Age category
The appropriate age category is determined by the respondent's age on the last day of
the month preceding the interview.
Aggravated assault
An attack or attempted attack with a weapon, regardless of whether an injury occurred,
and an attack without a weapon when serious injury results.
With injury - An attack without a weapon when serious injury results or an attack with a weapon involving any injury. Serious injury includes broken bones, lost teeth, internal injuries, loss of consciousness, and any unspecified injury requiring two or more days of hospitalization.Threatened with a weapon - Threat or attempted attack by an offender armed with a gun, knife, or other object used as a weapon that does not result in victim injury.
Assault
An unlawful physical attack or threat of attack. Assaults may be classified as
aggravated or simple. Rape, attempted rape, and sexual assaults are excluded from this
category, as well as robbery and attempted robbery. The severity of assaults ranges
from minor threats to nearly fatal incidents.
Burglary
Unlawful or forcible entry or attempted entry of a residence. This crime usually, but
not always, involves theft. The illegal entry may be by force, such as breaking a
window or slashing a screen, or may be without force by entering through an unlocked
door or an open window. As long as the person entering has no legal right to be
present in the structure a burglary has occurred. Furthermore, the structure need not
be the house itself for a burglary to take place; illegal entry of a garage, shed, or
any other structure on the premises also constitutes household burglary. If breaking
and entering occurs in a hotel or vacation residence, it is still classified as a
burglary for the household whose member or members were staying there at the time the
entry occurred.
Attempted forcible entry-A form of burglary in which force is used in an attempt to gain entry.Completed burglary - A form of burglary in which a person who has no legal right to be present in the structure successfully gains entry to a residence, by use of force, or without force.
Forcible entry - A form of completed burglary in which force is used to gain entry to a residence. Some examples include breaking a window or slashing a screen.
Unlawful entry without force -A form of completed burglary committed by someone having no legal right to be on the premises, even though no force is used.
Business
A company, service or membership organization consisting of one or more establishments
under common ownership or control. For this survey, major subsidiaries were treated as
separate businesses.
CERT C.C.
An organization that works with the U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness Team (CERT) and
the private sector. CERT C.C. studies computer and network security in order to provide
incident response services to victims of attacks, publish alerts concerning
vulnerabilities and threats, and offer information to help improve computer and network
security.
Collection year
The set of victimizations reported to the NCVS in interviews conducted during the same
calendar year. This set may include victimizations which occurred in the previous
calendar year, due to the retrospective nature of the NCVS interview. Collection year
data are used in tables beginning in 1996. See "Data year."
Commercial crimes
Crimes against commercial establishments of any type are not included in the survey.
Commercial establishments include stores, restaurants, businesses, service stations,
medical offices or hospitals, or other similar establishments. For victimizations
occurring in commercial establishments, the crime is included or not included
depending upon whether the survey respondent was threatened or harmed in some way or
personal property was taken.
Computer virus
A hidden fragment of computer code which propagates by inserting itself into or
modifying other programs. Includes viruses, worms, and Trojan horses. Excludes
spyware, adware, and other malware.
Crime classification
Victimizations and incidents are classified based upon detailed characteristics of the
event provided by the respondent. Neither victims nor interviewers classify crimes at
the time of interview. During data processing, a computer program classifies each
event into one type of crime, based upon the entries on a number of items on the
survey questionnaire. This ensures that similar events will be classified using a
standard procedure. The glossary definition for each crime indicates the major
characteristics required to be so classified. If an event can be classified as more
than one type of crime, a hierarchy is used which classifies the crime according to
the most serious event that occurred. The hierarchy is: rape, sexual assault, robbery,
assault, burglary, motor vehicle theft, theft.
Data year
The set of victimizations reported to NCVS all of which occurred within the same
calendar year. For all years prior to 1996, Criminal Victimization in the United
States tables are based upon data year. Beginning in 1996 and later years, tables are
based upon collection year. See "Collection Year."
Denial of service
The disruption, degradation, or exhaustion of an Internet connection or e-mail service
that results in an interruption of the normal flow of information. Denial of service is
usually caused by ping attacks, port scanning probes, or excessive amounts of incoming
data.
Domestic violence
Refers to violence between spouses, or spousal abuse but can also include cohabitants
and non-married intimate partners.
Drug possession
Includes possession of an illegal drug, but excludes possession with intent to sell.
Electronic vandalism or sabotage
The deliberate or malicious damage, defacement, destruction or other alteration of
electronic files, data, web pages, or programs.
Embezzlement
The unlawful misappropriation of money or other things of value, by the person to whom
the property was entrusted (typically an employee), for his or her own purpose.
Includes instances in which a computer was used to wrongfully transfer, counterfeit,
forge or gain access to money, property, financial documents, insurance policies,
deeds, use of rental cars, or various services by the person to whom they were
entrusted.
Ethnicity
A classification based on Hispanic culture and origin, regardless of race. Persons
are asked directly if they are Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino before being asked about
their racial category.
Felony
An offense, as murder or burglary, of graver character than those called misdemeanors,
especially those commonly punished in the U.S. by imprisonment for more than a year.
Fraud
The intentional misrepresentation of information or identity to deceive others, the
unlawful use of a credit or debit card or ATM, or the use of electronic means to
transmit deceptive information, in order to obtain money or other things of value.
Fraud may be committed by someone inside or outside the business. Includes instances in
which a computer was used to defraud the business of money, property, financial
documents, insurance policies, deeds, use of rental cars, or various services by
forgery, misrepresented identity, credit card or wire fraud. Excludes incidents of
embezzlement.
Head of household
A classification which defines one and only one person in each housing unit as the
head. Head of household implies that the person rents or owns (or is in the process of
buying), the housing unit. The head of household must be at least 18, unless all
members of the household are under 18, or the head is married to someone 18 or older.
Hispanic
A person who describes himself as Mexican American, Chicano, Mexican, Mexicano, Puerto
Rican, Cuban, Central American, South American, or from some other Spanish culture or
origin, regardless of race.
Household
A person or group of people meeting either of the following criteria: (1) people whose
usual place of residence is the same housing unit, even if they are temporarily
absent: (2) people staying in a housing unit who have no usual place of residence
elsewhere.
Household Burglary
See burglary.
Human trafficking
The commerce and trade in the movement or migration of people, legal and illegal,
including both legitimate labor activities as well as forced labor.
Incident
A specific criminal act involving one or more victims and offenders. For example, if
two people are robbed at the same time and place, this is classified as two robbery
victimizations but only one robbery incident.
Information Sharing and Analysis Centers (ISACs)
Organizations that work with the U.S. Government, law enforcement agencies, technology
providers, and security associations such as U.S. CERT. ISACs maintain secure
databases, analytic tools and information gathering and distribution facilities
designed to allow authorized individuals to submit reports about information security
threats, vulnerabilities, incidents and solutions.
InfraGard
An information sharing and analysis effort serving the interests and combining the
knowledge base of a wide range of members. At its most basic level, InfraGard is a
partnership between the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the private sector.
Larceny
The unlawful taking of property other than a motor vehicle from the possession of
another, by stealth, without force or deceit. Includes pocketpicking, nonforcible
purse
snatching, shoplifting, and thefts from motor vehicles. Excludes receiving and/or
reselling stolen property (fencing), and thefts through fraud or deceit.
Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA)
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) defines this as a population nucleus of
50,000 or more, generally consisting of a city and its immediate suburbs, along with
adjacent communities having a high degree of economic and social integration with the
nucleus. MSA's are designated by counties, the smallest geographic units for which a
wide range of statistical data can be attained. However, in New England, MSA's are
designated by cities and towns since these subcounty units are of great local
significance and considerable data is available for them. Currently, an area is
defined as an MSA if it meets one of two standards:
(1) A city has a population of at least 50,000; (2) the Census Bureau defines an
urbanized area of at least 50,000 people with a total metropolitan population of at
least 100,000 (or 75,000 in New England). The Census Bureau's definition of urbanized
areas, data on commuting to work, and the strength of the
economic and social ties between the surrounding counties and the central city
determine which counties not containing a main city are included in an MSA. For New
England, MSA's are determined by a core
area and related cities and towns, not counties. A metropolitan statistical area may
contain more than one city of 50,000 and may cross State lines.
Metropolitan area
See "Metropolitan Statistical Area."
Motor Vehicle
An automobile, truck, motorcycle, or any other motorized vehicle legally allowed on
public roads and highways.
Completed motor vehicle theft - The successful taking of a vehicle by an unauthorized
person.
Attempted motor vehicle theft - The unsuccessful attempt by an unauthorized person to
take a vehicle.
Motor vehicle theft
Stealing or unauthorized taking of a motor vehicle, including attempted thefts.
Completed motor vehicle theft - The successful taking of a vehicle by an unauthorized person.Attempted motor vehicle theft - The unsuccessful attempt by an unauthorized person to take a vehicle.
Multiple offenders
Two or more persons inflicting some direct harm to a victim. The victim offender
relationship is determined by the offender with the closest relationship to the
victim. The following list ranks the different relationships from closest to most
distant: spouse, ex spouse, parent, child, other relative, nonrelative well known
person, casual acquaintance, or stranger (See Nonstranger and Stranger).
Murder
(1) Intentionally causing the death of another person without extreme provocation or
legal justification or (2) causing the death of another while committing or attempting
to commit another crime.
Non-Hispanic
Persons who report their culture or origin as something other than "Hispanic" as
defined above. This distinction is made regardless of race.
Nonnegligent/voluntary manslaughter
Intentionally and without legal justification causing the death of another when acting
under extreme provocation. The combined category of murder and nonnegligent
manslaughter excludes involuntary or negligent manslaughter, conspiracies to commit
murder, solicitation of murder, and attempted murder.
Offense
A crime. When referring to personal crimes, the term can be used to refer to both
victimizations and incidents.
Other computer security incidents
Incidents that do not fit within the definitions of the specific types of cyber attacks
and cyber theft. Encompasses spyware, adware, hacking, phishing, spoofing, pinging,
port scanning, sniffing, and theft of other information, regardless of whether damage
or losses were sustained as a result.
Personal crimes
Rape, sexual assault, personal robbery, assault, purse snatching and pocket picking.
This category includes both attempted and completed crimes.
Place of occurrence of crime
The location at which a crime occurred, as specified by the victim. Survey measures of
crimes occurring in commercial establishments, restaurants, nightclubs, public
transportation and other similar places include only those crimes involving NCVS
measured crimes against persons, not the establishments. Crimes against commercial
establishments and other places are not measured by the survey.
Property crime
Property crimes including burglary, motor vehicle theft, or theft. This category
includes both attempted and completed crimes.
Purse snatching/Pocket picking
Theft or attempted theft of property or cash directly from the victim by stealth,
without force or threat of force.
Race
For this survey respondents self identify with one or more racial categories. Racial
categories for this report are white only, black only, and other race only.
The "other" category is composed of Asian Pacific Islanders, and American Indians,
Aleuts, and Eskimos, if only one of these races is given.
Persons reporting two or more races are included in the category of "more than one
race". The race of the head of household is use for computing household crime
demographics.
Rape
Forced sexual intercourse including both psychological coercion as well as physical
force. Forced sexual intercourse means vaginal, anal or oral penetration by the
offender (s). This category also includes incidents where the penetration is from a
foreign object such as a bottle. Includes attempted rapes, male as well as female
victims, and both heterosexual and homosexual rape. Attempted rape includes verbal
threats of rape.
Rate of victimization
see "Victimization rate."
Region
The States have been divided into four groups or census regions:
Midwest - Includes the 12 States of Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan,
Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, and Wisconsin.
Northeast - Includes the 9 states of Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire,
New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Vermont.
South - Includes the District of Columbia and the 16 States of Alabama, Arkansas,
Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, North
Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, and West Virginia.
West - Includes the 13 states of Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho,
Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming.
Robbery
Completed or attempted theft, directly from a person, of property or cash by force or
threat of force, with or without a weapon, and with or without injury.
Completed/property taken - The successful taking of property from a person by force or threat of force, with or without a weapon, and with or without injury.Completed with injury - The successful taking of property from a person, accompanied by an attack, either with or without a weapon, resulting in injury.
Completed without injury - The successful taking of property from a person by force or the threat of force, either with or without a weapon, but not resulting in injury.
Attempted to take property - The attempt to take property from a person by force or threat of force without success, with or without a weapon, and with or without injury.
Attempted without injury - The attempt to take property from a person by force or the threat of force without success, either with or without a weapon, but not resulting in injury.
Attempted with injury - The attempt to take property from a person without success, accompanied by an attack, either with or without a weapon, resulting in injury.
Rural area
A place not located inside the Metropolitan Statistical Area. This category includes a
variety of localities, ranging from sparsely populated rural areas to cities with
populations less than 50,000.
Sample
The set of housing units selected by the U. S. Census Bureau to be interviewed for the
survey. All occupants of the household age 12 or older are interviewed. See
methodology for sample inclusions and exclusions.
Series
Six or more similar but separate events, which the respondent is unable to describe
separately in detail to an interviewer.
Sexual assault
A wide range of victimizations, separate from rape or attempted rape. These crimes
include attacks or attempted attacks generally involving unwanted sexual contact
between victim and offender. Sexual assaults may or may not involve force and include
such things as grabbing or fondling. Sexual assault also includes verbal threats.
Simple assault
Attack without a weapon resulting either in no injury, minor injury (for example,
bruises, black eyes, cuts, scratches or swelling) or in undetermined injury requiring
less than 2 days of hospitalization. Also includes attempted assault without a weapon.
With minor injury - An attack without a weapon resulting in such injuries as bruises, black eyes, cuts or in undetermined injury requiring less than 2 days of hospitalization.Without injury - An attempted assault without a weapon not resulting in injury.
Subsidiary
A company in which another business has more than 50% ownership or the power to direct
or cause the direction of management and policies.
Suburban areas
A county or counties containing a central city, plus any contiguous counties that are
linked socially and economically to the central city. On data tables, suburban areas
are categorized as those portions of metropolitan areas situated "outside central
cities."
Tenure
The NCVS recognizes two forms of household tenancy: (1) owned, which includes
dwellings that are mortgaged, and (2) rented, which includes rent free quarters
belonging to a party other than the occupants, and situations where rental payments
are in kind or services.
Theft
Completed or attempted theft of property or cash without personal contact. Incidents
involving theft of property from within the sample household would classify as theft
if the offender has a legal right to be in the house (such as a maid, delivery person,
or guest). If the offender has no legal right to be in the house, the incident would
classify as a burglary.
Completed - To successfully take without permission property or cash without personal contact between the victim and offender.Attempted - To unsuccessfully attempt to take property or cash without personal contact.
Theft of intellectual property
The illegal obtaining of copyrighted or patented material, trade secrets, or trademarks
(including designs, plans, blueprints, codes, computer programs, software, formulas,
recipes, graphics) usually by electronic copying. Excludes theft of personal or
financial data such as credit card or social security numbers, names and dates of
birth, financial account information, or any other type of information.
Theft of personal or financial data
The illegal obtaining of information that potentially allows someone to use or create
accounts under another name (individual, business, or some other entity). Personal
information includes names, dates of birth, social security numbers, or other personal
information. Financial information includes credit, debit, or ATM card account or PIN
numbers. Excludes theft of intellectual property such as copyrights, patents, trade
secrets, and trademarks. Excludes theft of any other type of information.
U.S. CERT
The United States Computer Emergency Readiness Team is a partnership between the
Department of Homeland Security and the public and private sectors. Established in 2003
to protect the nation's Internet infrastructure, U.S. CERT coordinates defense against
and responses to cyber attacks across the nation.
Urban areas
The largest city (or grouping of cities) in a Metropolitan Statistical Area (see
definition of Metropolitan Statistical Area).
Victimization
A crime as it affects one individual person or household. For personal crimes, the
number of victimizations is equal to the number of victims involved. The number of
victimizations may be greater than the number of incidents because more than one
person may be victimized during an incident. Each crime against a household is assumed
to involve a single victim, the affected household.
Victimization rate
A measure of the occurrence of victimizations among a specified population group.
For personal crimes, this is based on the number of victimizations per 1,000 residents
age 12 or older. For household crimes, the victimization rates are calculated using
the number of incidents per 1,000 households.
Victimize
To commit a crime against a person or household.
Violence, crimes of
Rape, sexual assault, personal robbery or assault. This category includes both
attempted and completed crimes. It does not include purse snatching and pocket
picking. Murder is not measured by the NCVS because of an inability to question the
victim.
Completed violence - The sum of all completed rapes, sexual assaults, robberies, and
assaults. See individual crime types for definition of completed crimes.
Attempted/threatened violence - The unsuccessful attempt of rape, sexual assault,
personal robbery or assault. Includes attempted attacks or sexual assaults by means of
verbal threats. See individual crime types for definition of attempted crimes.