Criminal records and statistics are also available through various sources. For example, aggregated crime data is available for analysis to develop a picture of potential criminal activity, risk, and security for a particular location. This type of crime data includes calls for service (CFS) consisting of every report of crime, suspected crime, and activity called into the police via the 911 emergency system and other channels. CFS includes incidents reported, along with the location, date, and time the event was reported.
The CFS data is generally quite useful, especially for security situations involving preventive measures against property crimes. The CFS data allows for temporal and spatial analyses of trends and patterns in crime activity, enabling countermeasures to be developed. CFS data can be used in conjunction with local law enforcement agency offense or incident reports, as well as the FBI's Uniform Crime Report (UCR) codification system.
CFS data and offense or incident reports can be mined in order to forecast criminal activity and for the clustering of unsolved crimes. This will be covered in depth in Chapter 12. Other aggregated crime data includes the FBI's National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS) which will expand the (UCR) data available on the following eight primary crimes:
Murder
Rape
Robbery
Aggravated assault
Burglary
Larceny theft
Motor vehicle theft
Arson
Another criminal data set is that of the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS), containing the characteristics of crime victims, including their age, sex, race, ethnicity, marital status, household income, years at their residence, and relationship to the offender. NCVS data is compiled via surveys of approximately 60,000 U.S. households. The NCVS, like the CFS, can be used for analysis of patterns and crime risk assessment, which, in this case, is crime against individuals rather than property. NIBRS is also being developed for collecting data on crimes focusing on 22 offense categories:
Arson
Assault offenses: (aggravated assault, simple assault, intimidation)
Bribery
Burglary/breaking and entering
Counterfeiting/forgery
Destruction/damage/vandalism of property
Drug/narcotic offenses: drug/narcotic violations, drug equipment violations
Embezzlement
Extortion/blackmail
Fraud offenses: false pretenses/swindle/confidence game, credit card/automatic teller machine fraud, impersonation, welfare fraud, wire fraud
Gambling offenses: betting/wagering, operating/promoting/assisting gambling, gambling equipment violations, sports tampering
Homicide offenses: murder and non-negligent manslaughter, negligent manslaughter, justifiable homicide
Kidnapping/abduction
Larceny/theft offenses: pocket-picking, purse-snatching, shoplifting, theft from building, theft from coin-operated machine or device, theft from motor vehicle, theft of motor vehicle parts or accessories, all other larceny
Motor vehicle theft
Pornography/obscene material
Prostitution offenses: prostitution, assisting or promoting prostitution
Robbery
Sex offenses, forcible: forcible rape, forcible sodomy, sexual assault with an object, forcible fondling
Sex offenses, non-forcible: incest, statutory rape
Stolen property offenses (receiving, etc.)
Weapon law violations
Aggregate crime statistics exist at the following levels: national, state, metropolitan statistical area (MSA) consisting of the core cities with over 50,000 people, city and county, beat, district or precinct, crime statistical reporting area, census tract, and individual property. There are also security reports (SR) maintained by private industry for all major buildings, which contain detailed information on crime for their premises with usually the following data:
Incident reported
Date of incident
Time of incident
Location of incident
Victim(s), if any
Witness(es), if any
Modus operandi (MO)
Follow-up investigation
Outcome
Some of these statistics are available from the Department of Justice site at
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/cmrc/weblinks/welcome.html
Other criminal databases and networks include the following:
National Law Enforcement Telecommunications Systems (NLETS): NLETS is a nationwide network that links all states and many federal agencies together for the exchange of a criminal justice information. In each state, an interface agency is responsible for maintaining an instate law enforcement telecommunication systems that delivers messages throughout the state. Through those connections, any criminal justice agency on a state law enforcement telecommunications systems in one state can communicate with any criminal justice agency on a law enforcement telecommunications system in any other state. This includes all major police agencies and most smaller ones. In addition, many prosecutors, probation departments, parole offices, and the like communicate with each other and with local, state, and federal law enforcement agencies through these systems.
Information Available from Other States Via NLETS
Vehicle registration information
Drivers license information
Criminal history records
Boat and snowmobile registration [1]
Parole and probation information [2]
Corrections information [3]
Sex offender registration information [4]
National Files Available to NLETS Users
ATF gun tracking data
FAA tracking information
FAA aircraft registration data
National impounded vehicle file
National drug pointer index
Hazardous material information
INS's law enforcement support center
Data Available From Canada Through NLETS
Wanted persons
Stolen and registered vehicles
Drivers license files
Stolen articles files
Stolen guns files
Stolen securities files
Stolen boats files
Criminal history records
National Crime Information Center (NCIC): Another source of criminal data for each state law enforcement telecommunications system is the FBI's Network. The system has been in operation since its inception in 1967. Its current, enhanced version, NCIC 2000, came online in July 1999. NCIC is a national index of theft reports, warrants, and other criminal justice information submitted by law enforcement agencies across the country. It provides real-time information regarding persons and property to police officers by the side of the road, case investigators, booking personnel, prosecutors, probation and parole officers, and others. Through NCIC, almost all police departments in the country share their theft reports, warrants, missing-person reports, and the like with each other in an online, real-time mode. At present, users generate more than 2,000,000 transactions per day.
Information Regarding Property Available from NCIC
Stolen vehicles
Vehicles used in felonies
Stolen license plates
Stolen boats
Stolen articles
Stolen securities
Stolen guns
Recovered guns
Information Regarding Persons Available from NCIC
Wanted person reports (warrants)
Foreign fugitive reports
Missing-person reports
Protective order data
Persons of possible danger to secret services protectees
Sex offenders registration data
Persons on supervised release
Violent gang and terrorist organization (and members) data
The NCIC Network also provides inquiry access to the FBI's Interstate Identification Index (III). The III index points to the criminal history record residing either in the FBI or the particular state's holding information. It utilizes the telecommunications systems of the FBI, the individual states, and NLETS to respond to requests for criminal history information. This decentralized system promotes the use of state records, which are more complete, and reduces the FBI workload in maintaining and disseminating the records.
The FBI's Criminal Justice Information Services Wide Area Network (CJIS WAN) connects the states to the FBI's Integrated Automated Fingerprint Identification Systems (IAFIS). This WAN has a connection in each state, which allows for the electronic submission of arrest fingerprints to the FBI from the state criminal history repository. That submission causes the creation of a criminal history record in III. The CJIS WAN also provides for the electronic submission of latent fingerprints for the investigation of crimes and for submission of the fingerprints of noncriminal justice applicants for national background searches.
With IAFIS, those states that have built, or are building, in-state AFIS systems capable of accepting electronic submission of fingerprints from local arresting agencies will be able to forward those electronic fingerprints to the FBI and receive a response as to that person's national identification and criminal history within two hours. Plans for the CJIS WAN call for expanding its use to include non-CJIS services. The first major addition is to use the WAN for the delivery of certain FBI laboratory services, such as the DNA information shared among the states and FBI. Long-terms plan call for the NCIC 2000 Network and the CJIS WAN to be consolidated into a single network.
Other systems and telecommunications networks providing criminal-related data include the following:
CODIS: the Combined DNA Index System, a national index of DNA profiles limited to convicted offenders and crime-scene evidence
NIBIN: the National Integrated Ballistics Information Network, an attempt to unify BATF and FBI firearms databases
NDPIX: the National Drug Pointer Index, a pointer system that allows state, local, and federal agencies to determine if a suspect is under investigation by any other participating agency
UCR/NIBRS: the National Uniform Crime Reporting System, a statistical system based on crime reporting by state and local police agencies not intended to include personally identifying information
NICS: the National Instant Criminal Background Check System for presale firearm background searches by licensed firearms dealers
LEO: the Law Enforcement On-Line, a public safety intranet for research and training
Other federal criminal data systems that support the justice activities of one or more agencies at the federal level only include the following:
TECS: the Treasury Enforcement Communications Systems
DRUGX: a common FBI/DEA drug intelligence database intended to allow coordination of investigative activities for both federal agencies
JABS: the Joint Automated Booking System, a federal booking capability that enables federal agencies to share arrest data and provides linkage between the booking systems of federal law enforcement agencies and the FBI's IAFIS
NIPC: the National Infrastructure Protection Center database
IDENT-INS: two print AFIS capability for searching aliens entering the country
FinCEN: the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network
There are also multistate networked databases containing additional criminal data, such as:
RISS: the Regional Information Sharing System
WIN: the Western Identification Network, an AFIS consortium of western states
SWBS ADIS: the Southwest Border States Anti-Drug Information System
GREAT: the Gang Reporting, Evaluation, and Tracking system, an investigative database of suspected gang members maintained by the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department, accessible to agencies nationwide
Aside from criminal statistics, there are of course individual criminal records, some of which are available on the Web, at such sites as criminalfiles.info, which provides instant searches from its databases of criminal records covering the most populous U.S. states and some U.S. counties. This site maintains databases containing felony, and misdemeanor dispositions and traffic violations. In general, search results from these databases show name, date of birth, race, sex, offense, disposition, date of disposition, county, and case number. The site charges a $10-per-search fee. Figure 2.1 provides a sample of a record extract.
Nevada criminal search 2 charges for Nevada criminal detail records found Name: DOE JAMES Birth MM/YYYY: 02/23/1963 Release Date: Sentence Date 11/8/1994 County Name: : Offense : SEXUAL ASSAULT Statute: 114 Sentence: Cause Number: 989561 Disp Date: Disposition: File Date: Fine Amount: Name: DOE JAMES Birth MM/YYYY: 02/23/1963 Release Date: Sentence Date 11/8/1994 County Name: N/a : Offense : SEXUAL ASSAULT Statute: 114 Sentence: N/A Cause Number: 976251 Disp Date: Disposition: N/A File Date: Fine Amount:
Alabama | Arkansas | Arizona |
Colorado | Connecticut | Florida |
Florida-Duval County | Florida-Pinellas County | Florida-Dade County |
Florida-Hillsborough County | Florida-Palm Beach County | Georgia |
Idaho | Illinois | Illinois-Cook County |
Indiana | Kentucky | Michigan |
Minnesota | Mississippi | Missouri |
New Jersey | New York State | New York City |
North Carolina | Nevada | Ohio |
Oklahoma | Oregon | South Carolina |
Tennessee | Tennessee-Shelby County | Texas |
Texas-Dallas County | Virginia | Washington State |
Appendix A contains additional websites with criminal data.
[1]Information not available from all states
[2]Information not available from all states
[3]Information not available from all states
[4]Information not available from all states