Volume II Of The Ithaca College Policy Manual The College will provide upon request all campus crime statistics as reported tothe United States 2.8.6 Campus Disciplinary Actions and arrests http://www.ithaca.edu/attorney/policies/vol2/Volume_2-20805.htm
Extractions: Policies for the Entire Campus Community Office of Public Safety Security Awareness and Crime Prevention Programs Sexual Offenses Hate Crimes Campus Crime Statistics Campus Disciplinary Actions and Arrests Hate Crime Statistics Drug and Alcohol Policies College AIDS Policy ... Occupational Safety Policies The College will provide upon request all campus crime statistics as reported to the United States Department of Education at http://ope.ed.gov/security/Search.asp and search by "Name of Institution." ( PLEASE NOTE: You must use Internet Explorer to access the campus crime statistics.) Further information related to the campus crime statistics may be obtained by contacting Mr. Robert Holt, Director of Public Safety at 607-274-3353 or the Office of Student Affairs and Campus Life at 607-274-3374. 2.8.6 Campus Disciplinary Actions and Arrests
Crime Statistics Informational Resources for crime Statistics Location Definitions Offense Liquor, Drug, and Weapon Offenses arrests and Judicial Referrals. arrests http://safetyweb.uoregon.edu/safety/crime_stats.htm
Extractions: Directory Jobs Search Sports ... safetyweb.uoregon.edu Informational Resources for Crime Statistics Location Definitions Offense Definitions In compliance with federal law, the University of Oregon prepares an annual report on campus safety, security programs and services. Originally enacted in 1990, the federal law was amended in 1998 and renamed the Jeanne Clery Disclosure of Campus Security Policy and Campus Crime Statistics Act. These tables provide crime statistics as required under this act. These statistics are also available in pamphlet format from our office. For statistics not required under this act, see Other Offense Statistics Offenses by Location Offense Type Year On Campus On-Campus
Security Brochure Text Campus agencies involved in the collection of crime statistics are provided and tabulation of the locations involved in reported crimes and arrests. http://www.utexas.edu/student/vpsa/SecurityBrochure/SecurityText.html
Extractions: The University coordinates the collection and reporting of crime statistics as specified by federal law. Agencies involved in the collection of these data include the University of Texas Police Department (UTPD), the Office of the Dean of Students , the Director of Housing and Food Service , the Director of the University Counseling and Mental Health Center University Health Services Human Resource Services , and the Austin Police Department (APD). In addition, UTPD will follow up all reports of criminal activity in areas under its jurisdiction regardless of the source. Campus agencies involved in the collection of crime statistics are provided guidance annually regarding the requirements of federal law, including the categorization of criminal activities and tabulation of the locations involved in reported crimes and arrests. UTPD, through a cooperative arrangement with APD, obtains relevant crime statistics from the APD database, which provides appropriate crime codes, and the nature, dates, times, and the locations of crimes committed within the City of Austin. The Office of the
Quick Links Administrative Staff Listing Admissions And Records crime Statistics. An informed community is a safetyconscious college community . Reported arrests Made. Liquor Law Violations, 0, 0, 0, 0 http://www.shastacollege.edu/resources/security/crimstat.htm
Extractions: Quick Links... Administrative Staff Listing Admissions and Records Apply Bond Information Bookstore Catalog Class Schedule Department Listing Employment Opportunites Employment-Students Extended Education Fees Financial Aid Fine Arts Calendar Frequently Asked Questions Human Resources Map - Campus Museum Online Courses Registration Schedule Classes Shasta College Home Page Shasta College Foundation Staff Directory Student Employment Transcript Request Form Technology Support University Center Wellness/School Nurse
Extractions: Bureau of Justice Statistics BJS home page On this page: Index of available files Additional data files Related sites Most of these files are in .wk1 format which can be easily read by most spreadsheet and statistical programs, and many word processors. A few of the holdings are a collection of files which are archived into one .zip file to facilitate transfer from the Internet. For more information about how to access these files, see Help for using BJS products
BJRI CRIMINAL JUSTICE STATISTICS RETRIEVAL Index Crimes Reported by Agency, County and Region. Adult arrests by County andRegion. Dispositions of Adult Felony arrests by County and Region http://criminaljustice.state.ny.us/crimnet/ojsa/areastat/areast.htm
Georgia Bureau Of Investigation which could be used in the portrayal of crime in the United States. The Georgia crime Information Center receives monthly crime and arrest reports http://www.ganet.org/gbi/disclucr.html
Extractions: Information The Georgia Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) program is part of a nationwide, cooperative statistical effort administered by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. In the 1920s, the International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP) envisioned the need for statistics on crime in our Nation. A voluntary national data collection effort was developed and initiated in 1930 and is the basis of the current UCR program. There are a variety of statistics which could be used in the portrayal of crime in the United States. These include penal, prosecutive, arrest, offense and conviction data. To best depict total crime and to provide the most meaningful data to police administrators, it was determined that the UCR program would collect data on known offenses and persons arrested. This data is used in law enforcement administration, operation and management, as well as to indicate the fluctuations in the level of crime throughout America. In 1995, the Georgia General Assembly mandated that Georgia law enforcement agencies also collect specific information about Family Violence offenses to include the names, sex, date of birth and relationship of the parties involved; the time, place and date of the incident; whether children were involved or whether the act of family violence was committed in the presence of children; the type and extent of alleged abuse; the existence of substance abuse; the number and types of weapons involved; the existence of any prior court orders; the number of complaints involving persons who have filed previous complaints; the type of police action taken; and any other information that may be pertinent.
SSBR: Crime An index of current FBI crime statistics. The estimated number of arrestsfor drug abuse violations increased from 2002 to 2003. Previous http://www.whitehouse.gov/fsbr/crime.html
Extractions: Provided by Federal Bureau of Investigation as of October 25, 2004. CHART: Violent Crime Rates by Gender Violent Crime Rates by Gender of Victim Violent crime rates declined after 1994 as measured by the National Crime Victimization Survey. Victimization rates for males and females are getting closer in recent years.
Miami University: Documents And Policies Statistics contained in this category may duplicate crimes concurrently reported to The City of Oxford statistics for arrests On Campus and arrests Off http://www.miami.muohio.edu/documents_and_policies/right_to_know/campuscrime/cso
Extractions: * 7 non-verfied sexual assaults are included in the respective geographic locations. a Non-Campus is (1) any building or property owned or controlled by a student organization that is officially recognized by Miami; or (2) any building or property owned or controlled by Miami that is used in direct support of or in relation to, Miami's educational purposes, is frequently used by students, and is not within the same reasonably contiguous geograhic area of Miami. b The city of Oxford provides reports for the entire city of Oxford. The City of Oxford statistics for Criminal Offenses On Campus and Criminal Offenses Off Campus are reported in those categories. Thus, the statistics reported here as Public Property do NOT include City of Oxford Campus or Non-Campus statistics. Miami University owns property throughout the city of Oxford, and during the academic year, the majority of the residents in the City of Oxford are Miami University students. Because our students live, work, and learn throughout the entire Oxford community, Miami University has exceeded the Criminal Offenses Public Property reporting requirements and provided crime statistics for the City of Oxford for 2001, 2002, and 2003.
Crime Arrest Statistics 2004 crime and Arrest Statistics 2003 crime and Arrest Statistics 2002 crimeand Arrest Statistics 2001 crime and Arrest Statistics 2000 crime and http://www.lasd.org/sites/yir9600/
Covering Crime On College Campuses By S. Daniel Carter Article details what campus crime information colleges and universities must If both an arrest and referral are made, only the arrest is counted. http://www.securityoncampus.org/reporters/coveringcrime.html
Extractions: This article originally appeared in the September 2000 issue of "Quill Magazine" a publication of the Society of Professional Journalists. As college and university students go back to school this fall, student and professional journalists will have new tools to access campus crime records. Jeanne Clery New regulations from the U.S. Department of Education (DOE) took effect over the summer and require schools to provide more campus crime information than ever before. The rules will, for the first time, open up some "campus court" records. These rules implement legislation signed into law by President Clinton in 1998 and represent the culmination of nearly a decade of work by a coalition of media and victims' rights groups, led by SPJ and Security On Campus, Inc. (SOC). Representatives of both organizations were involved in the development of the DOEs regulatory language. They served on the "negotiated rulemaking" committee for the campus crime reporting provisions and offered extensive written comment on the language dealing with the release of student disciplinary records involving violent crimes and non-forcible sex offenses. Since 1991, under the federal "Crime Awareness and Campus Security Act," all institutions of higher education, both public and private, that participate in any federal student aid programs have had to report three years worth of campus crime statistics, post security policies and make timely warnings. Many image-conscious schools, however, exploited loopholes in the law to hide crimes or violated it without fear of enforcement.
The Jeanne Clery Act Each school must disclose crime statistics for the campus, unobstructed public areas If both an arrest and referral are made only the arrest is counted. http://www.securityoncampus.org/lawyers/cleryact.html
Extractions: The Jeanne Clery Disclosure of Campus Security Policy and Campus Crime Statistics Act , codified at 20 USC 1092 (f) as a part of the Higher Education Act of 1965 , is a federal law that requires colleges and universities to disclose certain timely and annual information about campus crime and security policies. All public and private institutions of postsecondary education participating in federal student aid programs are subject to it. Violators can be "fined" up to $27,500 by the U.S. Department of Education, the agency charged with enforcement of the Act and where complaints of alleged violations should be made, or face other enforcement action. The Clery Act, originally enacted by the Congress and signed into law by President George Bush in 1990 as the Crime Awareness and Campus Security Act of 1990 , was championed Annual Report- Schools have to publish an annual report every year by October 1st that contains 3 years worth of campus crime statistics and certain security policy statements including sexual assault policies which assure basic victims' rights, the law enforcement authority of campus police and where students should go to report crimes. The report is to be made available automatically to all current students and employees while prospective students and employees are to be notified of its existence and afforded an opportunity to request a copy. Schools can comply using the Internet so long as the required recipients are notified and provided the exact Internet address where the report can be found and paper copies are available upon request. A copy of the statistics must also be provided to the U.S. Department of Education.
Hawaii Attorney General - CPJA: Research & Statistics (For basic UCR statistics on reported Index Crimes by district and beat on Oahu, Domestic ViolenceRelated Murders; Drug Offense arrests in Hawaii, http://www.cpja.ag.state.hi.us/rs/index.shtml
Extractions: Branch publications such as the annual Crime in Hawaii Uniform Crime Report provide critical, comprehensive data and analysis to the Attorney General and other criminal justice agencies and professionals, legislators, crime prevention and community mobilization groups, academic and research institutions, service providers, news media, and the general public. These reports and data provide an objective framework for the consideration of crime problems facing Hawaii. Branch staff also provide technical assistance and serve on several crime-related committees. The Research and Statistics Branch, through the administering of grants from the U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics Justice Research and Statistics Association . The Branch directs the state Uniform Crime Reporting Program in partnership with the Federal Bureau of Investigation and Hawaii's county police departments. Crime In Hawaii - Uniform Crime Reporting Program (For basic UCR statistics on reported Index Crimes by district and beat on Oahu,
MSU Security,Crime Statistics crime statistics are published annually and cover the three previous calendar years . Weapons arrest. 2. 0. 0. Weapons referred to adjudication http://www.mnsu.edu/security/crimestats.html
Friends University - Security - Crime Statistics Hate Crimes, 0, 0, 0. Arrest on Campus, 2001, 2002, 2003. Liquor Law Violations,7*, 7*, 10*. Drug Abuse, 0, 0, 2*. Weapons Possessions, 0, 0, 0 http://www.friends.edu/security/crime_statistics.asp
IRE Data Library || Databases The Clery Act Campus crime statistics from the US Department of ARREST DISCIPLINE The arrest and discipline tables include totals for liquor law http://www.ire.org/datalibrary/databases/campus/
A Report Of The Three Most Recent Years' Crime Statistics 4) Legislation did not require colleges to break out the arrest statistics inresidence halls from the overall oncampus crime statistics for 1997 and 1998. http://police.ua.edu/csr/three.html
Extractions: Campus Security Report Home About the University Police Community Oriented Police Safer Living Guide ... Police Home Since 1990, in accordance with the federal regulations of the Campus Security Act, The University of Alabama has published both crime statistics for the three most recent calendar years and UA security policies in the annual Safer Living Guide . This guide was distributed each year to current UA employees and students and was also made available to prospective employees and students. (This guide now introduces our prospective and current students, faculty, and staff to the general procedures for reporting crimes both on and off campus and includes tips on preventing theft of property and crimes of violence, including physical and sexual assaults.) In October 2000, The University of Alabama began publishing campus crime statistics and UA security policies in the Annual Campus Security Report, available on the Web at safety.ua.edu. Printed copies of the Annual Campus Security Report are available to any member of the community or interested party by e-mailing ua.police@ua.edu
Data & Statistics Offense Data Arrest Data Domestic Violence Data Officer Data Florida IndexCrime by Jurisdiction 19962004 PDF (Excel File, 837 KB) http://www.fdle.state.fl.us/FSAC/data_statistics.asp
Extractions: Note: Florida has adopted a "Forcible Sex Offense" category that is not used at the Federal level. Florida's Forcible Sex Offenses (FSO) include forcible rape, attempted rape, forcible sodomy, and forcible fondling. Users of this site will note that various reports will use either a Forcible Rape or a FSO category in Index Offenses. When Forcible Rape is presented it includes rape and attempted rape only while forcible sodomy and forcible fondling are included in aggravated assault. Note: Dade County was renamed "Miami-Dade County" in 1997. All county and jurisdictional data 1998 to date reflects this change. This change affects the alphabetical order of Miami-Dade County. Please note this change when downloading time series data earlier than 1998.
Welcome To The Florida Department Of Law Enforcement services to prevent, investigate, and solve crimes while protecting citizens . The 2005 Florida Statute Tables, both the Arrest and Clerk versions, http://www.fdle.state.fl.us/
Extractions: Crime Information Domestic Security ... More... FDLE Headlines Last Update: 9/20/05 11:34:46 AM Find out how to get FDLE Headlines automatically! Authorities are currently investigating a series of armed bank robberies that have occurred involving the same suspect. Read more... Recently we've received a number of inquiries regarding the implementation of this legislation, particularly as it relates to the background check requirements for individuals with access to school district campuses. Read more... IMPORTANT NOTICE: The State Officer Certification Examination on Wednesday, September 21st, in Ft. Lauderdale, will be administered as scheduled.