Term
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Definition
Data becomes information when it is effectively analyzed. |
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Term
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Definition
Information becomes knowledge when it is effectively communicated. |
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Term
History of Crime Analysis |
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Definition
Crime analysis techniques and products were used in the first modern police force, the London Metropolitan Police, in the 1800s. "Detectives," who identified patterns of crime, were first assigned in London in the 1840s; crime statistics were available for the city as early as 1847; and it was within this department that the concept of modus operandi, and of classifying offenders and crimes based on it, first appeared in the second half of the nineteenth century. |
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August Vollmer
(1876 - 1955)
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Definition
August Vollmer has been called the "father of American policing." Vollmer served as Chief of Police in Berkeley, California, from 1905 to 1932. His inovations range from police radios to fingerprinting, and include pin mapping, the regular review of incident reports, and the formation of patrol districts based on crime volume.
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Term
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Definition
"On the assumption of regularity of crime and similar occurences, it is possible to tabulate these occurences by areas within a city and thus determine the points which have the greatest danger of such crimes and what points have the least danger." - "The Police Beat" |
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Term
O.W. Wilson (1900 - 1972) |
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Definition
Orlando Winfield Wilson served as a police executive in a number of agencies, including the Chicago Police, where he was superintendent from 1960-1971. Wilson wrote several influential books including "Police Records" (1942), "Police Administration" (1950) and "Police Planning" (1957). The first written citation of crime analysis was made in Wilson's second edition of "Police Administration" (1963). |
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Term
Crime Analysis - O.W. Wilson |
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Definition
"The crime analysis section studies daily reports of serious crimes in order to determine the location, time, special characteristics, similarities to other criminal attacks, and various significant facts that might help to identify either a criminal or the existence of a pattern of criminal activity. Such information is helpful in planning the operations of a division or district." Though this is the earliest known source of the term, Wilson's use suggests that there were already crime analysis units in existence. |
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Term
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Definition
Law Enforcement Assistance Administration provided federal funds in support of crime analysis units and published a series of manuals in the 1970s. Crime analysis became one of the four facets of LEAA's Integrated Criminal Apprehension Program (ICAP). |
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Term
"Golden Age of Crime Analysis" |
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Definition
1990s - Problem-Oriented Policing, IACA, federal funding, mapping, Compstat, NIJ Crime Mapping Research Center, NLECTC (CMAP) |
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Term
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Definition
Herman Goldstein worked with O.W. Wilson in Chicago and wrote "Problem-Oriented Policing" in 1990. |
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Term
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Definition
Law Enforcement Analysis: Processes, techniques and products that provide information support to various missions of law enforcement agencies. |
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Term
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Definition
Crime analysts study crime and disorder data; identify and anhalyze patterns, trends and problems; and create and disseminate information that helps police agencies solve, reduce and prevent crime and disorder. |
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Criminal Intelligence Analysts |
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Definition
Criminal Intelligence Analysts concentrate on the collection and dissemination of information about criminals, particularly organizations and conspiracies. Intelligence analysts hunt for leads on the structure and hierarchy of criminal organizations, the flow of money and goods, relationships, current activities and plans and personal information about the participants - usually with the goal of arrest, prosecution and conviction of the offenders involved. |
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Criminal Investigative Analysts |
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Definition
Criminal Investigative Analysts create physical, behavioral and psychological profiles of offenders based on the characteristics of crimes they have committed. |
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Term
Crime Analysis - Modern Definition |
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Definition
Crime analysis is the systematic study of crime and disorder problems, as well as other police -related issues - including sociodemographic, spatial and temporal factors - to assist police in criminal apprehension, crime and disorder reduction, crime prevention and evaluation. |
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Term
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Definition
Tactical Crime Analysis includes the daily identification of emerging or existing crime patterns, including series and hot spots. The goal of tactical analysis is to:
- Identify emerging crime patterns as soon as possible
- Comprehensively analyze any patterns
- Notify the agency about the existence of patterns
- Work with the agency to develop the best tactics to address the patterns.
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Term
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Definition
Strategic Crime Analysis focuses on long-term trends or chronic problems in crime and disorder. In contrast to tactical analysis, strategic analysis is a periodic rather than daily duty. It generally takes longer and requires the analyst to collect his or her own data instead of relying exclusively on police reports. Finally, effective use of strategic crime analysis tends to focus on opportunity reduction rather than offender apprehension. |
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Term
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Definition
Trends are long-term increases and decreases in crime, or changes in the characteristics of a crime over a period of time. Crime trends can occur over months, years, decades, even centuries, but are rarely discussed in terms shorter than a month or longer than a decade. Sometimes they can be traced to a single cause (e.g., a new shopping mall, fluctuations in the price of heroin); other times they have numerous obscure and indirect social, environmental, economic, and political causes. |
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Term
Positive Crime Trends
Negative Crime Trends
Neutral Crime Trends |
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Definition
Positive Crime Trends represent increases in crime
Negative Crime Trends represent decerases in crime
Neutral Crime Trends represent consistent volume although may include shifts in crime characteristics |
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Term
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Definition
Problems are multiple crime or disorder incidents with common causal factors. One might think of "trends" as the symptoms and "problems" as the underlying causes. Problems occur over the long term and/or keep returning each year and/or are committed by multiple offenders. |
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Term
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Definition
In general, police data is inadequate to explain the root causes and underlyinig opportunity factors associated with problems. Analysts must collect qualitative data using qualitative methods such as interviews, surveys, focus groups, environmental assessments and external research. In general, analysts use police data to form hypotheses and then test these hypotheses with further field research. |
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Term
Administrative Crime Analysis |
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Definition
Administrative crime analysis is a broad category including an eclectic selection of administrative and statistical reports, research and other projects not focused on the immediate or long-term reduction or elimination of a pattern or trend. |
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Term
Police Operations Analysis |
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Definition
Police Operations Analysis describes the study of a police department's policies and practices - including its allocation of personnel, money equipment and other resources, geographically, organizationally and temporally - and whether these operations and policies have the most effective influence on crime and disorder in the jurisdiction. |
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Term
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Definition
- Data collection and management
- Data scanning and querying
- Data analysis
- Information Dissemination
- Response
- Evaluation and feedback
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Term
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Definition
- Knowledge about crime and criminal behavior
- Knowledge about policing and police strategy
- Knowledge about the jurisdiction
- Knowledge about the police agency
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Term
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Definition
- Incidents
- Other agencies
- Jurisdiction
- Persons and businesses
- Police activity
- GIS
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Term
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Definition
Four main factors can impact data quality:
- Accuracy
- Reliability
- Completeness
- Timeliness
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Term
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Definition
Whether an analyst finds his department's data management processes in fine order or in mind-breaking chaos, his goal is the same: To have easy access to a quality set of timely, complete data on which he can conduct flexible queries to find and analyze different crime phenomena. |
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Term
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Definition
Inductive analysis begins with individual pieces of data, which the analyst puts together to form patterns. Tactical analysis is very much an inductive process. |
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Term
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Definition
Deductive Analysis begins with a large amount of data, which the analyst filters, queries or mines to find patterns or trends within. Strategic crime analysis is primarily a deductive process ( at least , at its initial stages). |
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Term
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Definition
Analysts remove extraneous data to focus on what's important. This applies to individual pieces of data and to large data sets. |
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Term
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Definition
Analysts categorize, classify or cluster pieces of data into logical groups - robbery or burglary, purse snatching or carjacking, Beat 4 or Beat 5, offender or victim - to help identify, analyze and communicate information. |
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Term
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Definition
Analysts count, summarize, average or otherwise aggregate data into categories. Examples of aggregation include taking 20,000 police calls for service and showing the number during each shift; arranging 365 auto thefts by counting the make and model of cars stolen; and showing the average dollar value stolen by crime type for 16,500 property crimes. |
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Term
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Definition
Analysts may compare individual incidents to determine if they are related. They may also compare large data sets to determine trends and deviations from the norm. Most crime statistics are meaningless unless compared to previous time periods or other geographic areas. |
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Term
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Definition
Correlation is a statistical technique that determines if one set of data is related to another set of data (e.g., increased population is related to increased calls for service; decreased average income is related to increased crime rates). The term "correlation" is sometimes used informally to denote any any observed relationship between two variables. |
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Term
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Definition
This process takes correlation a step further by determining whether one factor causes another. Did the new shopping mall cause auto burglaries to increase in the area? Have increases in the price of heroin caused an increase in burglary? |
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Term
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Definition
Analysts can use existing data to project or predict the future. If we've already had 19 robberies this month, how many are we likely to have by the end of the month? If the offender's activities continue as they have in the past, where and when is he likely to strike next? |
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Term
Situational Crime Prevention |
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Definition
Situational Crime Prevention - Five Strategies
- Increase effort necessary to commit crime
- Increase the risk of getting caught
- Reduce potential rewards
- Reduce provocations
- Remove excuses by setting clear rules
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Term
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Definition
The San Diego Wheel suggests three tactical avenues for crime patterns: apprehension, suppression and target hardening. |
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Term
Routine Activities Theory |
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Definition
The Routine Activities Theory fixes crime at th econvergence of motivated offender, suitable target and absence of capable guardianship. Remove any of these elements and the crime will not occur. |
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Term
Situational Crime Prevention |
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Definition
Situational Crime Prevention suugests that crime can be prevented by one of five strategies:
- Increase the effort that criminals must expend to commit the crime
- Increase the risk criminals face while committing the crime
- Reduce the rewards of the crime
- Reduce provocations of offenders
- Remove excuses for crime by setting clear rules, posting signs and controlling drugs and alcohol.
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Term
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Definition
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Term
Data becomes information when it is effectively (blank).
a. Disseminated
b. Analyzed
c. Correlated
d. Coded |
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Definition
Data becomes information when it is effectively (b.) analyzed. |
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Term
Information becomes knowledge when it is effectively (blank).
a. Communicated
b. Learned
c. Categorized
d. Applied |
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Definition
Information becomes knowledge when it is effectively (a.) communicated. |
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Term
The first written citation of crime analysis was mentioned in the second edition of "police Administration" written by (blank)?
a. Herman Goldstein
b. O.W. Wilson
c. August Vollmer
d. John Eck |
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Definition
The first written citation of crime analysis was mentioned in the second edition of "police Administration" written by (b.) O.W. Wilson. |
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Term
The crime analysis process includes how many steps?
a. 4
b. 10
c. 6
d. 5 |
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Definition
The crime analysis process includes (c.) six steps. |
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Term
L.E.A.A. stands for (blank)
a. Law Enforcement Analysts Association
b. Law Enforcement Assistance Administration
c. Law Enforcement Analysis Administration
d. Law Enforcement Administration Association |
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Definition
L.E.A.A. stands for (b.) Law Enforcement Assistance Administration. |
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Term
The "San Diego Wheel" suggests three tactical avenues for crime patterns. The three avenues are (blank)?
a. Apprehension, Arrests, Target Hardening
b. Apprehension, Suppression, Target Hardening
c. Target Hardening, Prevention, Suppression
d. Suppression, Target Denial, Apprehension |
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Definition
The "San Diego Wheel" suggests three tactical avenues for crime patterns. The three avenues are:
(b.) Apprehension, Suppression, Target Hardening |
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Term
The analytical process of counting, summarizing or averaging is known as (blank)?
a. Categorization
b. Comparison
c. Aggregation
d. Correlation |
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Definition
The analytical process of counting, summarizing or averaging is known as (c.) aggregation. |
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Term
The statistical technique that determines if one set of data is related to another set of data is known as (blank).
a. Relation
b. Comparison
c. Projection
d. Correlation |
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Definition
The statistical technique that determines if one set of data is related to another set of data is known as (d.) correlation. |
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Term
The staffing level of analysts within an agency should be based on (blank)?
a. Population
b. Number of officers
c. Volume of crime
d. Area in square miles |
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Definition
The staffing level of analysts within an agency should be based on (c.) volume of crime. |
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Term
One might think of "trends" as the symptoms and "problems" as (blank)?
a. ongoing trends
b. foundation of trends
c. patterns
d. underlying causes |
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Definition
One might think of "trends" as the symptoms and "problems" as (d.) underlying causes. |
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