These States Have The Highest Rates Of Violent And Property Crimes – IOTW Report

These States Have The Highest Rates Of Violent And Property Crimes

Arizona, Colorado, and Washington states have much higher rates of violence when compared to other large states.

Arizona, Colorado, California, Indiana, Texas, and Washington have much higher rates of property crimes when compared to other large states.

Arizona, Indiana, Tennessee, and Washington have much higher rates of burglary when compared to other large states.

LET: This article is based on a new study by the Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) of the US Department of Justice and my opinion as to what that research may hold for future compilations of state crime data. I asked a variety of questions via email about the future of BJS subnational reports but after multiple days, I did not get a response.

The title of the new study from BJS is, “Criminal Victimization in the 22 Largest U.S. States, 2017–2019.”

It would be simpler to just offer the report’s findings as to states having high rates for violence and property crimes (see “22 State To State Comparisons” below) but there are important policy and research considerations for justice administrators to consider (i.e., what happens when your numbers or rates of crime double or triple?).

Because the National Crime Victimization Survey is relatively unknown to many, some explanation is prudent. MORE

23 Comments on These States Have The Highest Rates Of Violent And Property Crimes

  1. This is just one more reason my, Receive What Law Enforcement Your Taxes Pay For Bill, should be enacted

    My Bill:

    1) Each and every victim of crime should receive a Government issued card similar to an EBT Card in the amount of any losses or damages suffered not covered by insurance
    2) That card can be used to pay any and all local, county, State and federal taxes or fees
    3) Any amount Insurance underwriters shall be reimbursed for the loss by the local jurisdiction
    4) The amount shall not in any way shape or form be backfilled by any State or federal agency

    This immediately changes the entire dynamic and those collecting taxes to provide law enforcement and justice have skin in the game.

    1) Police would be fully funded before politicians spent a single dime on anything else.
    2) Victims rights to be secure in their homes and on the streets and would be recognized as preferential to the rights of victimizers.
    3) “Progressive” Prosecutors would no longer be endorsed and supported by politicians and non-profits.
    4) Police Chief and Administration would no longer be an affirmative action, diversity and virtue signaling position

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  2. It is blue hellholes in these states. Austin is a disaster. They had 1,200 plus police and now are down to 800 with 300 potentially retiring. It takes 2.5 hours for them to show up to head on DUI traffic collisions. They won’t show up to a regular accident. Denver, Seattle etc all in similar situations. Homeless are allowed to live everywhere. Gee we can’t figure out why this is happening. Property crimes and homeless go hand in hand.

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  3. @Anonymous:

    Property crimes and homeless go hand in hand.

    In support of “reclaim the English Language” efforts, let’s not call them “homeless.” Let’s call them BUMS.

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  4. When, and if, normal citizens have had enough, they’ll resolve the problem themselves. When the “authorities” fail to do their jobs it eventually leads to self-help. It all depends upon the level of tolerance of the productive members of the communities. Everyone has a breaking point.

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  5. Oh yay! WA state is tops in every crime category they have. A beautiful place run by people with the ugliest of ideas. What’s been done to Seattle in itself is a crime.

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  6. @ Illustr8r MARCH 23, 2023 AT 6:41 PM

    I was called everything from crackpot to reactionary when I pointed out where Seattle and Portland were obviously headed in the 1960’s and 70’s. For the life of me I could not get my mind around why I could sit in church and read my catechism and apply what I learned to observed patterns of behavior and others couldn’t.

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  7. Hmm, here’s something extremely related. And the numbers are shocking. At least to me.
    h tps://www.lawenforcementtoday.com/unpublished-cdc-study-confirms-2-million-defensive-handgun-uses-annually/

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