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Criminal Victimization in the United States, 1994This final annual report gives detail 1994 data for the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS). It presents the major variables measured in the survey in 118 data tables covering crimes of violence (rape, sexual assault, robbery, assault) and theft (pocket picking, purse snatching, burglary, theft, and motor vehicle theft). Tables from the report cover victim characteristics (sex, age, race, ethnicity, marital status, education, income, and residence); crime characteristics (time and place of occurrence, distance from home, weapon use, self-protection, injury, medical care, economic loss, and time lost from work); victim-offender relationship; substance use by offenders; offender characteristics (age, race, and sex); whether crimes were reported to police; reasons for reporting or not; and police response time for reported crime. 5/97 NCJ 162126This report is one in a series. More recent editions may be available. To view a list of all in the series go to the publications page. Full report Acrobat file (1M) | ASCII text file (70K)
Chapter 1: Introduction Acrobat file (119K) |
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Bureau of Justice Statistics U.S. Department of Justice Send comments to askbjs@usdoj.gov Page last revised on May 27, 1997 |