I wrote “What Groups Are Victimized the Most By Crime? Crime’s Shifting Landscape” based on new crime patterns. Anyone paying attention to crime data over decades knows that crime patterns shift or change.
The fundamental question is whether significant declines in violent and property crime, as recorded by the FBI, the media, and independent analysts for 2024 and 2025, are actual drops or are criminals shifting to easier, more profitable crimes?
Most of us have a hard time envisioning non-sofisticated street-level criminals turning to identity theft and fraud. It takes little skill to get a handgun and engage in a robbery. It takes even less to go through unlocked doors and windows (or breaking them) to commit a burglary. Are criminals embracing new, safer, and more profitable endeavors?
We know that the vast majority of what we call crime isn’t reported to law enforcement. We know that the great majority of reported crimes do not involve an arrest. We know that a significant number of arrests are not prosecuted, and the great majority of prosecuted crimes involve plea bargains with multiple dropped charges. We know that the great majority of those who get prison (most convicted felons do not) serve a short period of incarceration.
With all available federal statistics above from the Bureau of Justice Statistics of the USDOJ, it seems that criminals get away with most crimes with limited consequences.
So why change from street-level crimes to those requiring knowledge, partners, and sophistication? I interviewed hundreds of criminal offenders throughout my career and reviewed lots of criminal histories. I wasn’t impressed with their modus operandi (their method of operations). Their crimes seemed crude and without skill. Are they really transitioning to digital and additional forms of property crimes?
Why Change? Because Risks Are Fewer and Payoffs Are Greater
The bottom line is that the vast majority of the crimes listed below are not reported to law enforcement, and the vast majority of reported crimes are unsolved. The shift goes beyond digital events.
USA Today: Scammers and cybercriminals stole a record total of $16.6 billion from Americans in 2024, marking a 33% increase in losses from 2023, the FBI said in a new report on April 23. Per the Bureau of Justice Statistics, only 7 percent are reported.
The Hill (the newspaper of Congress) addressed cargo theft. The average value of each cargo theft is more than $200,000, and according to the National Insurance Crime Bureau, there has been a 1,500 percent increase in cargo theft incidents since 2021. Total cargo theft losses increased by 27 percent in 2024 and are projected to rise another 22 percent in 2025.
Retail shrink (shoplifting-organized attacks) hit $94.5 billion in 2021, a 53% jump from 2019, according to the National Retail Federation’s annual survey, CNN. According to the National Retail Federation, $112.1 billion in losses were attributed to shrinkage, mostly theft and organized retail crime (ORC)—in 2022, a 19% increase over the year before. Most retailers will not confront shoplifters.
There are 120 million porch package thefts in the US. The survey indicated that there are far more porch pirate thefts than total reported property crimes to the FBI. The financial toll of these thefts is $16 billion. Very few are solved.
A growing number of firearms are being stolen from parked cars, especially in urban areas, according to a new report that highlights a frequently overlooked source of illegally circulating guns. The number of guns reported stolen from vehicles increased by 31% over five years. In large urban areas, the overall gun theft rate jumped by 42% between 2018 and 2022. Very few are solved.
Reported Crimes
Approximately 80 percent of what we call crime are property events. Larcenies, burglaries, and vehicle thefts may be down nationally, based on the 30 percent of property crimes reported to law enforcement per the Bureau of Justice Statistics. Still, it’s more than possible for total property crimes to be up based on the examples above because of underreporting. Either they are counted in seperate reports by the FBI or the National Crime Victimization Survey or not counted at all.
See More
See more articles on crime and justice at Crime in America.
Most Dangerous Cities/States/Countries at Most Dangerous Cities.
US Crime Rates at Nationwide Crime Rates.
National Offender Recidivism Rates at Offender Recidivism.
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