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Publication Bureau of Justice Statistics Fiscal Year 1994 Program Plan

Maureen Henneberg

June 1, 1994    NCJ 148138

The report describes the 34 million criminal victimizations that occur annually, as well as activities and operations of the 50,000 offices, agencies, and institutions that comprise the U.S. criminal justice system. BJS statistics indicate that the rate of victimization by offenders armed with handguns reached a 20-year high in 1992, while overall rates of victimization from rape, robbery, and aggravated assault were below 1981 rates. Adults in State and Federal prisons or on probation or parole accounted for 3 percent of white men, 15 percent of black men, and 2 percent of all adults in the United States. Drug offenders constituted 7 percent of persons entering State prisons in 1980 but 30 percent of those entering in 1992. Residents of large cities paid about $144 per person to operate police departments, over 50 percent more than residents of smaller cities and towns. Statistics and descriptive information are provided for the National Pretrial Reporting Program, the National Prosecutor Survey, the National Judicial Reporting Program, State and Federal inmates, the Justice Information Policy Assistance Program, 1994 initiatives of the BJS, and BJS assistance to State statistical analysis centers. Figures and tables

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Federal Justice Statistics Program (FJSP)
Firearm Inquiry Statistics (FIST) Program
Justice Expenditure and Employment Extracts Series
Law Enforcement Management and Administrative Statistics (LEMAS)
National Corrections Reporting Program (NCRP)
National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS)

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http://www.bjs.gov/index.cfm?ty=pbdetail&iid=3293

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