Michael R. Rand, William J. Sabol, Ph.D., Michael Sinclair, Howard N. Snyder
September 3, 2010
This webpage includes analyses from four data sources: the National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS), the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS), the Survey of Inmates in State and Federal Correctional Facilities (SISFCF), and the Survey of Inmates in Local Jails (SILJ). Each data source examines the involvement of alcohol and violent crime from different perspectives and different sets of criminal behaviors. In NIBRS law enforcement officers are asked to record whether alcohol use by victims, offenders, or both was involved in the incident. In NCVS victims are asked to report whether they believe the offenders had consumed alcohol prior to or during the crime. Finally, in the inmate surveys prison and jail inmates are asked if they were using alcohol at the time of the crime for which they were incarcerated.
The NCVS captures the broadest range of crime and includes nonfatal crime reported and not reported to law enforcement. Because the NCVS measures the number of victimizations, it does not restrict identifying an incident as alcohol-involved based on the quantity of alcohol consumed by the offender or the degree of impairment resulting from the alcohol consumption. NIBRS captures fatal and nonfatal crimes reported to law enforcement, which are likely more serious than those captured by NCVS. Victimizations captured by NCVS and offenses known to police reflected in NIBRS may underestimate domestic violence; however, it is not clear which data source provides better information on the characteristics of these crimes.
In NIBRS, officers are asked to indicate whether the crime involved alcohol, drugs, or computers. Because officers use primarily observation and professional judgment to form their assessment and the assessment is unlikely to be based on a chemical or behavioral test for alcohol, the incident is likely to be coded as alcohol-involved only when a victim or an offender shows obvious signs of alcohol impairment. As a result, some alcohol-involved incidents may not be coded as such (e.g., incidents in which the amount of alcohol consumed was relatively small and none of the people involved showed outward signs of alcohol use). In some jurisdictions, officers may also indicate "not applicable" if alcohol, drugs, or computers were not involved in the crime. For the alcohol and crime analysis presented here, BJS treated the absence of an indication that alcohol was involved or a non-applicable response as a non-alcohol-related incident.
In the inmate surveys (SISFCF and SILJ), inmates are asked whether they had been using alcohol prior to or during the commission of the crime leading to their incarceration. The differences in the distribution of violent crimes leading to incarceration, and those reported to the NCVS or NIBRS, may arise from the fact that the prison and jail inmates have been convicted, whereas NIBRS and NCVS include all crimes—those that result in a conviction and those that do not. Also, inmates are more likely to know whether they had been using alcohol prior to or during the crime than either the victims or law enforcement. The SISFCF and the SILJ also provide information on alcohol involvement for non-violent crimes.
These variations in the four data collections are likely to result in different statistics related to alcohol use in violent crimes. While in some ways these differences may lead to confusion about how to interpret the findings of alcohol involvement in crime, when carefully considered they can paint a more complete picture than any single data collection.
For detailed information on alcohol-related incidents, data tables, and figures, click on the topical links below.
Related Publications
Drug Use, Testing, and Treatment in Local Jails Describes the drug involvement of jail inmates and the level of drug use, testing, and treatment in jails. | |
Press Release | PDF (114K) | ASCII file (40K) | Spreadsheet (Zip format 60K) | Codebooks and Datasets | To order paper version |
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DWI Offenders under Correctional Supervision Provides data on offenders in jail, in prison, or on probation for driving while intoxicated. | |
Press Release | PDF (171K) | ASCII file (83K) | Spreadsheet (Zip format 36K) | Codebooks and Datasets | To order paper version |
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Substance Abuse and Treatment of State and Federal Prisoners, 1997 Presents data from the 1997 Survey of Inmates in Adult State and Federal Correctional Facilities concerning prisoners' use of alcohol and illegal drugs and the substance abuse treatment they received. | |
Press Release (6K) | PDF (137K) | ASCII file (85K) | ZIP Format (Spreadsheet 43K) | Codebooks and Datasets | To order paper version |
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Alcohol and Crime (1998) Provides an overview of national information on the role of alcohol in violent victimization and its use among those convicted of crimes, including victim perceptions of alcohol use by offenders at the time of the crime. | |
Press Release (5K) | PDF (145K) | ASCII file (106K) | Codebooks and Datasets | To order paper version |
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Drunk Driving Paper copy only. | |
Print version (PDF 650K)
Spreadsheet (Zip format 36K)
To cite this product, use the following link:
http://www.bjs.gov/index.cfm?ty=pbdetail&iid=2313