The crime incident count of Fairfield, CA was 329 for aggravated assault in 2018. The crime incident count of West Jordan, UT was 208 for aggravated assault in 2018.
Crime Incident Count
Crime Incident Rate per 100,000 People
Crime statistics are sourced from the FBI Uniform Crime Reporting Program and aggregated across year and crime type. The FBI does not gather statistics for all jurisdictions, so some localities may be missing. Normalization is based on the population values published with the UCR data itself, so rather than on US Census data, as the jurisdiction of the data may vary. Crime rates are normalized on a per 100K basis; specifically, the crime count is divided by the population count, the result is then multiplied by 100K and rounded to the nearest integer value. Latest data, displayed in charts and other visualizations, is from 2014.
Above charts are based on data from the FBI Uniform Crime Reporting Program | ODN Dataset | API -
Public Safety and Crime Datasets Involving Fairfield, CA or West Jordan, UT
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Uniform Crime Reporting System Arrests 2017
data.ct.gov | Last Updated 2021-03-24T14:36:38.000ZArrests are the number of persons arrested, cited or summoned for all criminal acts in Part I and Part II Crimes for the given jurisdiction. "Arrestee" refers to the nature of the crime and age or other relevant demographic information of the individual arrested.
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Uniform Crime Reporting System Arrests 2015
data.ct.gov | Last Updated 2021-03-24T14:36:35.000ZArrests are the number of persons arrested, cited or summoned for all criminal acts in Part I and Part II Crimes for the given jursidiction. "Arrestee" referes to the nature of the crime and age or other relevenat demographic information of the individual arrested.
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Uniform Crime Reporting System Offenses 2013
data.ct.gov | Last Updated 2021-03-24T14:36:33.000ZThe Uniform Crime Reporting Program measures the extent, fluctuation and distribution of crime throughout the United States. After counting Crime Index offenses reported, minus any unfounded complaints, contributors provide the number of “actual offenses” and the number of crimes cleared. For a criminal offense to be “cleared,” either of the following situations must prevail: (1) at least one person is arrested, charged, and turned over to the court for prosecution; or (2) some element beyond police control precludes the physical arrest of the offender (e.g., death of offender, victim refuses to cooperate, confession by offender already in police custody), resulting in the offense being cleared by “exceptional means.” Contributing agencies also include data on the value of property stolen and recovered in connection with the reported offenses, plus specific information regarding homicides, officers assaulted and arson.
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Uniform Crime Reporting System Arrests 2016
data.ct.gov | Last Updated 2021-03-24T14:36:38.000ZArrests are the number of persons arrested, cited or summoned for all criminal acts in Part I and Part II Crimes for the given jurisdiction. "Arrestee" refers to the nature of the crime and age or other relevant demographic information of the individual arrested.
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Uniform Crime Reporting System Arrests in 2010
data.ct.gov | Last Updated 2021-03-24T14:36:39.000ZArrests are the number of persons arrested, cited or summoned for all criminal acts in Part I and Part II Crimes.
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Uniform Crime Reporting System Offenses in 2010
data.ct.gov | Last Updated 2021-03-24T14:36:36.000ZThe Uniform Crime Reporting Program measures the extent, fluctuation and distribution of crime throughout the United States. After counting Crime Index offenses reported, minus any unfounded complaints, contributors provide the number of “actual offenses” and the number of crimes cleared. For a criminal offense to be “cleared,” either of the following situations must prevail: (1) at least one person is arrested, charged, and turned over to the court for prosecution; or (2) some element beyond police control precludes the physical arrest of the offender (e.g., death of offender, victim refuses to cooperate, confession by offender already in police custody), resulting in the offense being cleared by “exceptional means.” Contributing agencies also include data on the value of property stolen and recovered in connection with the reported offenses, plus specific information regarding homicides, officers assaulted and arson.
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Uniform Crime Reporting System Arrests 2011
data.ct.gov | Last Updated 2021-03-24T14:36:35.000ZArrests are the number of persons arrested, cited or summoned for all criminal acts in Part I and Part II Crimes
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Uniform Crime Reporting System Offenses 2011
data.ct.gov | Last Updated 2021-03-24T14:36:32.000ZThe Uniform Crime Reporting Program measures the extent, fluctuation and distribution of crime throughout the United States. After counting Crime Index offenses reported, minus any unfounded complaints, contributors provide the number of “actual offenses” and the number of crimes cleared. For a criminal offense to be “cleared,” either of the following situations must prevail: (1) at least one person is arrested, charged, and turned over to the court for prosecution; or (2) some element beyond police control precludes the physical arrest of the offender (e.g., death of offender, victim refuses to cooperate, confession by offender already in police custody), resulting in the offense being cleared by “exceptional means.” Contributing agencies also include data on the value of property stolen and recovered in connection with the reported offenses, plus specific information regarding homicides, officers assaulted and arson.
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Uniform Crime Reporting System Arrests 2013
data.ct.gov | Last Updated 2021-03-24T14:36:32.000ZArrests are the number of persons arrested, cited or summoned for all criminal acts in Part I and Part II Crimes
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Uniform Crime Reporting System Arrests in 2012
data.ct.gov | Last Updated 2021-03-24T14:36:35.000ZArrests are the number of persons arrested, cited or summoned for all criminal acts in Part I and Part II Crimes