the relationship of victims to known offenders, there were 1,448,833 victims of crimes against persons (e.g., murders, sex offenses, assault offenses) and robbery offenses from the crimes against property category.
Law enforcement agencies submitted data to the UCR Program through incident reports and arrest reports for 3,361,416 arrestees.
By gender, 71.6 percent were male, and 28.4 percent were female.
A brief look at data collected through NIBRS for 874,003 drug/narcotic offenses shows the more expansive data NIBRS offers, particularly offender data, and the types of connections available through NIBRS.
Of the 5,266,175 known offenders, 21.3 percent were connected to drug/narcotic offenses.
In addition to the annual NIBRS report, the FBI is making NIBRS data available through the UCR Program’s Crime Data Explorer (CDE), the FBI’s digital front door to crime data.
With the collection of the more detailed data of NIBRS set to become the national data standard by January 1, 2021, law enforcement agencies across the nation are making the transition from the traditional SRS to NIBRS.
The full NIBRS, 2017 report is available online.
Information about the NIBRS transition is available on the NIBRS web page at fbi.gov/nibrs.
Related story: 2017 NIBRS Crime Data Released