Explore The NRA Universe Of Websites

APPEARS IN News

Big Government Provides Some Data

Tuesday, September 7, 2021

Big Government Provides Some Data

The FBI usually released crime data in September. Researchers and policy wonks would pour over the data, looking for any hint of a chance for a policy intervention or investigating long-term trends. This year will be different. The FBI announced in 2015 that the underlying reporting system for crime data would change by 2021 but not all agencies nationwide are quite ready for the new system. Implementation remains a work in progress. 

The Uniform Crime Report was conceived in the 1920s and formally launched in 1927 under the Committee on Uniform Crime Reporting. Responsibility for the collection and reporting of data was delegated to the FBI three years later, in 1930. For 90 years, not much changed. The new system, incident based reporting, promises to be a better and more accurate system than what sufficed for ninety years. The National Incident Based Reporting System (NIBRS) reports up to ten offenses within each incident, while the current system only reports the most egregious crime.

For example, consider a robbery that ends in murder. Under the old system, only murder would be reported in the annual crime tally. The new system promises the capability to report both the robbery and the murder.

The current hang-up is that the old system really isnt the old” system. Only 57% of law enforcement agencies in the country are participating in NIBRS as of September 2, 2021, though the deadline for switching to NIBRS was January 1, 2021. The change was announced in 2015.

Five states are not yet certified in NIBRS, meaning they do not (yet?) have the technical infrastructure in place to support the new reporting system. Five out of 50 isnt bad, right? These states are Alaska, California, Florida, New Jersey, and New York – representing a sizeable chunk of the total population. That does not include Alabama, which has no state program, or the eighteen states with less than a majority of their law enforcement agencies participating.

This is data that law enforcement agencies should have on hand. Its crime data. States have had at least six years to develop the new capabilities, and law enforcement agencies capture the data by the very nature of their work. It is their work.

The difficulties with NIBRS dont end with low participation. Counting multiple offenses within a single incident will naturally lead to higher crime totals. Any comparison of data aggregated in this manner compared to the single-offense tally system will look like a spike in crime. The spike will, of course, simply be the new parameters in effect.

We saw this effect when the FBI changed the definition of rape years ago. The change limited the ability to trend that crime, particularly at the state level.

We may see similar difficulties trending NIBRS data, though the FBI has said it will continue to convert NIBRS data to the old format for this purpose through the transition period. We do not yet know how long the transition period will last. Once the definition or parameters change, trending becomes much more difficult. Well either default to the old system through conversions, or force two incompatible data collection methods together.

Its too early to say that the FBI has botched the new system. It may very well be useful; it certainly has promise – provided participation increases. The FBI has rolled out a very shiny data exploration tool, though it does not lend itself easily to state-to-state comparisons. Our own NRA-ILA crime data tool goes back to 1960 and specifically allows state-to-state comparisons. Its at the bottom of this fact sheet about crime. All of the data is from the FBI, but its simpler than the FBIs tool.

Isnt that what we all want – simple? We expect the FBI, state, and local law enforcement agencies to know how much crime happened in their jurisdiction – or, at least how much crime was reported to law enforcement in their jurisdictions. The FBI is in the 91st year of managing national crime data, and five years has not been enough time to get the well-publicized new system fully operational.

This is a recurring problem with the federal government. Remember, the CDC annually published absurd estimates on non-fatal gunshot injuries up until they were called out publicly by The Trace. The CDC has since ceased providing that estimate entirely, though anti-gun researchers continued to cite the ridiculous number long after the hopelessly flawed methodology was exposed.

Hospitals know the reasons for their patientsvisits, and law enforcement agencies are aware of the crime reported to them. Why does the federal government have such difficulty aggregating and reporting this data? Researchers and politicians rely on this data to understand the world and develop policy. Anti-gun activists – including those masquerading as earnest researchers – have shown themselves willing to misconstrue data to advance their cause, and this new data system may offer them just such an opportunity. Its all too easy to see activists comparing incompatible data points without offering a disclaimer.

Before essentially getting its own house in order with basic data collection, anti-gun politicians in Congress and unelected bureaucrats want the federal government to fund research projects. That funding has gone to well-known and well-funded anti-gun research programs and professors at universities with multi-billion-dollar endowments.

Maybe – just maybe – the federal government should focus on getting the data right. Publishing research is far more advantageous to the anti-gun agenda than simply collecting the right data, but wed all like to live in a country in which government bureaucrats are not actively seeking to infringe on Constitutional rights.

IN THIS ARTICLE
FBI National Crime Report
TRENDING NOW
Turks and Chaos: Island Jurisdiction a Potential Nightmare for U.S. Gun Owners

News  

Monday, May 13, 2024

Turks and Chaos: Island Jurisdiction a Potential Nightmare for U.S. Gun Owners

Set aside communist Cuba for a moment, these days another Caribbean island jurisdiction is providing a cautionary tale for U.S. gun owners. 

“District of Crime”: Shocking Case Characteristic of D.C. Approach to Violence

News  

Monday, May 13, 2024

“District of Crime”: Shocking Case Characteristic of D.C. Approach to Violence

When a reasonable person finds it impossible to take anti-gun big city politicians and their professed “need” for more gun control seriously, maybe it’s stories like this one from Washington, D.C. that play a role.

Ninth Circuit Upholds California Law Allowing Gun Owners’ Private Data to be Shared with Research Institutions in NRA-ILA-Supported Case

Monday, May 13, 2024

Ninth Circuit Upholds California Law Allowing Gun Owners’ Private Data to be Shared with Research Institutions in NRA-ILA-Supported Case

On May 8, 2024, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld California’s law requiring California’s Department of Justice to provide firearm purchasers’ and CCW applicants’ information to research institutions.

President Donald J. Trump to Address NRA Members at the 153rd NRA Annual Meeting in Dallas, Texas

News  

Friday, May 3, 2024

President Donald J. Trump to Address NRA Members at the 153rd NRA Annual Meeting in Dallas, Texas

Today, the National Rifle Association of America (NRA) announced that President Donald J. Trump will address NRA members as the keynote speaker at the 2024 NRA Annual Meetings & Exhibits on Saturday, May 18th in Dallas, ...

NRA Scores Legal Victory Against ATF; “Pistol Brace Rule” Enjoined From Going Into Effect Against NRA Members

Monday, April 1, 2024

NRA Scores Legal Victory Against ATF; “Pistol Brace Rule” Enjoined From Going Into Effect Against NRA Members

NRA Members Among the Largest Class Protected from Draconian Rule

The State of Crime: A Steep Decline, or Another Bidenesque Wild Story?

News  

Monday, May 6, 2024

The State of Crime: A Steep Decline, or Another Bidenesque Wild Story?

In his State of the Union address this year, President Joe Biden proclaimed that “Americans deserve the freedom to be safe, and America is safer today than when I took office,” boasting that “[l]ast year, the murder ...

Maine: Waiting Period Law May Force Kittery Trading Post Out of State

Tuesday, May 7, 2024

Maine: Waiting Period Law May Force Kittery Trading Post Out of State

Last month, after a barrage of procedural games and inaction by Governor Janet Mills, radical progressive politicians passed LD 2238, "An Act to Address Gun Violence in Maine by Requiring a Waiting Period for Certain Firearm Purchases", ...

Delaware: Governor to Sign Permit to Purchase Bill

Tuesday, May 14, 2024

Delaware: Governor to Sign Permit to Purchase Bill

Governor Carney is scheduled to sign extreme Permit to Purchase legislation in Dover on Thursday. May 16th.

Huge Victory for Colorado Gun Owners: Semi-Auto Ban Dead for 2024 Session!

Tuesday, May 7, 2024

Huge Victory for Colorado Gun Owners: Semi-Auto Ban Dead for 2024 Session!

On Tuesday, May 7th, House Bill 1292, the semi-automatic ban, was indefinitely postponed and is officially off the table for this legislative session. 

Grassroots Spotlight: South Carolina

Take Action  

Monday, May 13, 2024

Grassroots Spotlight: South Carolina

It was a busy and exciting start to the year in South Carolina, as NRA-ILA and the Second Amendment supporters in the state worked to push Constitutional Carry across the finish line!

MORE TRENDING +
LESS TRENDING -

More Like This From Around The NRA

NRA ILA

Established in 1975, the Institute for Legislative Action (ILA) is the "lobbying" arm of the National Rifle Association of America. ILA is responsible for preserving the right of all law-abiding individuals in the legislative, political, and legal arenas, to purchase, possess and use firearms for legitimate purposes as guaranteed by the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.