Skip to local navigation | Skip to main content

Crime and Victim Statistics

Rates of Victimization

In 2006, 16 million criminal victimizations befell individuals over age 12 in urban and suburban areas in the United States,, according to the National Crime Victimization Survey . In these areas, approximately 76 percent of victimizations involved property and 23 percent were violent. Nearly 1 percent were purse snatching and pocket picking. Males and females were equally likely to be victimized by an offender they previously knew (Rand and Catalano, 2007). [1]

As a group, adolescents are most likely to be victimized. Individuals who have been victimized previously are at increased risk to be victimized again. Researchers in Great Britain found that just 4 percent of victims suffered more than 44 percent of victimizations (Farrell and Pease, 1993).

See NIJ's Web page on Child Abuse and Maltreatment for more findings about the long-term effects of victimization for adolescents.

Notes and Works Cited

Notes

[1] Based on findings from the Bureau of Justice Statistics' National Crime Victimization Survey of 2003: 54 percent of violence against males was conducted by strangers, while 64 percent of violence against females was conducted by nonstrangers (see Catalano, 2004: 1, 9–10). Back to text.

Works Cited

Catalano, S.M. Criminal Victimization, 2003 : Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2004, NCJ 205455.

Farrell, G., and K. Pease. Once Bitten, Twice Bitten: Repeat Victimization and Its Implications for Crime Prevention. Crime Prevention Unit Paper 46. London, England: Police Research Group, 1993.

National Association of Crime Victim Compensation Boards. Compensation to Victims Continues to Increase Exit Notice . Accessed March 14, 2007.

Newmark, L.C. Crime Victims' Needs and VOCA-Funded Services: Findings and Recommendations From Two National Studies. Final report submitted to the National Institute of Justice, March 2004, NCJ 214263. Back to text.

Victim Services. From Pain to Power: Crime Victims Take Action. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Justice, Office for Victims of Crime, September 1998, NCJ 166604.

Date Entered: January 17, 2008