US. Department of Justice Office of Justice Programs Bureau of Justice Statistics fter rising from 1.1 million in 2015 to 1.4 An in 2018, the number of persons who were victims of violent crime excluding simple assault dropped to 1.2 million in 2019. This is the first statistically significant decrease in the number of persons who were victims of violent crime excluding simple assault since 2015, and it corresponds with a decline in September 2020, NCJ 255113 Criminal Victimization, 2019 Rachel E. Morgan, Ph.D., and Jennifer L. Truman, Ph.D., BJS Statisticians the number of victims of rape or sexual assault from 2018 to 2019. Based on the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS), the nation’s largest crime survey, the portion of U.S. residents age 12 or older who were victims of one or more violent crimes excluding simple assault declined from 0.50% (about 1 in 200 persons) in 2018 to 0.44% (about 1 in 230 persons) in 2019, a 12% decrease (figure 1). FIGURE 1 Percent of U.S. residents age 12 or older who were victims of violent crime excluding simple assault 1993-2019 —_—_—_ "93: "95 ‘oo 05 “10 15 aL 2015-2019 Percent 0.6 05 ou tp 03 02 0.1 5 "16 a “18 19 Note: Estimates include 95% confidence intervals. See table 18 for definitions and appendix table 1 for estimates and standard errors. Estimates for 2006 should not be compared to other years and are excluded from the 1993-2019 figure. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 1993-2019. HIGHLIGHTS ® The rate of violent crime excluding simple assault declined 15% from 2018 to 2019, from 8.6 to 7.3 victimizations per 1,000 persons age 12 or older. = Among females, the rate of violent victimization excluding simple assault fell 27% from 2018 to 2019. = There were 880,000 fewer victims of serious crimes (generally felonies) in 2019 than in 2018, a 19% drop. ® From 2018 to 2019, 29% fewer black persons and 22% fewer white persons were victims of serious crimes. ® The rate of violent victimization in urban areas— based on the NCVS's new classifications of urban, suburban, and rural areas—declined 20% from 2018 to 2019. = Based on the 2019 survey, less than half (41%) of violent victimizations were reported to police. = The percentage of violent victimizations reported to police was lower for white victims (37%) than for black (49%) or Hispanic victims (49%). = The portion of violent incidents involving black offenders (25%) was 2.3 times the portion involving black victims (11%), while the portion involving Asian offenders (1.0%) was 0.4 times the portion involving Asian victims (2.3%). = The rate of property crime declined 6% from 2018 (108.2 victimizations per 1,000 households) to 2019 (101.4 per 1,000). = The percentage of households that were burglarized declined to the lowest level since the NCVS was redesigned in 1993. Ms ing BJS4Q mn 3502-022 Page | of 53 EFTA_00001547 EFTA00156888

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The percentage of households that experienced burglary (0.82%), which is unlawful or forcible entry or attempted entry of places in connection with a completed or attempted theft, was the lowest since the NCVS was redesigned in 1993, After peaking in 1994 (2.89%), this type of crime has generally declined over time, hitting a new low in 2019 (figure 2).! The burglary prevalence rate fell 23% from 2018 to 2019. The NCVS is a self-reported survey administered annually from January 1 to December 31. Annual NCVS estimates are based on the number and characteristics of crimes respondents experienced during the prior 6 months, not including the month in which they were interviewed. Therefore, the 2019 survey covers crimes experienced from July 1, 2018 to November 30, 2019, and March 15, 2019 is the middle of the reference period. Crimes are classified by the year of the survey and not by the year of the crime. NCVS data can be used to produce— = Prevalence estimates: The number or percentage of unique persons who were crime victims, or of unique households that experienced crime. ® Victimization estimates: The total number of times that people or households were victimized by crime. For personal crimes, the number of victimizations is the number of victims of that crime. Each crime against a household is counted as having a single victim—the affected household. = Incident estimates: The number of specific criminal acts involving one or more victims. (See Measurement of crime in the National Crime Victimization Survey, page 29.) 'n this report, significance is reported at both the 90% and 95% confidence levels. See figures and tables for testing on specific findings. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 FIGURE 2 Percent of U.S. households who were victims of burglary, 1993-2019 Percent 35 3.0 25 20 1s - 1.0 05 0.0 93 "95 ‘00 “05 “10 5 ‘19 Note: Estimates include 95% confidence intervals. Burglary is the unlawful or forcible entry or attempted entry of including a permanent residence, other residence (e.g., a hotel room or vacation residence), or other structure (e.g., a garage or shed) where there was a completed or attempted theft. See apy ix table 2 for estimates and standard errors. Estimates for 2006 should not be compared to other years and are excluded from this figure (see Criminal Victimization, 2007 (NCJ 224390, BJS, December 2008). Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 1993-2019. 3502-022 Page 2 of 53 EFTA_00001548 EFTA00156889

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Victimization estimates Victimizations reflect the total number of times that people or households were victimized by crime. From 1993 to 2019, the rate of violent victimization FIGURE 3 Rate of violent victimization excluding simple assault and rate of violent victimization reported to police, excluding simple assault, 1993-2019 excluding simple assault declined 75%, from 29.1 to fate Per 1,000 persons age 12 or older 7.3 victimizations per 1,000 persons age 12 or older (figure 3).* (Simple assault is the category of violent 30 victimization captured by the NCVS that is least likely to be prosecuted as a felony.) Similarly, the rate of violent ub victimization reported to police, excluding simple Violent victimizations, excluding simple assault assault, declined 77% during this period, from 14.9 to 20 3.4 victimizations reported to police per 1,000 persons 5 age 12 or older. 0 = The rate of violent victimization excluding simple NAAN assault decreased from 2018 to 2019 5 ARERR Violent victimizations reported to police, excl i ssault After increasing 27% from 2015 to 2018 (from 6.8 to 8.6 0 . sre Police, excluding simple a 93 '95 “00 “05 ‘10 15 19 victimizations per 1,000 persons age 12 or older), the rate of violent victimization excluding simple assault declined 15% in 2019 (to 7.3 per 1,000) (table 1). This decrease was driven partly by a decline in rape or sexual assault victimizations, which declined from 2.7 per 1,000 persons age 12 or older in 2018 to 1.7 per 1,000 in 2019. 2Violent crime excluding simple assault was called serious violent crime in NCVS reports prior to Criminal Victimization, 2018. Note: Estimates include 95% confidence intervals. See appendix table 3 for estimates and standard errors. Estimates for 2006 should not be compared to other years and are excluded from this figure (see Criminal Victimization, 2007 (NCJ 224390, BJS, December 2008)). Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 1993-2019. TABLE 1 Number and rate of violent victimizations, by type of crime, 2015-2019 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019" Rate per r Rate per Rate per Rate te ber Type of violent crime Number 1,000# Number Number 1,000? Number 1 Number — 1,000° Violent crime® 5,006,620¢ 18.6 5,353,820 19.7 5,612,670 206 6385520 232 5813410 9 21.0 Rape/sexual assault 431840 «16 298.410¢ 1.1F 393,980 14 734630f 27t 459,310 7 Robbery 578580 2.1 458810 17 613,40 23 573,100 21 534,420 19 Assault 3,996,200t 148+ 4,596,600 16.9 4,604,850 169 5,077,790 184 4819680 174 Aggravated assault 816,760¢ 3.0 1040580 38 993,170 36 1,058,040 3.8 1,019,490 37 Simple assault 3,179,440¢ 118 3,556,020 13.1 3,611,680 133 4019750 146 3,800,190 = 13.7 Violent crime e: simple assaul 1,827,170 6.8 1,797,790 6.6 2,000,990 7.3 2365770 86t 2,013,220 73 Note: Details may not sum to totals due to rounding. Violent-crime categories include rape or sexual assault, rob! assault, and they include threatened, attempted, and completed occurrences of aggravated assa assault, and simple ly significant differences may vary teal those crimes. Year-to-year statis from those previously reported. Previously, BJS created standard errors and presented testing for statistically significant differences among National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) estimates in this table using generalized variance function parameters, while this table uses the Balanced Repeated Replication method. See Methodology for more information on the differences between these methods of variance estimation. See appendix table 5 for standard errors. *Comparison year. +Difference with comparison year is significant at the 95% confidence level. +Difference with comparison year is significant at the 90% confidence level. Rate is per 1,000 persons age 12 or older. See appendix table 34 for population numbers. Judes homicide because the NCVS is based on interviews with victims. “See Methodology for details on the measurement of rape or sexual assault in the NCVS. dincludes rape or sexual assault, robbery, and aggravated assault; this category was called serious violent crime prior to Criminal Victimization, 2018. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2015-2019. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 3 3502-022 Page 3 of 53 EFTA_00001549 EFTA00156890

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From 2018 to 2019, there was no statistically significant Rates of property victimization decreased from 2018 change in the rate of total violent victimization, which to 2019 includes simple assault. Based on the 2019 survey, about - _ 65% of total violent victimizations were simple assault, ‘The 2019 survey found that an estimated 12.8 million with the remaining 35% being rape or sexual assault, US. households exper jenced one or more property robbery, or aggravated assault. There were no statistically _Victimizations, which include burglaries, residential significant changes in the rates of robbery, aggravated trespassing, motor-vehicle thefts, and other thefts assault, or simple assault from 2018 to 2019. (table 2). After remaining relatively stable from 2017 (108.4 victimizations per 1,000 households) to 2018 (108.2 per 1,000), the property-crime victimization TABLE 2 Number and rate of property victimizations, by type of crime, 2015-2019 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019* Rate Rate Rate Rate Rate per Type of property crime © Number 1 000 Number 1, Number 1 ‘0008 Number 1 000" Number 1008" Total 14,611,040 110.7 15,815,310 1186t 13,340,220 1084t 13,502,.840f 1082¢ 12,818,000 1014 Burglary/trespassing? 2904570 220t 3,160,450 23.7 2,538,170t 206 2,639,620¢ = 21.1f 2,178,400 17.2 Burglary“ 2,020,730 153t 2205180 165t 1688890 = 13.7 1,867,620f 15.0t 1,484,730 117 Trespassing? 883,850 = 67+ 955,270 =72t 849,280¢ 69T 772,000 62 693,670 58 Motor-vehicle theft 564,160 43 618330 46 516,810 42 534,010 43 495,670 39 Other theft® 11142310 844 12,036,530 93t 10,285,240 83.6 10,329.210 827 10,143,930 80.2 Note: Details may not sum to totals due to rounding. Categories include threatened, attempted, and completed crimes. The number of property crimes should not be compared from 2017, 2018, or 2019 to 2016 or 2015, as the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) household weighting adjustment was updated for 2017 onward, which decreased the number of estimated households by about 8%. Property crime rates are unaffected by this change. See Methodology for details. Year-to-year statistically significant differences may vary from those previously reported. Previously, BJS created standard errors and presented testing for statistically significant differences among NCVS estimates in this table using generalized variance function parameters, while this table uses the Balanced Repeated Replication method. See Methodology for more information. See appendix table 6 for standard errors. *Comparison year. Difference with comparison year is significant at the 95% confidence level. Difference with comparison year is significant at the 90% confidence level. Rate is per 1,000 households. See appendix table 35 for number of households. ®Called household burglary prior to Criminal Victimization, 2018. Includes unlawful or forcible entry or attempted entry of places, including a permanent residence, other residence {e.g., a hotel room or vacation residence), or other structure (e.g., a garage or ), but does not include trespassing on land. includes only crimes where the offender committed or attempted a theft. Estimates differ from those previously published in the Criminal Victimization, 2018 report because a coding error that affected the generation of those earlier estimates has been corrected. includes crimes where the offender did not commit or attempt a theft. Does not include trespassing on land. Estimates differ from those previously published in the Criminal Victimization, 2018 report because a coding error that affected the generation of those earlier estimates has been corrected. *Includes other unlawful taking or attempted unlawful taking of property or cash without personal contact with the victim. Incidents involving theft of property from within the same household would classify as theft if the offender has a legal right to be in the house (such as a maid, delivery person, or guest). If the offender has no legal right to be in the house, the incident would classify as a burglary. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2015-2019. NCVS methods of variance estimation For surveys with complex sample designs, such as the direct-variance estimation, and continues to present other NCVS, several methods can be used to estimate the victimization and incidence estimates using GVFs (except magnitude of sampling error associated with an estimate. for totals in tables 4, 9, 24, and 25 that are also presented In previous reports, BJS has used both generalized in tables 1 and 2, and statistics in table 12 that are based variance function (GVF) parameters and direct-variance on the new classification of urban, suburban, and rural estimation for generating standard errors and testing areas). The Taylor Series Linearization (TSL) method, statistically significant differences between NCVS another form of direct-variance estimation, continues estimates. Compared to GVFs, direct-variance estimation to be used to generate standard errors for prevalence is generally considered more accurate in approximating estimates. BJS has an active research program on direct- the true variance. variance estimation that seeks to improve the quality This year's bulletin presents tables 1 and 2 using the and accuracy of NCVS estimates. See Methodology for Balanced Repeated Replication (BRR) method, a form of more details. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 4 3502-022 Page 4 of 53 EFTA_00001550 EFTA00156891

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rate declined 6% from 2018 (108.2 per 1,000) to 2019 (101.4 per 1,000). This decline was partly due to a 22% decrease in burglary (15.0 to 11.7 burglaries per 1,000 households). As with the prevalence of burglary, this was the lowest observed rate of burglary victimization since the NCVS was redesigned in 1993. There were nearly 1.2 million domestic-violence victimizations The rate of domestic violence, which includes a subset of violent victimizations that were committed by intimate partners or family members, was 4.2 victimizations per 1,000 persons age 12 or older, based on the 2019 survey (table 3). This was not a statistically significant change from the rate in 2018 (4.8 per 1,000). There were also no statistically significant changes in the rates of intimate-partner violence, stranger violence, violent crime involving injury, and violent crime involving a weapon, from 2018 to 2019. The rate of completed violent victimization decreased from 2018 to 2019 The NCVS measures completed, attempted, and threatened violent victimizations experienced by persons age 12 or older. From 2018 to 2019, the rate of completed violent victimizations decreased from 6.9 victimizations per 1,000 persons to 5.5 per 1,000 (table 4). There was no statistically significant change in the rate of attempted or threatened violent victimization from 2018 to 2019. TABLE 3 TABLE 4 Number and rate of violent victimizations, by selected Rate of completed, attempted, and threatened violent characteristics of violent crime, 2018 and 2019 victimizations, 2015-2019 2018 2019" Violent victimizations 2015-2016 = 2017S 2018 = 2019* Selected characteristics of Rate per Rate per Total? 186 197 206 232 210 violent crime Number 1,000? Number 1,0007 Completed 60 51 56 69% 55 Domestic violence” 1,333,050 48 1,164,540 4.2 Attempted 64 60 68 72 70 Intimate partner violence® 847,230 3.1 695,060 25 Threatened 61t 85 82 92 «85 Stranger violence? 2,493,750 9.1 2,254,740 8.1 Note: Details may not sum to totals due to rounding. Rate is per 1,000 Violent crime involving injury 1,449,530 5.3 1,265,680 46 persons age 12 or older. See appendix table 34 for population numbers. Violent crime involving a Violent-victimization categories include rape or sexual assault, robbery, weapon 1,329,700 48 1,119,060 4.0 aggravated assault, and simple assault. See appendix table 8 for Note: Details may not sum to totals due to rounding. Violent-crime = rd erro s. categories include rape or sexual assault, robbery, aggravated assault, and omparison year. . oo simple assault. They also include threatened, attempted, and completed +Difference with comparison year is significant at the 95% occurrences of those crimes. Other violent-crime categories in this table, confidence level. induding domestic violence and violent crime involving injury, are not Difference with comparison year is significant at the 90% mutually exclusive from these categories or from each other. See appendix confidence level. table 7 for standard errors. Statistically significant differences for the total victimization rates are *Comparison year. presented using the Balanced Repeated Replication method. Generalized Rate is tper 1,000 persons age 12 or older. See appendix table 34 for population numbers. Includes the subset of violent victimizations that were committed by intimate partners or family members. “includes the subset of domestic-violence victimizations that were committed by intimate partners, which include current or former spouses, boyfriends, or girlfriends. includes the subset of violent victimizations that were committed by someone unknown to the victim. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2018 and 2019. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 variance function parameters were used to calculate statistically significant differences for the rest of the table. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2015-2019. 3502-022 Page 5 of 53 EFTA_00001551 EFTA00156892

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The Uniform Crime Reporting program and the National Crime Victimization Survey together provide a complementary picture of crime in the U.S. The Bureau of Justice Statistics’ National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) measures crime reported and not reported to police. The Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) program, administered by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), measures only crime recorded by police. In 2018, the UCR reported that 3.7 total violent crimes (including murder and non-negligent manslaughter, rape, robbery, and aggravated assault) per 1,000 residents and 22.0 property crimes (including burglary and motor-vehicle theft) per 1,000 residents were known to law enforcement (table 5). The 2018 NCVS estimated that 4.3 violent crimes excluding simple assault per 1,000 persons age 12 or older, and 36.9 property crimes per 1,000 households, were reported to law enforcement. The 2019 NCVS estimated that 3.4 violent crimes excluding simple assault per 1,000 persons age 12 or older, and 33.0 property crimes per 1,000 households, were reported to law enforcement? Because the NCVS and the UCR measure an overlapping, but not identical, set of offenses and use different approaches in measuring them, complete congruity should not be expected between estimates from these two sources. Restricting the NCVS to violent crime reported to police, and excluding simple assault, keeps the measures as similar as possible. However, significant methodological and definitional differences remain between how these violent crimes are measured in the NCVS and the UCR: ® The UCR includes murder, non-negligent manslaughter, and commercial crimes (including burglary of commercial establishments), while the NCVS excludes those crime types. The UCR excludes sexual assault, which the NCVS includes.4 The UCR property-crime rates are per person, while the NCVS's are per household. (There were 2.2 persons age 12 or older per household in 2019.) Moreover, because the number of households may not grow at the same rate each year as the total population, trend data for rates of property crimes measured by the two programs may not be entirely comparable. 32019 UCR data had not been publicly released at the time this report was published. 4Sexual assault includes a range of victimizations and is separate from rape or attempted rape. Sexual assault includes attacks or threatened attacks involving unwanted sexual contact between victim and offender, with or without force; grabbing or fondling; and verbal threats. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 TABLES Rates of crime reported to police in the Uniform Crime Reporting program and in the National Crime Victimization Survey, 2018 and 2019 Rate ‘per 1,000 persons 2018 UCR rate per _49¢ 12 or older Type of crime 1,000 residents? 2018NCVS 2019NCVS Violent crime excluding simple assault 3.69 429 3.38 Murder 0.05 ~ ~ Rape/sexual assault® 043 0.66 056 Robbery 0.86 130 050 Aggravated assault 247 232 1.92 2018 UCR rate per Rate per 1,000 households 1,000 residents* 2018 NCVS_2019NCVS Property crime 21.99 36.89 33.00 Burglary“ 3.76 71 6.03 Motor-vehicle theft 229 3.36 3.12 Note: National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) and Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) program crime rates are calculated differently. UCR crime rates are normally reported per 100,000 persons but were recalculated for this report to align with the reporting of NCVS crime rates. See appendix table 9 for standard errors. ~Not applicable. Includes crimes against populations not included in the NCVS: persons age 11 or younger, persons who are homeless, persons who are institutionalized, and crimes against commercial establishments. 5 The NCVS estimate includes sexual assault; the UCR does not. The UCR estimate is based on its revised definition of rape. See Methodology for details on the measurement of rape or sexual assault in the NCVS. The UCR defines burglary as forcible entry, unlawful entry where no force is used, or attempted forcible entry of a structure to commit a felony or theft. The NCVS defines burglary as the unlawful or forcible entry or attempted entry of places, including a permanent residence, other residence (e.g., a hotel room or vacation residence), or other structure (e.g., a garage or shed), where there was a completed or attempted theft. NCVS estimates differ from those previously published in the Criminal Victimization, 2018 report because a coding error that affected the generation of those earlier estimates has been corrected. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2018 and 2019, and Federal Bureau of Investigation, Crime in the United States, 2018, https://ucr.fbi.gov/crime-in-the-u.s/2018/crime-in-the- us.-2018/topic-pages/tables/table-1. Continued on next page 3502-022 Page 6 of 53 EFTA_00001552 EFTA00156893

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The Uniform Crime Reporting program and the National Crime Victimization Survey together provide a complementary picture of crime in the U.S. (continued) = NCVS estimates are based on interviews with a nationally representative sample of persons in U.S. households. UCR estimates are based on counts of crimes recorded by law enforcement agencies and are weighted to compensate for incomplete reporting. = The NCVS does not measure crimes against persons who are homeless or who live in institutions (e.g., nursing homes and correctional institutions) or on military bases. Also, it does not measure crimes against children age 11 or younger. The UCR measures crimes against all U.S. residents, including crimes against children age 11 or younger. In some states mandatory CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 reporting laws require that persons report certain crimes against youth. Due to these factors, the age distribution of crimes measured in the UCR differs from that of the NCVS. Taken together, these two measures of crime provide amore comprehensive picture of crime in the U.S. For additional information about the differences between the NCVS and UCR, see The Nation's Two Crime Measures (NCJ 246832, BJS, September 2014). 3502-022 Page 7 of 53 EFTA_00001553 EFTA00156894

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About 2 out of 5 violent victimizations were reported to police in 2019 The NCVS provides statistics on crimes reported and not reported to police and on the reasons why a crime was not reported to police. Victims may not report a crime for a variety of reasons, including fear of reprisal or getting the offender in trouble, believing that police would not or could not do anything to help, and believing the crime to be a personal issue or too trivial to report. Reporting to police may occur during or immediately following a criminal incident or at a later date. Police may be notified by the victim, a third party managers), or police may have been at the scene of the incident. Based on the 2019 survey, 41% of violent victimizations were reported to police, which was not a statistically significant change from 2018 (43%) (table 6). About a third (33%) of property victimizations were reported to police in 2019. There were some statistically significant changes from 2018 to 2019 by type of crime reported to police. ‘The percentages of robbery (from 63% to 47%) and other theft (from 29% to 27%) reported to police declined during this period, while the percentage of intimate partner violence reported to police increased, (including witnesses, other victims, household members, from 45% to 58%. or other officials, such as school officials or workplace TABLE 6 Percent and rate of victimizations reported to police, by type of crime, 2018 and 2019 Percent of victimizations reported to police Rate of victimizations reported to police per 1,000# Type of crime 2018 2019* 2018 2019* Violent crime® 42.6% 40.9% 99 86 Rape/sexual assault® 249 339 07 06 Robbery 626+ 46.6 13 09 Assault 430 40.9 79 71 ‘Aggravated assault 605 52.1 23 19 Simple assault 384 379 56 5.2 Violent crime excluding simple assault? 49.9% 46.5% 43 34 Selected characteristics of violent crime Domestic violence® 47.0% 52.2% 23 22 Intimate partner violencef 450+ 58.4 14 15 Stranger violence? 445 39.9 40 33 Violent crime involving injury 543 495 29 23 Violent crime involving a weapon 60.3 52.4 293 24 Property crime 34.1% 325% 369t 33.0 Burglary/trespassing" 466 485 99t 83 Burglary! 415 514 Te 6.0 Trespassing! 445 422 28 23 Motor-vehicle theft 786 79.5 34 31 Other theft* 28.64 268 237 215 Note: Violent-crime categories include rape or sexual assault, robbery, aggravated assault, and simple assault, and they include threatened, attempted, and completed occurrences of those crimes. Other violent-crime categories in this table, including domestic violence and violent crime involving injury, are not mutually exclusive from these categories or from each other. See appendix table 10 for standard errors. "Comparison year. Difference with comparison year is significant at the 95% confidence level. #Difference with comparison year is significant at the 90% confidence level. ®Rates are per 1,000 persons age 12 or okder for violent crime reported to police and per 1,000 households for property crime reported to police. See appendix table 34 for population numbers and appendix table 35 for number of households. ‘xcludes homicide because the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) is based on interviews with victims. See Methodology for details on the measurement of rape or sexual assault in the NCVS. includes rape or sexual assault, robbery, and aggravated assault; this category was called serious violent crime prior to Criminat Victimization, 2018. includes the subset of violent victimizations that were committed by intimate partners or family members. fincludes the subset of domestic-violence victimizations that were committed by intimate partners, which include current or former spouses, boyfriends, or girlfriends. includes the subset of violent victimizations that were committed by someone unknown to the victim. Called household burglary prior to Criminal Victimization, 2018. Includes unlawful or forcible entry or attem empted entry of places, including a permanent residence, other residence (e.g. a hotel room or vacation residence), or other structure (e.g., a garage or shed), but does not include trespassing on land. includes onty crimes where the offender committed or attempted a theft. Estimates differ from those previously published in the Criminal Victimization, 2018 report because a coding error that affected the generation of those earlier estimates has been corrected. Jincludes crimes where the offender did not commit or attempt a theft. Does not include trespassing on land. Estimates differ from those previously lished in the Criminal Victimization, 2018 mech becuse a coding error that affected the generation of those earlier estimates has been corrected. ncludes the taking or attempted unlaveful taking or cash without personal contact with the victim. Incidents involving theft of property from within the same household would classify as pert the offender has a legal right to be in the house (such as a maid, delivery person, or quest). If the offender has no legal right to be in the house, the incident would classify as a burglary. 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The rate of unreported violent crime increased from 2015 to 2019 From 2018 to 2019, there were no statistically significant changes in the rate of reported or unreported violent crime (whether completed, attempted, or threatened) (table 7). While the rate of total violent crime (whether completed, attempted, or threatened) reported to police was 8.6 victimizations reported per 1,000 persons age 12 or older in both 2015 and 2019, the rate of unreported violent crime increased from 9.5 per 1,000 persons in 2015 to 12.1 per 1,000 in 2019. During this same period, Assistance from a victim-service agency was received for 8% of violent victimizations Victim-service agencies are public or private organizations that provide help to victims. Based on the 2019 survey, assistance from a victim-service agency was received in 8% of violent victimizations (table 8). This was a decline from the percentage in 2018 (11%). The percentage of violent victimizations committed by an intimate partner for which victims received assistance from a victim-service agency increased from 18% in 2018 to 26% in 2019. the rate of both reported (from 2.2 per 1,000 to 3.1 per 1,000) and unreported (from 3.6 per 1,000 to 5.3 per 1,000) threatened crime increased. TABLE7 Rate of violent victimization reported and not reported to police, by completed, attempted, and threatened crimes, 2015-2019 Rate of reported crime per 1,000? Rate of unreported crime per 1,000? Violent crime 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019° 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019* Total 8.6 86 92 99 86 95t 10.8 109 12.9 121 Completed 33 25 28 33 25 26 26 26 35 28 Attempted 31 26 29 32 29 33 33 38 38 40 Threatened 22¢ 3.6 35 34 31 36+ 49 45 5.6 53 Note: Details may not sum to totals due to rounding and missing data. Violent-crime categories include rape or sexual assault, robbery, aggravated assault, and simple assault. Each year between 2015 and 2019, whether the crime was reported to police or not was unknowm at a rate of 0.3 to 0.5 victimizations per 1,000 persons age 12 or older. See appendix table 11 for standard errors. “Comparison year. +Difference with comparison year is significant at the 95% confidence level. Difference with comparison year is significant at the 90% confidence level. Rate is per 1,000 persons age 12 or older. See appendix table 34 for population numbers. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2015-2019. TABLES Percent of violent victimizations for which victims received assistance from a victim-service agency, by type of crime, 2018 and 2019 Type of crime 2018 2019" Violent crime? 10.6% f 1% Violent crime excluding simple assault 128 108 Simple assault o4t 6.0 Intimate partner violence 18.1% ¢ 26.1% Violent crime involving injury 14.7% 17.9% Violent crime involving a weapon 112% 7.1% Note: See appendix table 12 for standard errors. “Comparison year. Difference with comparison year is significant at the 95% confidence level. Difference with comparison year is significant at the 90% confidence level. includes rape or sexual assault, robbery, aggravated assault, and simple assault. Includes threatened, attempted, and completed occurrences of those crimes. Excludes homicide because the National Crime Victimization Survey is based on interviews with victims. Dincludes rape or sexual assault, robbery, and aggravated assault; this category was called serious violent crime prior to Criminal Victimization, 2018. includes the subset of domestic-violence victimizations that were committed by intimate partners, which include current or former spouses, boyfriends, or girlfriends. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2018 and 2019. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 3502-022 Page 9 of 53 EFTA_00001555 EFTA00156896

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Rates of violent victimization decreased across some demographic characteristics from 2018 to 2019 From 2018 to 2019, the rate of violent victimization decreased from 24.7 victimizations per 1,000 white persons age 12 or older to 21.0 per 1,000 (table 9). Among Asians, the rate of violent victimization declined from 16.2 per 1,000 in 2018 to 7.5 per 1,000 in 2019. During this same period, the rate of violent victimization also decreased for persons ages 25 to 34 (from 31.8 to 25.0 victimizations per 1,000) and ages 35 to 49 from (25.2 to 19.5 per 1,000). Among divorced persons, the rate of violent victimization decreased from 39.1 per 1,000 in 2018 to 28.5 per 1,000 in 2019. Among females, the rate of violent victimization excluding simple assault decreased from 9.6 victimizations per 1,000 females age 12 or older in 2018 to 7.0 per 1,000 in 2019. From 2018 to 2019, the rate of violent crime excluding simple assault also decreased for persons ages 35 to 49 (from 9.8 to 6.7 victimizations per 1,000). For those living in households where income was less than $25,000 a year, the rate decreased from 19.0 to 14.2 victimizations per 1,000 persons age 12 or older. In the same period, the rate of violent crime excluding simple assault for those living in households earning more than $200,000 a year increased from 3.0 to 7.0 per 1,000. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 TABLE 9 Rate of violent victimization, by type of crime and demographic characteristics of victims, 2018 and 2019 Violent victimization Total violent excluding simple Victim demographic victimization* assal characteristic 2018 ~——-2019* 2018 2019* Total 23.2 21.0 86t 73 Sex Male 221 21.2 75 75 Female 243 208 96 70 Race/ethnicity White? 247% 21.0 82 65 Black4 204 18.7 10.0 70 Hispanic 186 213 a5 102 Asian? 162¢ 75 56 19! Otherde 49.2 663 205 209 Age 1217 342 35.2 10.1 1.0 18-24 359 37.2 163 160 25-34 318% 25.0 NB ag 35-49 252% = 195 98¢ 67 50-64 183 189 64 56 65 or alder 65 60 23 19 Marital status Never married 335 312 12.9 ng Married 124 ie) 41 30 Widow/widower 125 10.7 43 49 Divorced 391t 285 148 107 Separated 582 641 208 195 Household income Lessthan $25,000 408 378 190% 142 $25,000-$49,999 235 19.7 93 75 $50,000-$99,999 165 166 47 55 $100,000-5199,999 19.2 16.2 58 39 $200,000 ormore 163 18.0 30t 70 Note: Rates are per 1,000 persons age 12 or older. Includes threatened, attempted, and completed occurrences of those crimes. See appendix table 34 for population numbers and appendix table 13 for standard errors. “Comparison year. +Difference with comparison year is significant at the 95% confidence level. Difference with comparison year is significant at the 90% confidence level. ! Interpret estimate with caution. Estimate is based on 10 or fewer sample cases or coefficient of variation is greater than 50%. Includes rape or sexual assault, robbery, aggravated assault, and simple assault. Excludes homicide because the National Crime Victimization Survey is based on interviews with victims. Pincludes rape or sexual assault, robbery, and aggravated assault; this category was called serious violent crime prior to Criminal Victimization, 2018. CStatistically significant differences for the total victimization rates are presented using the Balanced Repeated Replication method. Generalized variance function parameters were used to calculate statistically significant differences for the rest of the table. déxcludes persons of Hispanic origin (e.g., “white” refers to non-Hispanic whites and “black” refers to non-Hispanic blacks}. ®includes Native Hawaiians and Other Pacific Islanders, American Indians and Alaska Natives, and persons of two or more races. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2018 and 2019. 10 3502-022 Page 10 of 53 EFTA_00001556 EFTA00156897

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The percentage of violent victimizations reported to police was higher for females than for males Based on the 2019 survey, the percentage of violent victimizations reported to police was higher for females (46%) than for males (36%) (table 10). This difference can largely be attributed to reporting of simple assaults, as the percentages of violent victimizations reported to police, excluding simple assault, were similar for females (47%) and males (46%). The percentage of violent victimizations reported to police was lower for white persons (37%) than for black persons (49%) and Hispanics (49%). Among different age groups, the percentage of violent victimizations reported to police, excluding simple assault, was lower for persons ages 18 to 24 (36%) than for persons ages 25 to 34 (60%), 50 to 64 (52%), or 65 or older (61%). The percentage of violent crime reported to police was lower for those who had never been married (35%) than for married (45%), divorced (46%), or separated (62%) persons. The percentage of violent victimizations reported to police, excluding simple assault, was lowest for those living in households earning more than $200,000 a year (13%). TABLE 10 Percent and rate of violent victimizations reported to police, by type of crime and demographic characteristics of victims, 2019 Violent victimizations Total violent reported to police, victimizations excluding simple reported to police? assault? Victim demographic Rate per Rate per characteristic Percent 1 Percent —_1,000° Total 40.9% 86 46.5% 34 Sex Male” 35.7% 75 464% 35 Female 45.9F 96 46.6 33 Race/ethnicity White*> 37.0% 78 46.9% 3.0 Black® 49.2 92 52.1 37 Hispanic 48.8 t 104 48.7 5.0t Asian® 479 36f 429! O8t! Otherbc 39.8 264F 273t 57 Age 12-17 24.0% t 84t 374% 41 18-24" 37.9 144 364 58 25-34 464 11.6 60.2 53 35-49 444 86T 422 28t 50-64 anit aot 525t 29+ 65 or older 419 25t 610t wt Marital status Never married* 34.8% 109 423% 5.0 Married 454F 52f 49.8 St Widow/widower 473 5.0t 63.9F 31 Divorced 46.2F 13.2 497 53 Separated 617 39.6t 60.9+ 11.9¢ Household income Less than $25,000 41.8% 158f 46.8% 6.6T $25,000-$49,999 447 88 S74t 43t $50,000-$99,999" 43.1 72 445 24 $100,000-$199,999 33.0 53 43.1 17 $200,000 or more 295¢ 53 134¢ 09+ Note: Violent-crime categories include rape or sexual assault, robbery, aggravated par pa and simple assault, and they include bpipenien attempted, and com occurrences se crimes. See ay table ator Standard eran pes “Comparison group. Difference with comparison group is significant at the 95% confidence level. Difference with comparison group is significant at the 90% confidence level. ! Interpret estimate with caution. Estimate is based on 10 or fewer sample cases or coefficient of variation is greater than 50%. Rates are per 1,000 persons age 12 or older. See appendix table 34 for pulation numbers. ludes persons of Hispanic origin (e.g., “white” refers to non-Hispanic whites and “black” refers to non-Hispanic blacks}. “includes Native Hawaiians and Other Pacific Islanders, American Indians and Alaska Natives, and persons of two or more races. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2019. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 11 3502-022 Page 11 of 53 EFTA_00001557 EFTA00156898

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Classification of urban, suburban, and rural areas in the National Crime Victimization Survey By Jeffrey H. Anderson, Ph.D., BJS Director This year, the Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) provides new classifications of urban, suburban, and rural areas for the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS), with the goal of presenting a more accurate picture of where criminal victimizations occur. Historically, the NCVS has classified areas as urban, suburban, or rural based on the following definitions: = Urban: within a principal city of a Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) ® Suburban: within an MSA but not within a principal city of the MSA = Rural: outside of an MSA These definitions are straightforward, but they suffer from two main shortcomings: 1. Metropolitan statistical areas are based on entire counties, and counties almost always contain both rural and non-rural areas. Yet the NCVS's historical definitions classify each county as being either entirely rural (if not part of an MSA) or entirely non-rural (if part of an MSA). For example, California's San Bernardino County, which includes much of the Mojave Desert and covers more than twice as much land as the state of Maryland, is classified as containing no rural areas under the NCVS's historical definitions. This is because San Bernardino County is part of the Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario MSA, and the NCVS's historical definitions do not classify any part of an MSA as being rural. On the other hand, Colorado's La Plata County, home of Durango, is classified under the historical definitions as being entirely rural, because it is not part of an MSA. This is true even though the Census Bureau says that, as of 2010, 40% of La Plata County's population lived in non-rural areas. Similarly, Casmalia, Calif. had a 2010 population of 138 people and is surrounded by undeveloped land. Because it is located within a county (Santa Barbara) that is designated as an MSA (the Santa Maria-Santa Barbara MSA), the NCVS's historical definitions classify Casmalia as suburban. Meanwhile, Bozeman, Mont., with a 2010 population of 37,280—270 times that of Casmalia—is classified by the NCVS's historical definitions as rural, because it is located in a county that is not part of an MSA. 2. The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) designates principal cities (of which there are anywhere from 1 to nearly 20 in a given MSA) as being among “the more significant places in each Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical Area...in terms of population and employment.” The principal city designation is not necessarily indicative of urban status, nor is it intended CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 to be. Yet the NCVS's historical definitions classify all principal cities of MSAs as urban, and all other places as not urban. Asa result, Union City, N.J., located just across the Hudson River from Midtown Manhattan, is classified by the NCVS's historical definitions as suburban, due to its not being defined as a principal city. Union City had a 2010 population density of 51,918 people per square mile, more than three times the population density of San Francisco (17,180). Meanwhile, Rome, N.Y., which had a 2010 population density of 451 people per square mile—less than 1% that of Union City—is classified by the historical definitions as urban. The same is true for Yuma, Ariz., Hilton Head Island, S.C., and Foley, Ala. None of these had a population density in 2010 that was even 2% that of Union City, yet all are classified as urban under the NCVS's historical definitions, while Union City is classified as suburban. These are not isolated examples. Weighted housing-unit density (discussed more below) is essentially a measure of how closely people live to one another. Based on the 2010 Census of Population and Housing and 2013 OMB principal-city designations, 506 of the 674 principal cities in the United States (75%) had weighted housing-unit densities below that of the U.S. as a whole. In other words, three-quarters of the places classified by the historical definitions as urban were /ess densely developed than the areas where most U.S. residents lived. Anew definition: BJS's new NCVS definition of urban is based on the notion that urban places are those that are densely populated, are at the center of a major metropolitan area, or some combination of these. BJS's specific criteria is that a place is urban if it is— ® The main city or Census-designated place (i.e., the first place listed) in a 500,000-person (Census-designated) “urbanized area,” with a weighted housing-unit density within its city limits of at least 3,000 housing units per square mile. In other words, the primary city in a large “urbanized area” qualifies as urban if it meets the weighted-housing-unit-density threshold of 3,000 housing units per square mile. (The overall weighted housing-unit density for the U.S. is 2,396, based on the 2010 Census.) A named city or Census-designated place in a 500,000-person (Census-designated) “urbanized area,” with a weighted housing-unit density of at least 4,000 housing units per square mile within its city limits. In Continued on next page 12 3502-022 Page 12 of 53 EFTA_00001558 EFTA00156899

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Classification of urban, suburban, and rural areas in the National Crime Victimization Survey (continued) other words, a city that is prominent enough to be included by the Census Bureau in the name of a large “urbanized area” (for example, Long Beach in the Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim urbanized area) qualifies as urban if it meets the weighted-housing-unit-density threshold of 4,000 housing units per square mile. Any city or Census-designated place with a population of at least 50,000 and a weighted housing-unit density of at least 5,000 housing units per square mile. Any city or Census-designated place with a population of at least 10,000 and a weighted housing-unit density of at least 10,000 housing units per square mile. The Census Bureau's “urbanized areas” referenced in this definition are similar to OMB's metropolitan areas, but they delineate areas of substantial population rather than utilizing entire counties. The weighted housing-unit density referenced in this definition is discussed in greater detail below. In addition to developing this definition of urban, BJS has adopted the Census Bureau's definition of rural to replace the historical NCVS definition of rural. The Census Bureau provides specific, carefully drawn boundaries around “urban areas” (both larger “urbanized areas” and smaller “urban clusters”) using set criteria, classifying everything outside of those boundaries as rural. BJS classifies areas that are neither urban nor rural as suburban. In comparison to places that are urban, suburban areas are characterized by lower density, a larger ratio of single-family homes to apartments, and layouts based principally on automobile transportation. Some suburban areas, those that might be thought of as “suburbia proper,” do not have their own urban centers but are located near a separate urban city. Other suburban areas are cities or towns that have urban centers, but those centers have smaller populations than their surrounding suburban areas, so the bulk of the city's population lives in suburban areas. (Cities are the smallest geographical designations that can realistically be used in classifying areas as urban.) In short, suburban areas are a mix of “suburbia proper,” towns, and some generally smaller cities that are more suburban than urban. BJS uses weighted housing-unit density in its new NCVS definitions because that measure provides a better indication of the degree of urban density than conventional population density does. Conventional population density is derived by dividing population by land area, and it measures how densely populated a given area of land is. As of the 2010 Census, the U.S. as a whole had a conventional population density of 87 people per square mile; however, most U.S. residents do not live in areas where there are only 87 people per square mile. The CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 experience of most U.S. residents is more fully captured by weighted population density, which is essentially a measure of how densely populated an area is from the perspective of those who live in it. Weighted housing-unit density is similar to weighted population density, with the difference being that the latter focuses on population and the former on housing units. In comparing weighted housing-unit density to weighted population density, John R. Ottensmann writes, “Housing units better represent the physical pattern of urban development, as they are relatively fixed."> Housing-unit density is the number of housing units per square mile in a given area. Weighted housing-unit density, under BJS’s approach, is the weighted average of the housing densities for all census tracts in an area, with the tracts weighted by their number of housing units. For ease of explanation, imagine an area with only two census tracts. One tract has 2,000 housing units, covers 2 square miles, and thus has a housing-unit density of 1,000 housing units per square mile. The other tract has 6,000 housing units, covers 1 square mile, and thus has a housing-unit density of 6,000 housing units per square mile. The area's weighted housing-unit density is the weighted average of these two tract-level housing-unit densities, or (1,000"2,000+6,000"6,000)/8,000 = 4,750. Otherwise put, the weighted housing-unit density is based one-quarter on the first tract's density (because it contains one-quarter of the housing units) and three- quarters on the second tract's density. Weighted housing-unit density identifies urban places much more clearly than conventional population density does. Among places with populations of at least 10,000 people in 2010, Chicago rises from #71 in conventional population density to #16 in weighted housing-unit density, New Orleans from #2,212 to #190, and Urban Honolulu from #474 to #13. Meanwhile, Passaic, NJ. falls from #7 in conventional population density to #45 in weighted housing-unit density, while Santa Ana, Calif. falls from #67 to #237 (moving from 4 places above Chicago to 221 places below). Comparing the old and new definitions: Both the old and new NCVS definitions, as would be expected, classify New York's five boroughs as urban (New York City’s weighted housing-unit density is a nation- leading 29,345 housing units per square mile), and they both add Jersey City, NJ. (weighted housing-unit density 5John R. Ottensmann. “On Population-Weighted Density” February 2018. https://www.researchgate.net/ publication/322992771_On_Population-Weighted_Density. Continued on next page 13 3502-022 Page 13 of 53 EFTA_00001559 EFTA00156900

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Classification of urban, suburban, and rural areas in the National Crime Victimization Survey (continued) of 13,837 housing units per square mile), Newark, NJ. (8,788), and White Plains, N.Y. (5,671). The old definition also includes New Brunswick, NJ. (4,908) and Lakewood, NJ. (2,106). The new definition reclassifies Lakewood and New Brunswick as suburban (although just a 2% increase in New Brunswick's weighted housing-unit density would qualify it as urban) and adds the following places as urban: Guttenberg, NJ. (weighted housing-unit density of 29,171 housing units per square mile); Hoboken, NJ. FIGURE 4 Washington, D.C. MSA, by old and new classification Old classification New classification | Toy Bh suvetan Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2019; and 2010 Census of Population and Housing and 2013 OMB Metropolitan Statistical Area designations. TABLE 11 (25,870); West New York (21,763); Union City, N.J. (20,477); Cliffside Park, NJ. (12,001); Mount Vernon, N.Y. (8,811); East Orange, N.J. (8,763); Bayonne, N_J. (8,263); Yonkers, N.Y. (7,930); Elizabeth, NJ. (7,468); Passaic, N.J. (7,424); and Paterson, NJ. (6,739). As the accompanying map of the Washington, D.C. area (figure 4) shows, both the old and new definitions include Washington, D.C. (weighted housing-unit density of 10,115 housing units per square mile), Arlington, Va. (10,485), Alexandria, Va. (7,714), and Silver Spring, Md. (6,135), as urban places. The new definitions do not classify anywhere else in the D.C. area as urban. The old definitions added as urban Bethesda, Md. (4,325), Gaithersburg, Md. (2,836), Reston, Va. (2,543), Rockville, Md. (2,534), and Frederick, Md. (2,235), all of which the new definitions classify as suburban. The new definitions more closely fit U.S. residents’ own sense of where they live, as reflected in the American Housing Survey (AHS). For each of five metropolitan or micropolitan area designations, the following table and figure show how most AHS respondents in 2017 classified where they lived (and what percentage of respondents gave that classification), what percentage of people would be classified that same way by the new and old NCVS definitions, and the difference between the AHS result and the new and old NCVS results (table 11, figure 5). As table 11 shows, 58% of AHS respondents who lived in the biggest principal city of an MSA said that they lived in an urban place. Forty-three percent of them would be classified as living in an urban place by the new NCVS definitions, a difference of 15 percentage points (58% versus 43%) from the portion of AHS respondents who gave that answer. In comparison, 100% of those U.S. residents’ sense of where they live, per the American Housing Survey Percent classified same way as Most common most common AHS classification classification by Part of MSA/micro area lived in AHS respondents* New NCVS definitions Old NCVS Difference (in percentage points) definitions NewNCVSvs.AHS Old NCVS vs. AHS 58% urban 67% suburban 64% suburban Biggest principal city of MSA Other principal city of MSA In MSA but not principal city In micropolitan area 52% rural Outside of metro/micro area 709 rural Average ~ 4American Housing Survey. ~Not applicable. 43% 88 i) 100% 15 42 21 67 100 15 36 100 4 48 100 5 30 12 45 79 48 75 Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2019; 2010 Census of Population and Housing and 2013 OMB Metropolitan Statistical Area designations; and U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, American Housing Survey, 2017. Continued on next page CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 14 3502-022 Page 14 of 53 EFTA_00001560 EFTA00156901

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Classification of urban, suburban, and rural areas in the National Crime Victimization Survey (continued) respondents would be classified as living in an urban place by the old NCVS definitions, a difference of 42 percentage points (58% vs. 100%) from the portion of AHS respondents who gave that answer. While AHS respondents’ answers about where they live are not necessarily dispositive, the new NCVS definitions fare far better than the old ones versus the AHS in every category, by a margin of at least 21 percentage points per category and an average margin of 33 points per category. Under the new definitions, 12% of the population lives in urban areas, 69% in suburban areas, and 19% in rural areas, compared to 33% in urban areas, 53% in suburban areas, and 14% in rural areas under the old definitions (table 31). Of the main cities in the 15 largest MSAs in the U.S., the new definitions classify 13 as urban. The two FIGURE 5 classified as suburban—Phoenix, Ariz. and Riverside, Calif.—had 2010 weighted housing-unit densities below that of the U.S. as a whole. According to the historical NCVS definitions, by far the most urban region in the country is the West, followed by the South (using the Census Bureau's regional classifications). Under the new definitions, the Northeast is by far the most urban region, followed in order by the West, Midwest, and South. The most suburban region according to the old definitions is the Northeast. Under the new definitions, the West is the most suburban region, with the Northeast being the least suburban region. A complete list of places classified as urban under the new NCVS definitions is provided at the back of this report (appendix table 36). Location-of-residence classification, by source of classification American Housing Survey respondent dassification Biggest principal cityaf MSA Other principal city of MSA In MSA but not principal city in micropolitan area Outside of metro/micro area New NCVS definitions Biggest principal city of MSA Other principal city of MSA In MSA but not principal city In micropolitan area Outside of metro/micro area Old NCVS definitions 40 20 ° Biggest principal cityof MSA Other principal city of MSA In MSA but not principal city Note: See appendix table 4 for estimates. in micropolitan area Outside of metra/micro area Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2019; U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, American Housing Survey, 2017; and 2010 Census of Population and Housing and 2013 OMB Metropolitan Statistical Area designations. 3502-022 Page 15 of 53 EFTA_00001561 EFTA00156902

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The rate of violent victimization in urban areas, based on the new classifications of urban, suburban, and rural areas, declined from 2018 to 2019 From 2018 to 2019, the rate of violent victimization in urban areas declined from 26.5 victimizations per 1,000 persons age 12 or older to 21.1 per 1,000 (table 12) based on the NCVS's new classifications of urban, suburban, and rural areas (see text box on pp. 12-15). Excluding simple assault, the rate of violent victimization in urban areas fell from 12.2 victimizations per 1,000 persons age 12 or older in 2018 to 8.0 per 1,000 in 2019. There were no statistically significant changes in the rates of violent victimization, or of violent victimization excluding simple assault, in suburban or rural areas from 2018 to 2019. The rate of property victimization, however, declined from 2018 to 2019 in both suburban (from 108.6 to 100.8 victimizations per 1,000 households) and rural (from 80.3 to 68.1 per 1,000) areas. There was no statistically significant change in the rate of property crime in urban areas. Based on the new definitions, the 2019 rate of violent victimization in urban areas (21.1 per 1,000 persons age 12 or older) and suburban areas (22.3 per 1,000) was higher than the rate in rural areas (16.3 per 1,000). There was no statistically significant difference between the rates of violent victimization in urban and suburban areas, and there were no statistically significant differences in the rates of violent victimization excluding simple assault across urban, suburban, and rural areas. ‘The rate of property victimization in urban areas (153.0 per 1,000 households) was higher than the rate in suburban (100.8 per 1,000) and rural areas (68.1 per 1,000). The rate of property victimization in suburban areas was also higher than the rate in rural areas. TABLE 12 Rate of victimization, by type of crime and location of residence, 2018 and 2019 Rate per 1,000 Violent crime excluding Violent crime” simple assault Property crime4 Location of residence® 2018 2019* 2018 2019* 2018 2019" New definition Urbané 26.5¢ 21.1 122+ 8.0 1469 153.0 Suburban9 238 223 86 7.6 108.6 t 1008 Rural” 18.9 16.3 63 5.6 803 t 68.1 Old definition Urban’ 28.9 26.0 122 95 1429 1444 Suburbani 18.6 16.5 61 57 86.7 t 749 Ruralk 26.9 263 96 77 101.7 ¢ 921 Note: Statistically significant differences for the new definition rates are presented using the Balanced Repeated Replication method of direct estimation. Statistically significant differences for the old definition rates are presented using generalized variance function parameters. See appendix table 15 for standard errors. *Comparison year. Difference with comparison year is significant at the 95% confidence level. Difference with comparison year is significant at the 90% confidence level. Rate is per 1,000 persons age 12 or older for violent crime and per 1,000 households for property crime. See table 31 for populations. Dincludes rape or sexual assault, robbery, aggravated assault, and simple assault. Excludes homicide because the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS)} is based on interviews with victims. includes rape or sexual assault, robbery, and aggravated assault; this category was called serious violent crime prior to Criminal Victimization, 2018. includes burglary, residential trespassing, motor-vehicle theft, and other theft. See Classification of urban, suburban, and rural areas in the National Crime Victimization Survey on pp. 12-15 and Methodology for details on the measurement of location of residence in the NCVS. fail census blocks within cities or Census-designated places that meet certain criteria based on their population and density. See Classification of urban, suburban, and rural areas in the National Crime Victimization Survey on pp. 12-15 and appendix table 36. SAll other census blocks not classified as urban or rural. Pay census blocks not in Census Bureau-defined urbanized areas or urban clusters. ‘Within the principal city of a Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA). JWithin an MSA but not ina principal city of the MSA. ‘Not within an MSA. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2018 and 2019. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 16 3502-022 Page 16 of 53 EFTA_00001562 EFTA00156903

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Incidents estimates An incident is a specific criminal act involving one or more victims.® In 2019, there were 5.4 million total violent incidents involving victims age 12 or older (table 13). Patterns varied in the demographic characteristics of victims and offenders involved in violent incidents, as perceived by the victims. Based on the 2019 survey, the victim-to-population ratio of 1.0 for both males and females shows that the percentage of violent incidents involving male (49%) or female (51%) victims was equal to males’ (49%) or females’ (51%) share of the Tables 13 through 17 present incident-level data on victims and offenders. Offender characteristics in the NCVS are based on victims’ perceptions of offenders. population. The offender-to-population ratio shows that the percentage of violent incidents involving male offenders (75%) was about 1.5 times greater than the percentage of males represented in the population (49%), whereas the percentage of violent incidents involving female offenders (21%) was 0.4 times the percentage of females in the population (51%). ‘The victim-to-population ratio varied by race. The percentage of violent incidents involving white (62%) or black (11%) victims was similar to the population percentages of white (62%) or black (12%) persons. Likewise, about 17% of violent incidents involved Hispanic victims, which was equal to the representation of Hispanics in the population (17%). A smaller percentage of violent incidents involved Asian victims (2%) than the share of Asians in the population (6%). TABLE 13 Percent and number of violent incidents, by total population and victim and offender demographic characteristics, 2019 Number of Percent of Ratio of percentages violent incidents percentof ___violentincidents Offender Offender to Victim to Demographic characteristic Population? Offender? Victim —_population®* Offender? Victim _to victim population population Total 276,872,470 5,440,680 5,440,680 100% 100% 100% 10 10 10 Sex Male 134,693,660 3,806,570 2,668,600 48.6% 75.0%t 49.0% 15 15 10 Female 142,178,810 1,085,550 2,772,070 514 214t 51.0 04 04 10 Both male and female offenders ~ 182,030 ~ ~ 3.6 ~ ~ ~ ~ Race/ethnicity White‘ 171,423,480 2,289,390 3,379,920 61.9% 50.2% 62.1% 08 08 10 Black® 33,397,100 1,140,470 582,650 124 25.0 107 23 21 09 Hispanicd 47,890,870 853,990 926,650 173 187 17.0 WW WW 10 Asian® 17,401,410 44520 123,400 63 1.0 23t 04 02 04 Others® 6,759,600 208,170 428,050 24 46t 79t 06 19 32 Multiple offenders of various races‘ ~ 27,720! ~ - 0.6! - ~ ~ ~ Age 11 oryounger! ~ 94,230 ~ ~ 2.0% ~ ~ ~ ~ 12-17 24,941,440 723,630 800,300 9.0% 15.6 4% F 1 Ww 16 18-29 52,798,870 1,348,610 1,617,860 19.1 29.0f 290.7 t 10 15 16 30 or older 199,132,160 2,323,940 3,022,520 79 50.0f 55.6t 09 07 08 Multiple offenders of various ages ~__157,390 ~ od 34 - ~ ~ ~ Note: Details may not sum to totals due to rounding and missing data for offender characteristics. An incident is a specific criminal act involving one or more victims. Offender characteristics are based on victims’ perceptions of offenders. See appendix table 16 for standard errors. *Comparison group. +Difference with comparison group is significant at the 95% confidence level. ! Interpret with caution. Estimate is based on 10 or fewer sample cases, or coeffici ~Not applicable. ®The National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS} population represents persons bincludes those incidents in which the ived offender characteristics were race or ethnicity of the offender was unknown in 16% of incidents, and the age ient of variation is greater than 50%. age 12 or older living in non-institutionalized residential settings in the US. ted. The sex of the offender was unknown in 7% of incidents, the the offender was unknown in 15% of incidents. “Excludes persons of Hispanic origin (e.g., “white” refers to non-Hispanic whites and “black” refers to non-Hispanic blacks). if the victim perceived any of the offenders in a multiple offender incident to be of Hispanic origin, they are classified as Hispanic. * includes Native Hawaiians and Other Pacific Islanders, American Indians and Alaska Natives, and persons of two or more races. {While the NCVS does not survey victims age 11 or younger, victims may report the offender to be age 11 or younger. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2019. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 17 3502-022 Page 17 of 53 EFTA_00001563 EFTA00156904

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Based on victims’ perceptions of the offenders, the offender-to-population ratio shows that the percentage of violent incidents involving black offenders (25%) was 2.1 times the percentage of black persons (12%) in the population. The percentage of violent incidents involving white offenders (50%) was about four-fifths (0.8 times) the percentage of whites (62%) in the population, while the percentage of violent incidents involving Hispanic offenders (19%) was similar to the percentage of Hispanics in the population (17%). The percentage of violent incidents involving Asian offenders (1%) was about one-fifth (0.2 times) the percentage of Asians in the population (6%). The percentage of violent incidents involving offenders of other races (Native Hawaiians and Other Pacific Islanders, American Indians and Alaska Natives, and persons of two or more races) was about double (1.9 times) the collective percentage of those races in the population. The offender-to-victim ratio shows that the percentage of violent incidents involving black offenders (25%) was over twice (2.3 times) the percentage of incidents committed against black victims (11%). In contrast, the percentage of incidents involving white offenders (50%) was four-fifths (0.8 times) the percentage of incidents committed against white victims (62%), while the percentage involving Asian offenders was two-fifths (0.4 times) the percentage committed against Asian victims. Persons ages 12 to 17 were more than 1.5 times more likely to be offenders (16%) or victims (15%) in violent incidents than their percentage of the population (9%). Those between the ages of 18 to 29 showed a similar pattern. Those age 30 or older were less likely to be offenders (50%) or victims (56%) than their percentage of the population (72%). Females were offenders in a greater percentage of violent incidents committed against females (28%) than against males (14%) (table 14). Males were offenders in a greater percentage of violent incidents committed against males (82%) than against females (69%). Based on victims’ perceptions, about 1.7 million violent incidents in 2019 were committed against white persons by offenders who were white, 346,260 violent incidents were committed against black persons by offenders who were black, and 334,600 violent incidents were committed against Hispanic persons by offenders who were Hispanic (table 15). There were 5.3 times as many TABLE 14 Percent of violent incidents, by victim and offender sex, 2019 Offender sex Number of Both male Victim sex _violentincidents Total Male Female and female Total 5,074,160 100% = 75.0% 214%t 3.6% Male* 2,410,380 100% 82.1 145 35 Female 2,663,770 100% = 686t 27.7 F 37 Note: Details may not sum to totals due to rounding. An incident is a specific criminal act involving one or more victims. Offender sex is based on victims’ perceptions of offenders. Includes those incidents in which the perceived sex of the offender was reported. The sex of the offender was unknown in 7% of incidents, which is why the number of incidents reported here is only 93% as high as in table 13. See appendix table 17 for standard errors. “Comparison group. Difference with comparison group is significant at the 95% confidence level. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2019. TABLE 15 Number of violent incidents, by victim and offender race or ethnicity, 2019 Number of Offender race/ethnicity Victim race/ethnicity violent incidents White® Black? Hispanic? Other®« White? 2,796,710 1,722,230" 4725707 463,520T 138,380 f Black? 494.610 89,980 t 346,260" 43,730F 14,6407! Hispanic 774,310 170,840 t 249,030 334,600" 19,840 F Note: Details may not sum to totals due to rounding. An incident is a specific criminal act involving one or more victims. Offender race or ethnicity is based ‘on victims’ perceptions of offenders. Includes those violent incidents in which the perceived offender race or ethnicity was reported. Offender race or ethnicity was unknown in 16% of violent incidents, which is why the number of incidents reported here is only 84% as high as in table 13. See appendix table 18 for standard errors. *Comparison groups are intraracial victim and offender percentages (white-on-white, black-on-black, and Hispanic-on-Hispanic}. Difference with comparison group is significant at the 95% confidence level. ! Interpret with caution. Estimate is based on 10 or fewer sample cases, or coefficient of variation is greater than 50%. Excludes persons of Hispanic origin (e.g. “white” refers to non-Hispanic whites and “black” refers to non-Hispanic blacks). if the victim perceived any of the offenders in a multiple offender incident to be of Hispanic origin, they are classified as Hispanic. includes Asians, Native Hawaiians and Other Pacific Islanders, American indians and Alaska Natives, persons of two or more races, and multiple offenders of various races. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2019. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 18 3502-022 Page 18 of 53 EFTA_00001564 EFTA00156905

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violent incidents committed by black offenders against white victims (472,570) as were committed by white offenders against black victims (89,980). The largest percentage of violent incidents committed Sixty-two percent of violent incidents committed against white victims were perceived to be committed by white offenders, the same portion (62%) of the total U.S. population age 12 or older that was white (table 17). Among black victims, the percentage of violent incidents against white, black, and Hispanic victims were committed by someone of the same race or ethnicity (table 16). Offenders were white in 62% of violent incidents committed against white victims, black in 70% of incidents committed against black victims, and Hispanic in 43% of incidents committed against Hispanic victims. perceived to be committed by black offenders (70%) was 5.8 times higher than the percentage of black persons in the population (12%). The percentage of violent incidents committed against Hispanic victims by Hispanic offenders (43%) was 2.5 times higher than the percentage of Hispanics in the population (17%). TABLE 16 Percent of violent incidents, by victim and offender race or ethnicity, 2019 Victim race/ Number of Offender race/ethnicity ethnicity violent incidents Total White? Black? Hispanic? Other®« White* 2,796,710 100% 61.6%" 16.9% t 16.6% tf 49% Black? 494,610 100% 18.2¢ 70.0" Bat 30t! Hispanic 774,310 100% 21¢ 32.2¢ 432" 26+ Note: Details may not sum to totals due to rounding. An incident is a specific criminal act involving one or more victims. Offender race or ethnicity is based on victims’ perceptions of offenders. Includes those violent incidents in which the perceived offender race or ethnicity was reported. Offender race or ethnicity was unknovm in 16% of violent incidents, which is why the number of incidents reported here is only 84% as high as in table 13. See appendix table 19 for standard errors. *Comparison groups are intraracial victim and offender percentages (white-on-white, black-on-black, and Hispanic-on-Hispanic). Difference with comparison group is significant at the 95% confidence level. Difference with comparison group is significant at the 90% confidence level. ! Interpret with caution. Estimate is based on 10 or fewer sample cases, or coefficient of variation is greater than 50%. Excludes persons of Hispanic origin (e.g., “white” refers to non-Hispanic whites and “black” refers to non-Hispanic blacks). Dif the victim perceived any of the offenders in a multiple offender incident to be of Hispanic origin, they are classified as Hispanic. “includes Asians, Native Hawaiians and Other Pacific Islanders, American Indians and Alaska Natives, persons of two or more races, and multiple offenders various races. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2019. TABLE 17 Percent of violent incidents and percent of the U.S. population, by victim and offender race or ethnicity, 2019 oo Ratio of percentages Percent of violent incidents committed by offenders Percent of the population? Offender of same Offender of — er Victim race/ Ofthesame Ofanother Ofthesame Of another population Ofsame population of another ethnicity Total race/ethnicity race/ethnicity Total race/ethnicity" race/ethnicity* _race/ethnicity® race/ethnicity® White? 100% 61.6% 38.4% 100% 61.0% 38.1% 10 10 Blackd 100% 70.0 t 300+ 100% 121 87.9 58 03 Hispanic 100% 3.2T 56.8 100% 173 827 25 07 Note: Details may not sum to totals due to rounding. An incident is a specific criminal act involving one or more victims. Offender race or ethnicity is based ‘on victims’ perceptions of offenders. Includes those violent incidents in which the perceived offender race or ethnicity was reported. Offender race or ethnicity was unknown in 16% of violent incidents. See appendix table 20 for standard errors. *Comparisons are between the percentage of the U.S. population of the same race or ethnicity and the percentage of violent incidents committed by offenders of the same race or ethnicity, and between the percentage of the U.S. population of another race or ethnicity and the percentage of violent incidents committed by offenders of another race or ethnicity. Difference with comparison group is significant at the 95% confidence level. *The National Crime Victimization Survey population represents persons age 12 or older living in non-institutionalized residential settings in the US. The percentag ie incidents committed by offenders of the same race or ethnicity of the victim divided by the percentage of the U.S. population of the same race or ethnicity. “The percentage of incidents committed by offenders of another race or ethnicity divided by the percentage of the U.S. population of another race or ethnicity. Excludes persons of Hispanic origin (e.g., “white” refers to non-Hispanic whites and “black” refers to non-Hispanic blacks). Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2019. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 19 3502-022 Page 19 of 53 EFTA_00001565 EFTA00156906

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Prevalence estimates change in the percentage of persons who experienced 2 E " robbery, aggravated assault, or simple assault. The percentage of persons who experienced violent —_ fter increasing 22% from 2015 (0.41%) to 2018 (0.50%), crime excluding simple assault declined from 2018 the percentage of U.S. residents age 12 or older who to 2019 were victims of violent crime excluding simple assault decreased 12% (to 0.44%) in 2019. The number of victims of violent crime excluding simple assault fell from 1.4 million in 2018 to 1.2 million persons age 12 or older in 2019. This was largely driven by a decrease in the number of victims of rape or sexual assault. Prevalence reflects the number or percentage of unique persons who were crime victims, or of unique households that experienced crime. Based on the 2019 survey, 1.10% of all persons age 12 or older experienced one or more violent victimizations, which was not a statistically significant change from the percentage Prevalence rates declined from 2018 to 2019 for selected in 2018 (1.18%) but was higher than in 2015 (0.98%) characteristics of violent crime. The percentage of (table 18). The percentage of persons who experienced persons who were victims of domestic violence declined rape or sexual assault declined from 0.13% in 2018 to (from 0.23% to 0.19%), as did the percentage of persons 0.08% in 2019, but there was not a statistically significant who experienced violent crime involving injury (from 0.31% to 0.27%). TABLE 18 Number and percent of persons who were victims of violent crime, by type of crime, 2015-2019 Number of victims? Percent of persons? Type of crime 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019* 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019* Total violent crime‘ 2,650,670t 2,882,320 3,106,340 3,254,250 3,059,060 O.98%t 1.06% 1.14% 1.18% — 1.10% Rape/sexual assault? 204,000 162,940 208,960 347,090¢ 212,230 0.08 0.06 0.08 O13t 0.08 Robbery 375,280 312,310 402,430 363,210 337,720 0.14 O11 0.15 0.13 0.12 Assault 2,175520¢ 2,497,500 2,595,780 2,668,820 2,586,170 08it 0.92 0.95 097 0.93 Aggravated assault 560,720t 680,770 646,540 694,260 697,190 O21¢ 0.25 0.24 025 0.25 Simple assault 1,690,190t 1,903,860 2,024,880 2,058,870 1,965,410 063+ 0.70 0.74 075 071 Violent crime excluding simple assault® 1,099,400 1,123,190 »—-1,225,800 = 1,367,270¢ +1,216,400 041% 041% 045% O50%F 0.44% Selected characteristics of violent crime Domestic violence 493,310 514,350 559,820 636,540t 521,870 0.18% 0.19% 0.21% O23%t 0.19% Intimate partner violenced 310,090 273,890 308,560 368,980 310,320 0.12 0.10 0.11 0.13 O11 Stranger violence" 1,117,340 1,276,710 1,370,020 1,411,500 1,393,650 o4it O47 0.50 051 050 Violent crime involving injury 778,300 663,920 722,560 841,280 735,430 0.29 0.24 0.27 031% 027 Violent crime involving a weapon 644370t 767,320 776,770 838,630 788,920 0.24¢ 0.28 0.29 030 0.28 Note: Details may not sum to totals because a person may experience multiple types of crime. Violent-crime categories include rape or sexual assault, robbery, aggravated assault, and simple assault, and they include threatened, attempted, and completed occurrences of those crimes. Other violent-crime categories in this table, including domestic violence and violent crime involving injury, are not mutually exclusive from these categories or from each other. See appendix table 34 for population numbers and appendix table 21 for stan errors. “Comparison year. Difference with comparison year is significant at the 95% confidence level. Difference with comparison year is significant at the 90% confidence level. @Number of persons age 12 or older who experienced at least one violent victimization during the year. bpercentage of persons age 12 or older who experienced at least one violent victimization during the year. Excludes homicide because the National Crime Victimization Survey is based on interviews with victims. see Methodology for details on the measurement of rape or sexual assault in the NCVS. ®includes rape or sexual assault, robbery, and aggravated assault; this category was called serious violent crime prior to Criminal Victimization, 2018. fincludes the subset of violent victimizations that were committed by intimate partners or family members. Sincludes the subset of domestic-violence victimizations that were committed by intimate partners, which include current or former spouses, boyfriends, or girlfriends. hincludes the subset of violent victimizations that were committed by someone unknown to the victim. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2015-2019. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 20 3502-022 Page 20 of 53 EFTA_00001566 EFTA00156907

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Between 2018 and 2019, the number of white or TABLE 19 Asian violent crime victims decreased, and the Number and percent of persons who were victims of number of Fispanic victims increa: violent crime, by demographic characteristics of victims, Based on the 2019 survey, an estimated 1.17% of males 2018 and 2019 (1.6 million) and 1.04% of females (1.5 million) were the Victim 7 Number of victims? Percent of persons? victim of at least one violent crime (table 19). Prevalence —_characteristic 2018 2019° 2018 2019" rates decreased for some demographic groups from 2018 Total 3,254,250 3,059,060 1.18% 1.10% to 2019. The percentage of females who were victims of Sex violent crime decreased from 1.16% in 2018 to 1.04% Male 1,615,610 1,579,530 1.21% 1.17% in 2019. The percentage of whites who were victims alee icity 1,638,640 | 1,479,540 116s 104 decreased from 1.19% in 2018 to 1.07% in 2019, and the Whitee 2047640 1,836.520 119+ 107% percentage of Asians who were victims declined from . . Black 416,850 367,030 1.26 1.10 0.67% to 0.42% during this time period. From 2018 to Hispanic 493520¢ 610,690 1.05¢ 128 2019, the prevalence of violent victimization declined Asian€ 115510¢ 73,870 0.67 t 042 for persons ages 35 to 49 (from 1.27% to 1.06%). The Othercd 180,730 170,950 279 253 prevalence of violent victimization also decreased among —Age persons who were divorced (from 1.81% to 1.54%) or 12-17 377,420 400,830 151% 1.61% were widows or widowers (from 0.93% to 0.60%). 18-24 484,710 504,420 1.62 1.70 25-34 684,250 677,100 1.52 1.50 From 2018 to 2019, the portion of Hispanic persons 35-49 779,070t 651,210 1.27¢ 1.06 who were victims of violent crime increased from 1.05% 50-64 675,580 612,010 1.07 0.98 to 1.28%. There were no other statistically significant 65 or older 253,230 213,490 0.49 0.40 increases in the prevalence of violent victimization by Marital status demographic groups from 2018 to 2019. Nevermaried 1,572480 1,567,440 1.62% 1.60% Married 899,040 820,940 0.70 0.63 Widow/ The percentage and number of households that widower 140,520 t 90,700 093t 0.60 experienced property crime decreased from 2018 Divorced 495,460¢ 417,300 1.81¢ 154 to 2019 Separated 137,510 156,050 2.68 3.14 Note: Details may not sum to totals due to rounding and missing data. The 2019 survey found that 6.76% of all households Violent-crime categories include rape or sexual assault, robbery, aggravated 8.5 million) . d assault, and simple assault, and they include threatened, attempted, (8.5 million) experienced one or more property and completed occurrences of those crimes. See appendix table 34 for victimizations, down from 7.27% (9.1 million) in 2018 population numbers and appendix table 22 for standard errors. (table 20). This decline was driven in part by a decrease “Comparison year. Difference with comparison year is significant at the 95% confidence level. Difference with comparison year is significant at the 90% confidence level. ®Number of persons age 12 or older who experienced at least one violent in the rate of burglary. The percentage of households experiencing burglary decreased from 1.07% in 2018 to 0.82% in 2019, a decline of 23%. The prevalence of victimization during the year. motor-vehicle theft remained relatively stable from 2018 percentage of persons age 12 or older who experienced at least one violent to 2019. victimization during the year. Excludes persons of Hispanic origin (e.g., “white” refers to non-Hispanic whites and “black” refers to non-Hispanic blacks}. includes Native Hawaiians and Other Pacific Islanders, American Indians and Alaska Natives, and persons of two or more races. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2018 and 2019. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 21 3502-022 Page 21 of 53 EFTA_00001567 EFTA00156908

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TABLE 20 Number and percent of households victimized, by type of property crime, 2015-2019 Number of households victimized? Percent of households victimized® Type of property crime 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019* 2015 2016 2017 2018 ~—.2019* Total 10,030,510 9,825,060 9,145,690t 9,080,490F 8,545,770 760%t 7.37%T 743%T 7.27%t 6.76% Burglary/trespassing® 2,175,380 2,037,320 1,842,730¢ 1,851,420f 1,537,190 165%t 1.53%F 150%T 148% 1.22% Burglary? 1,562,130 1,455,720 1,273,410¢ 1,333,600f 1,040,730 118t = 1.09 103t = =61.07t = (0.82 Trespassing® 707,910 671,650 639,620t 585,190 530,440 054t 0.50 O52t O47 0.42 Motor-vehicle theft 465,650 470,880 438,860 424,360 411,140 035% 0.35% 036% O3% 0.33% Other theft 7,941,030 7,803,350 7,330,960+ 7.261840 6,991,800 6.02% +t S.B5%t S5.96%T S5.B2%t 5.53% Note: Details may not sum to totals because a household may experience multiple types of crime. The number of property crimes should not be compared from 2017, 2018, or 2019 to 2016 or 2015, as the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) household weighting adjustment was updated for 2017 onward, which decreased the number of estimated households by about 8%. Property crime rates are unaffected by this change. See Methodology for details. See appendix table 35 for number of households and appendix table 23 for standard errors. “Comparison year. +Difference with comparison year is significant at the 95% confidence level. Difference with comparison year is significant at the 90% confidence level. ®Number of households that experienced at least one property victimization during the year. Percentage of households that experienced at least one property victimization during the year. “Called household burglary prior to Criminal Victimization, 2018. Includes unlawful or forcible entry or attempted entry of places, including a permanent residence, other residence (e.g, a hotel room or vacation residence), or other structure (e.g. a garage or shed), but does not include trespassing on land. includes only crimes where the offender committed or attempted a theft. Estimates differ from those previously published in the Criminal Victimization, 2018 report because a coding error that affected the generation of those earlier estimates has been corrected. *includes crimes where the offender did not commit or attempt a theft. Does not include trespassing on land. Estimates differ from those previously published in the Criminal Victimization, 2018 report because a coding error that affected the generation of those earlier estimates has been corrected. fincludes the taking or attempted unlawful taking of property or cash without personal contact with the victim. Incidents involving theft of property from within the same household would classify as theft if the offender has a legal right to be in the house (such as a maid, delivery person, or guest). if the offender has no legal right to be in the house, the incident would classify as a burglary. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2015-2019. Prevalence of serious crime Tables 21 and 22 in this report present a person-based Serious property crime includes— prevalence measure to show the number and percentage = Completed burglary: unlawful or forcible entry of persons who were victims of a serious crime. This into places, including a permanent residence, other measure includes serious violent and serious aoe - residence (e.g., a hotel room or vacation residence), or crimes combined into one statistic. Crimes included in this other structure (e.g., a garage or shed), and involving a measure are those for which offenders can generally be theft or attempted theft charged with a felony offense. = Completed motor-vehicle theft. The measure of serious crime attributes a completed burglary victimization to each person age 12 or older in the household, and it attributes completed motor-vehicle theft to persons age 12 or older in the household when = Robbery: completed or attempted robbery they were the person responding to the survey on behalf = Aggravated assault: completed aggravated assault of the household (the household reference person) or with injury, and attempted or threatened aggravated were related to the household reference person. assault with a weapon. Serious violent crime includes— = Rape or sexual assault: completed or attempted rape, completed sexual assault with serious or minor injuries, and completed forced sexual assault without injury CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 22 3502-022 Page 22 of 53 EFTA_00001568 EFTA00156909

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The percentage of persons who were victims of serious crime decreased from 2018 to 2019 There were 880,000 fewer victims of serious crimes in 2019 than in 2018, a 19% drop (table 21). Serious crimes are those for which an offender can generally be charged with a felony offense. Based on the 2019 survey, 1.36% of persons age 12 or older (3.8 million) experienced at least one serious crime, down from 1.68% (4.6 million) in 2018. The decline in serious crime was driven primarily by a decrease in serious property crime, especially a crime declined from 1.25% in 2018 to 0.96% in 2019. The percentage of persons age 12 or older who were victims of completed burglary declined from 0.98% in 2018 to 0.73% in 2019. From 2018 to 2019, the percentage of persons age 12 or older who were victims of completed or attempted rape or of completed sexual assault with injury or force declined from 0.09% to 0.06%, a drop of more than 85,000 victims. There were no other statistically significant changes in serious violent crime from 2018 decline in completed burglary. The percentage of persons —_to 2019. age 12 or older who were victims of serious property TABLE 21 Number and percent of persons who were victims of serious crime, 2015-2019 Number of victims* Percent of persons” Type of crime 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019* 20152016 = 2017, 2018 =~. 2019" Total serious crime 4,793,040 4.708410 4,529,520t 4,636,730 3,756,490 L78%t L73%t 1.66%T 1.68%T 1.36% Serious violent crime? 1,063,530 1,092,700 1,170,460 ~—*1,277,820 1,173,030 039% 040% 043% 046% 042% Rape/sexual assault excl. threats and no-force contact 164,880 131,760 144,280 254,320 168,860 0.06 0.05 0.05 O.09t 0.06 Robbery 375,280 312,310 402,430 363,210 337,720 0.14 0.11 0.15 0.13 0.12 Aggravated assault 560,720+ 680,770 646,540 694,260 697,190 021 025 0.24 0.25 0.25 Serious property crime® 3,824,550 3,693,820t 3.452530t 3443770f 2,662,370 TAM t 1.36%T 127%T 15%T 0.96% Completed burglary 3,083,640 2,973,890t 2,736,910t 2,691,120f 2,016,280 L4t) «—109t) = 1L00t = OSBt = 0.73 Completed mmotorvehicle theft 801,770 802,270 746,630 794,040 663,430 030 0.29 0.27 0.29 0.24 Note: Details may not sum to totals because a person may experience multiple types of crime. See appendix table 24 for standard errors. *Comparison year. +Difference with comparison year is significant at the 95% confidence level. +Difference with comparison year is significant at the 90% confidence level. Number of persons age 12 or older who experienced at least one serious crime during the year. of persons age 12 or older who experienced at least one serious crime during the year. “includes persons who were a victim of a serious violent crime or whose household experienced a completed burglary or completed motor-vehicle theft. For these crimes, offenders can generally be charged with a felony offense. ” oy includes completed rape or attempted rape, sexual assault with serious or minor injuries, completed forced sexual assault without injury, completed or attempted robbery, completed aggravated assault with injury, and attempted or threatened aggravated assault with a weapon. Excludes simple assault, threatened rape or sexual assault, and unwanted sexual contact (not rape) without force. *Includes completed burglary and completed motor-vehicle theft. Completed burglary includes unlawful or forcible entry of places, including a permanent residence, aherteidenes (en. a hotel room or vacation residence), or ihe struchire fe. a garage or shed), and invabing Liters or ‘attempted theft Excludes attempted burglary, residential trespassing, and all other property crimes. This measure attributes a burglary victimization to each person age 12 or older in the household. Completed motor-vehicle-theft victimizations were attributed to persons only when they were age 12 or older and were the reference person for their household or were related to the reference person. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2015-2019. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 23 3502-022 Page 23 of 53 EFTA_00001569 EFTA00156910

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From 2018 to 2019, the percentage of whites and blacks who were victims of serious crime decreased Based on the 2019 survey, 1.44% of males (1.9 million males) and 1.28% of females (1.8 million females) were victims of serious crime (table 22), which represented a decline from 2018 for both sexes. In 2019, the prevalence of serious crime was higher for males than for females. The percentage of white persons age 12 or older who experienced serious crime declined from 1.57% in 2018 to 1.23% in 2019. The percentage of black persons declined from 2.21% to 1.57%. The percentage of Hispanics who were victims of serious crime in 2019 (1.70%) was higher than the percentage of whites (1.23%) or Asians (0.79%). The prevalence of serious crime decreased from 2018 to 2019 among persons ages 12 to 17 (from 1.95% to 1.46%), 35 to 49 (from 1.82% to 1.30%), 50 to 64 (from 1.60% to 1.23%), and 65 or older (from 1.26% to 1.00%). In 2019, the percentage of persons ages 18 to 24 (1.84%) who experienced serious crime was higher than the percentage of persons ages 35 to 49 (1.30%), 50 to 64 (1.23%), and 65 or older (1.00%). Never-married persons, married persons, widows or widowers, and divorced persons all experienced declines in serious crime from 2018 to 2019. In 2019, the prevalence of serious crime for married persons (1.04%) was lower than the prevalence for never-married (1.62%), divorced (1.84%), or separated (2.58%) persons. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 TABLE 22 Number and percent of persons who were victims of serious crime, by demographic characteristics of victims, 2018 and 2019 demographic Number of victims? Percent of persons® characteristic 2018 2019* 2018 2019* Total 4,636,730t 3,756,490 168%t = 1.36% Sex Male 2,307,130 — 1,935,310 172% 1.44% Female 2,329,600 f — 1,821,170 1.65 t 1.28 Race/ethnicity White‘ 2,687,680 f — 2,103,410 157%t 1.23% Black‘ 732,020¢ 522,790 221 157 Hispanic 889,800 815,790 189 1.70 Asiant 124,380 136,990 0.72 0.79 Othert4 202,860 177,510 3.13 2.63 Age 12-17 485,480% 364,230 195%t = 1.46% 18-24 553,530 545,930 1.86 1.84 25-34 831,150 746,950 185 1.65 35-49 1115,800t 798,510 1.82 1.30 50-64 1,004,830 769,840 1.60 1.23 65 or older 645,940% 531,020 1.26¢ 1.00 Marital status Never married 1,920,450 1,584,980 1.98% f 1.62% Married 1,585,130f 1,353,800 123+ 1.04 Widow/widower 297,020¢ 183,680 1.96 t 1.21 Divorced 652,090t 501,530 238+ 1.84 Separated 170,380 128,320 3.32 258 Note: Details may not sum to totals due to rounding and missing data. Serious crimes are those that are generally prosecuted as felonies; these include most completed or attempted violent crimes apart from simple assault, and completed burglaries and motor-vehicle thefts. See Prevalence of serious crime text box for more information, page 22). See appendix table 25 for standard errors. *Comparison year. +Difference with comparison year is significant at the 95% confidence level. Difference with comparison year is significant at the 90% confidence level. 4Number of persons age 12 or older who experienced at least one serious victimization during the year. bPercentage of persons age 12 or older who experienced at least one serious victimization during the year. “Excludes of Hispanic origin (e.9., “white” refers to non-Hispanic whites and “black” afar to nonfsparik: blacks). pe dincludes Native Hawaiians and Other Pacific Islanders, American Indians and Alaska Natives, and persons of two or more races. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2018 and 2019. 24 3502-022 Page 24 of 53 EFTA_00001570 EFTA00156911

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Additional NCVS estimates Additional NCVS victimization or incident estimates are included in tables 23 through 30. TABLE 23 Percent of violent victimizations reported to police, by completed, attempted, and threatened crimes, 2015-2019 Violent crime 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019° Total 46.5% 43.9% 44.9% 42.6% 40.9% Completed 55.6% 48.8 504 475 463 Attempted 476 429 425 448 48 Threatened 36.6 416 43.0 373 36.6 Note: Details may not sum to totals due to rounding. Violent-crime categories include rape or sexual assault, robbery, aggravated assault, and simple assault. See appendix table 26 for standard errors. *Comparison year. +Difference with comparison year is significant at the 90% confidence level. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2015-2019. TABLE 24 Number and rate of violent victimizations, by victim's veteran and citizenship status, 2018 and 2019 2018 2019 Chivensiye status” Number Tt0e ' Number ioe Total violent victimizations? 6,385,520 23.2 5,813,410 21.0 Veteran status‘ Veteran? 378,300 20.7 347,370 19.0 Non-veteran® 5,115,180 222 4,525,550 195 Citizenship status US. citizen 6,163,570 23.9 5,499,420 21.2 US-bom citizen 5,900,190 25.1 5,296,270 224 Naturalized US. citizen 263,380 116 203,150 88 Non-US. citizen 196,350 125 267,700 17.7 US-born! 5,900,190 25.1 5,296,270 224 Foreign-born? 459,730 11.9 470,850 123 Note: Details may not sum to totals due to rounding and missing data. See appendix table 27 for standard errors. *Comparison year. Rate is per 1,000 persons age 12 or older. Dincludes rape or sexual assault, robbery, aggravated assault, and simple assault. Includes threatened, attempted, and completed occurrences of those crimes. Statistically significant differences for the total victimization numbers and rates are presented using the Balanced Repeated Replication method. Generalized variance function parameters were used to calculate statistically significant differences for the rest of the table. includes persons age 18 or older. Veterans indude persons currently or previously on active duty. Because the NCVS is a household-based survey and active-duty military personnel are more likely to be out of the household at the time of data collection, most veterans in the sample are former active-duty military personnel. ®Non-veterans are persons who never served in the U.S. Armed Forces or who completed training in the Reserves or National Guard only. fPersons born in the US., in a US. territory, or abroad to US. parents. ONaturalized U.S. citizens or non-US. citizens. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2018 and 2019. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 TABLE 25 Firearm violence, 2018 and 2019 2018 2019* Total violent incidents? 5,954,090 5,440,680 Firearm incidents 427,730 440,830 Total violent victimizations® 6,385,520 5,813,410 Firearm victimizations 470,840 481,950 Rate of firearm victimization‘ 17 17 Firearm victimizations reported to police Number 310,310 290,790 Percent of all firearm victimizations 65.9% 60.3% Note: Includes violent crimes in which the offender possessed, showed, or used a firearm. See appendix table 28 for standard errors. "Comparison year. 3.An incident is a specific criminal act involving one or more victims. ‘ach victimization represents one person involved in an incident. Statistically significant differences for the total violent victimization numbers are presented using the Balanced Repeated Replication method. Generalized variance function parameters were used to calculate statistically significant differences for the rest of the table. “Rate is per 1,000 persons age 12 or older. See appendix table 34 for population numbers. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2018 and 2019. 25 3502-022 Page 25 of 53 EFTA_00001571 EFTA00156912

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TABLE 26 Percent and number of violent incidents excluding simple assault, by total population and victim and offender demographic characteristics, 2019 Number of Percent of Ratio of percentages violentincidents __percentof _ _violentincidents __Qffender Offender to Victim to Demographic characteristic Population? Offender® Victim —_population** Offender® Victim to victim population population Total 276,872,470 1,871,370 1,871,370 100% 100% 100% 10 10 10 Sex Male 134,693,660 1,467,020 934,150 48.6% B4.1%F 49.9% Ww WwW 10 Female 142,178,810 224,500 937,220 514 129+ 50.1 03 03 10 Both male and female offenders ~ 52,070 ~ ~ 3.0 ~ ~ ~ ~ Race/ethnicity White‘ 171,423,480 769,430 1,045,300 61.9% 47.7%t 55.9% 09 08 09 Black“ 33,397,100 399,860 © 225,130 121 248t 120 24 21 1.0 Hispanic? 47,890,870 371,010 = 432,770 173 23.0t BAt 10 13 13 Asian® 17,401,410 8750! 33,200! 63 O5t! 18t! 03 01 03 Othert* 6,759,600 48580 134,960 24 30 72t 04 12 30 Multiple offenders of various races‘ ~ 16,680! ~ ~ 1.0! ~ ~ ~ ~ Age 11 or younger! ~ 11,890! ~ - 0.7%! ~ ~ ~ ~ 12-17 24,941,440 214,650 240,970 9.0% 135t 12.9% 1 15 14 18-29 52,798,870 556,840 608,640 19.1 35.1t 325t 1 18 17 30 or older 199,132,160 739,660 1,021,760 719 466 546t 0.9 06 08 Multiple offenders of various ages bed 63,000 od bd 40 od ~ ~ od Note: Details may not sum to totals due to rounding and missing data for offender characteristics. An incident is a specific criminal act involving one or more victims. Offender characteristics are based on victims’ perceptions of offenders. See appendix table 29 for standard errors. *Comparison group. +Difference with comparison group is significant at the 95% confidence level. ! Interpret with caution. Estimate is based on 10 or fewer sample cases or coefficient of variation is greater than 50%. ~Not applicable. The National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) population represents persons age 12 or older living in non-institutionalized residential settings in the U.S. includes those incidents in which the perceived offender characteristics were reported. The sex of the offender was unknown in 7% of incidents, the race or ethnicity of the offender was unknovwm in 14% of incidents, and the age of the offender was unknown in 15% of incidents. Excludes persons of Hispanic origin (e.g., “white” refers to non-Hispanic whites and “black” refers to non-Hispanic blacks). if the victim perceived any of the offenders in a multiple offender incident to be of Hispanic origin, they are classified as Hispanic. includes Native Hawaiians and Other Pacific Islanders, American Indians and Alaska Natives, and persons of two or more races. {While the NCVS does not survey victims age 11 or younger, victims may report the offender to be age 111 or younger. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2019. TABLE 27 Percent of violent incidents excluding simple assault, by victim and offender sex, 2019 Offender sex Number of Both male Victim sex _violentincidents Total Male Female and female Total 1,743,590 100% 84.1% 12.9% 3.0% Male* 837,110 100% 87.7 ol 33 Female 906,480 100% 809 164t 27 Note: Details may not sum to totals due to rounding. An incident is a specific criminal act involving one or more victims. Offender sex is based on victims’ perceptions of offenders. Includes those incidents in which the perceived sex of the offender was reported. The sex of the offender was unknown in 79 of incidents which is why the number of incidents is only 93% as high as in table 26. See appendix table 30 for standard errors. *Comparison group. +Difference with comparison group is significant at the 95% confidence level. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2019. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 26 3502-022 Page 26 of 53 EFTA_00001572 EFTA00156913

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TABLE 28 Number of violent incidents excluding simple assault, by victim and offender race or ethnicity, 2019 Number of Offender race/ethnicity Victim race/ethnicity _violent incidents White? Black® Hispanic? Other@< White® 937,010 595,770" 127,350t 181,040 t 32,850t Black® 183,660 17,690! 143,090" 15,840t! 7,040 t! Hispanic 356,470 78,950 99,070 167,610" 10.850! Note: Details may not sum to totals due to rounding. An incident is a specific criminal act involving one or more victims. Offender race or ethnicity is based on victims’ perceptions of offenders. Includes those violent incidents in which the perceived offender race or ethnicity was reported. Offender race or ethnicity was unknowm in 14% of violent incidents excluding simple assault which is why the number of incidents is only 86% as high as in table 26. See appendix table 31 for standard errors. *Comparison groups are intraracial victim and offender percentages (white-on-white, black-on-black, or Hispanic-on-Hispanic). Difference with comparison group is significant at the 95% confidence level. ! Interpret with caution. Estimate is based on 10 or fewer sample cases, or coefficient of variation is greater than 50%. Excludes persons of Hispanic origin (e.g., “white” refers to non-Hispanic whites and “black” refers to non-Hispanic blacks). Dif the victim perceived any of the offenders in a multiple offender incident to be of Hispanic origin, they are classified as Hispanic. includes Asians, Native Hawaiians and Other Pacific Islanders, American Indians and Alaska Natives, and persons of two or more races. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2019. TABLE 29 Percent of violent incidents excluding simple assault, by victim and offender race or ethnicity, 2019 Number of Offender race/ethnicity Victim race/ethnicity violent incidents Total White? Black® Hispanic? Other’. White* 937,010 100% 63.6%" 13.6% f 19.3% t 35%t Black? 183,660 100% 96t! 779° B6t! 38t! Hispanic 356,470 100% 21t 278t 47.0" 30! Note: Details may not sum to totals due to rounding. An incident is a specific criminal act involving one or more victims. Offender race or ethnicity is based on victims’ perceptions of offenders. Includes those violent incidents in which the perceived offender race or ethnicity was reported. Offender race or ethnicity was unknowm in 14% of violent incidents excluding simple assault which is why the number of incidents is only 86% as high as in table 26. See appendix table 32 for standard errors. *Comparison groups are intraracial victim and offender percentages (white-on-white, black-on-black, or Hispanic-on-Hispanic). +Difference with comparison group is significant at the 95% confidence level. ! Interpret with caution. Estimate is based on 10 or fewer sample cases, or coefficient of variation is greater than 50%. Excludes persons of Hispanic origin (e.g., “white” refers to non-Hispanic whites and “black” refers to non-Hispanic blacks). Dif the victim perceived any of the offenders in a multiple offender incident to be of Hispanic origin, they are classified as Hispanic. “includes Asians, Native Hawaiians and Other Pacific Islanders, American Indians and Alaska Natives, and persons of two or more races. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2019. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 27 3502-022 Page 27 of 53 EFTA_00001573 EFTA00156914

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TABLE 30 Percent of violent incidents excluding simple assault and percent of the U.S. population, by victim and offender race or ethnicity, 2019 p tsleleatinchds Ratio of percentages ercent of violent n Offender another committed by offenders _ Percent of the U.S. population® Offender of same Offender of to J Victim race/ Ofthesame Of another Ofthesame Ofanother population of same population of another ethnicity Total race/ethnicity race/ethnicity Total _race/ethnicity* race/ethnicity Face/ethnicty? race/ethnicity¢ Whited 100% 63.6% 364% 100% 61.9% 38.1% 10 10 Black? 100% 77.9t 22.1 100% 124 87.9 65 03 Hispanic 100% 470t 53.0t 100% 173 82.7 27 06 Note: Details may not sum to totals due to rounding. An incident is a specific criminal act involving one or more victims. Offender race or ethnicity is based on victims’ perceptions of offenders. Includes those violent incidents in which the perceived offender race or ethnicity was reported. Offender race or ethnicity was unknown in 14% of violent incidents excluding simple assault. See appendix table 33 for standard errors. *Comparisons are between the le percentage of the US: population of the same race or ethnicity and the percentage of violent incidents committed by offenders of the same race or ethnicity, and between the percentage of the U.S. population of another race or ethnicity and the percentage of violent incidents committed by offenders of another race or ethnicity. +Difference with comparison group is significant at the 95% confidence level. The National Crime Victimization Survey population represents persons age 12 or older living in non-institutionalized residential settings in the US. ®The percentage of incidents committed by offenders of the same race or ethnicity of the victim divided by the percentage of the U.S. population of the same race or ethnicity. The percentage of incidents committed by offenders of another race or ethnicity divided by the percentage of the US. population of another race or ethnicity. dexcludes persons of Hispanic origin (e.g., “white” refers to non-Hispanic whites and “black” refers to non-Hispanic blacks). Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2019. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 28 3502-022 Page 28 of 53 EFTA_00001574 EFTA00156915

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Methodology Survey coverage The Bureau of Justice Statistics’ National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) is an annual data collection carried out by the U.S. Census Bureau. The NCVS isa self-reported survey that is administered annually from January 1 to December 31. Annual NCVS estimates are based on the number and characteristics of crimes respondents experienced during the prior 6 months, not including the month in which they were interviewed. Therefore, the 2019 survey covers crimes experienced from July 1, 2018 to November 30, 2019, and March 15, 2019 is the middle of the reference period. Crimes are classified by the year of the survey and not by the year of the crime. The NCVS is administered to persons age 12 or older from a nationally representative sample of U.S. households. It collects information on nonfatal personal crimes (rape or sexual assault, robbery, aggravated and simple assault, and personal larceny (purse-snatching and pick-pocketing) and household property crimes (burglary/trespassing, motor-vehicle theft, and other types of theft). The survey collects information on threatened, attempted, and completed crimes. It collects data both on crimes reported and not reported to police. Unless specified otherwise, estimates in this report include threatened, attempted, and completed crimes. In addition to providing annual level and change estimates on criminal victimization, the NCVS is the primary source of information on the nature of criminal victimization incidents. Survey respondents provide information about themselves (including age, sex, race, ethnicity, marital status, educational level, and income) and whether they experienced a victimization. For each victimization incident, respondents report information about the offender (including age, sex, race, ethnicity, and victim- offender relationship), characteristics of the crime (including time and place of occurrence, use of weapons, nature of injury, and economic consequences), whether the crime was reported to police, reasons the crime was or was not reported, and experiences with the criminal justice system. Household information, including household-level demographics (e.g., income) and property victimizations committed against the household (e-g., burglary/ CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 trespassing), is typically collected from the reference person. The reference person is any responsible adult member of the household who is not likely to permanently leave the household. Because an owner or renter of the sampled housing unit is normally the most responsible and knowledgeable household member, this person is generally designated as the reference person and household respondent. However, a household respondent does not have to be one of the household members who owns or rents the unit. In the NCVS, a household is defined as a group of persons who all reside at a sampled address. Persons are considered household members when the sampled address is their usual place of residence at the time of the interview and when they have no primary place of residence elsewhere. Once selected, households remain in the sample for 3% years, and eligible persons in these households are interviewed every 6 months, either in person or over the phone, for a total of seven interviews. First interviews are typically conducted in person, with subsequent interviews conducted either in person or by phone. New households rotate into the sample on an ongoing basis to replace outgoing households that have been in the sample for the full 3-year period. The sample includes persons living in group quarters, such as dormitories, rooming houses, and religious- group dwellings, and excludes persons living on military bases or in institutional settings such as correctional or hospital facilities. Measurement of crime in the National Crime Victimization Survey BJS presents data from the NCVS on victimization, incident, and prevalence rates. Victimization rates measure the extent to which violent and property victimizations occur in a specified population during a specified time. Victimization numbers show the total number of times that people or households are victimized by crime. For crimes affecting persons, NCVS victimization rates are estimated by dividing the number of victimizations that occur during a specified time (T) by the population at risk for those victimizations and multiplying the rate by 1,000. Number of victimizations experienced vi ot by 2 specified population y ictimization rate; = r Number of unique persons (or households) in the specified population , x 1,000 29 3502-022 Page 29 of 53 EFTA_00001575 EFTA00156916

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For victimization rates, each victimization represents one person (for personal crimes) or one household (for property crimes) affected by a crime.’ Every victimization experienced by a person or household during the year is counted. For example, if one person experiences two violent crimes during the year, both are counted in the victimization rate. If one household experiences two property crimes, both are counted in the victimization rate. Victimization estimates are presented in figure 3, tables 1 through 10, table 12, and tables 23 through 25 in this report. Incident rates are another measure of crime. The number of incidents is the number of specific criminal acts involving one or more victims. If every victimization had one victim, the number of incidents would be the same as the number of victimizations. If there was more than one victim, the incident estimate is adjusted to compensate for the possibility that the incident could be reported several times by multiple victims and thus be over-counted. For example, if two people were robbed during the same incident, this crime would be counted as one incident and two victimizations. Incident estimates are presented in tables 13 through 17, and tables 25 through 30 in this report. A third measure, reflecting a population's risk of experiencing one or more criminal victimizations, is prevalence rates. Like victimization rates, prevalence rates describe the level of victimization, but the latter are based on the number of unique persons or households in the population experiencing at least one victimization during a specified time. The key distinction between a victimization and prevalence rate is whether the numerator consists of the number of victimizations or the number of unique victims. For example, a person who experienced two robberies within the past year would be counted twice in the victimization rate but only once in the prevalence rate. Prevalence rates are estimated by dividing the number of unique victims or victimized households in the specified population by the total number of persons or households in the population and multiplying the rate by 100, yielding the percentage of the population victimized at least once in a period. 7In the NCVS, personal crimes are personal larceny (purse-snatching and pick-pocketing) and violent victimizations (rape or sexual assault, robbery, aggravated assault, and simple assault). Homicide is not included because the NCVS is based on interviews with victims. Property crimes are burglary, residential trespassing, motor-vehicle theft, and other theft. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 Number of unique victims (or victimized households} in a specified population , Number of unique persons (or households) in the specified population , Prevalence rate ; = 100 Prevalence rates are presented in figures 1 and 2, and tables 18 through 22 in this report. Prevalence rates for property crimes can be produced at the household or person levels by adjusting the numerators and denominators to reflect households or persons. Table 20 presents property-crime prevalence rates at the household level, and table 21 presents serious property- crime prevalence rates at the personal level. For more information about measuring prevalence in the NCVS, see Measuring the Prevalence of Crime with the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCJ 241656, BJS, September 2013). Non-response and weighting adjustments The 2019 NCVS data file includes 155,076 household interviews. Overall, 71% of eligible households completed interviews. Within participating households, interviews with 249,008 persons were completed in 2019, representing an 83% response rate among eligible persons from responding households. Victimizations that occurred outside of the U.S. were excluded from this report. In 2019, about 1% of the unweighted victimizations occurred outside of the U.S. NCVS data are weighted to produce annual estimates of victimization for persons age 12 or older living in U.S. households. Because the NCVS relies on a sample rather than a census of the entire U.S. population, weights are designed to adjust to known population totals and to compensate for survey non-response and other aspects of the complex sample design. NCVS data files include person, household, victimization, and incident weights. Person weights provide an estimate of the population represented by each person in the sample. Household weights provide an estimate of the household population represented by each household in the sample. After proper adjustment, both person and household weights are also typically used to form the denominator in calculations of crime rates. For personal crimes, the incident weight 30 3502-022 Page 30 of 53 EFTA_00001576 EFTA00156917

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is derived by dividing the person weight of a victim by the total number of persons victimized during an incident, as reported by the respondent. For property crimes measured at the household level, the incident weight and the household weight are the same, because the victim of a property crime is considered to be the household as a whole. The incident weight is most frequently used to calculate estimates of offenders’ and victims’ demographics. Victimization weights used in this report account for the number of persons victimized during an incident and for high-frequency repeat-victimizations (i.e., series victimizations). Series victimizations are similar in type to one another but occur with such frequency that a victim is unable to recall each individual event or describe each event in detail. Survey procedures allow NCVS interviewers to identify and classify these similar victimizations as series victimizations and to collect detailed information on only the most recent incident in the series. The weighting counts series victimizations as the actual number of victimizations reported by the victim, up to a maximum of 10. Doing so produces more reliable estimates of crime levels than counting such victimizations only once, while the cap at 10 minimizes the effect of extreme outliers on rates. According to the 2019 data, series victimizations accounted for 1.4% of all victimizations and 3.1% of all violent victimizations. Additional information on the enumeration of series victimizations is detailed in the report Methods for Counting High-Frequency Repeat Victimizations in the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCJ 237308, BJS, April 2012). Changes to the household weighting adjustment in 2017 The 2017 NCVS weights included a new adjustment that modified household weights to reflect independent housing-unit totals available internally at the U.S. Census Bureau. This new adjustment was applied only to household weights for housing units and does not affect person weights. Historically, the household weights were adjusted to reflect independent totals for the person population. This new weighting adjustment improves on the prior one and better aligns the number of estimated households in the NCVS with other Census household- survey estimates. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 Due to this new adjustment, the 2017 NCVS estimate for the number of households was about 8% lower than the 2016 NCVS estimate. As a result, the estimate of the number of households affected by property crime was also about 8% lower. When making comparisons of property crime at the household level between 2017 and prior years, compare victimization or prevalence rates. Rates are unaffected by this change in weighting methodology because both the numerator and denominator are equally affected. Comparisons of the number of households that were victimized between 2017 and prior years are inappropriate due to this change in weighting methodology. Property crime measured at the person level is unaffected by the change (as presented in measures of serious crime). For more information on weighting in the NCVS, see the Non-response and weighting adjustments section in this methodology and National Crime Victimization Survey, 2016 Technical Documentation (NCJ 251442, BJS, December 2017). Changes to the classification of urban, suburban, and rural areas Beginning in 2019, the NCVS employed a new method for classifying geographical areas (see Classification of urban, suburban, and rural areas in the National Crime Victimization Survey on pp. 12-15). All census blocks not in urbanized areas or urbanized clusters, as defined by the Census Bureau, are classified as rural, consistent with the Census Bureau's definition of rural. Census blocks within cities or Census-designated places that meet certain criteria based on population and density are classified as urban (see appendix table 36), while all other census blocks in urbanized areas or urban clusters are classified as suburban. Classifications of urban places are based on population size, weighted housing-unit density, and the Census Bureau's designations of urbanized areas and urban clusters, using data from the 2010 Census. Housing-unit density is the number of housing units per square mile in a given area. Weighted housing-unit density, under BJS’s approach, is the weighted average of the housing-unit densities for all census tracts in an area, with the tracts weighted by their number of housing units. Housing-unit addresses are converted into geographical coordinates through a process called geocoding. Housing units that cannot be geocoded are imputed. For more information on imputation procedures, see National Crime Victimization Survey, 2016 Technical Documentation (NCJ 251442, BJS, December 2017). 31 3502-022 Page 31 of 53 EFTA_00001577 EFTA00156918

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Table 31 shows the 2019 U.S. resident population for those age 12 or older and the number of households in each category (urban, suburban, rural) under both the new and historical classifications. About one-third of the US. resident population age 12 or older were classified as residing in an urban area under the historical definition, compared to about one-eighth under the new definition. ‘The percentage of the resident population classified as residing in a suburban area shifted from 53% to 69%, while the percentage classified as rural shifted from 14% to 19%. Similar shifts in the number of households were observed under the new classification. Standard error computations When national estimates are derived from a sample, as with the NCVS, caution must be used when comparing one estimate to another or when comparing estimates over time. Although one estimate may be larger than another, estimates based on a sample have some degree of sampling error. The sampling error of an estimate depends on several factors, including the amount of variation in the responses and the size of the sample. When the sampling error around an estimate is taken into account, estimates that appear different may not be statistically significant. One measure of the sampling error associated with an estimate is the standard error. The standard error may vary from one estimate to the next. Generally, an estimate with a smaller standard error provides a more reliable approximation of the true value than an estimate with a larger standard error. Estimates with relatively large standard errors have less precision and reliability and should be interpreted with caution. For complex sample designs, there are several methods that can be used to generate standard errors around a point estimate (e.g., numbers, percentages, and rates). In this report, generalized variance function (GVF) parameters and direct-variance estimation were used for variance estimation. Parameters are produced for GVFs that compute the variance of any crime estimate based on the value of that crime estimate. The GVF parameters are generated by fitting estimates and their relative variance to a regression model, using an iterative weighted least-squares procedure where the weight is the inverse of the square of the predicted relative variance. Compared to GVFs, direct-variance estimation is generally considered more accurate in approximating the true variance. In an effort to improve the quality and accurancy of NCVS estimates, BJS used direct-variance estimation instead of GVFs for tables 1 CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 TABLE 31 Population and number of households, by old and new definition of location of residence, 2019 Old definition New definition Location of residence Number Percent Number Percent Total U.S. resident population age 12 or older 276,900,000 100% 276,900,000 100% Urban 92,450,000 33 33,910,000 12 Suburban 146,700,000 53 190,800,000 69 Rural 37,720,000 14 52,160,000 19 Number of households 126,400,000 100% 126,400,000 100% Urban 43,770,000 35 15,900,000 13 Suburban 65,000,000 51 87,410,000 69 Rural 17,660,000 14 23,130,000 18 Note: Details may not sum to totals due to rounding. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2019; and 2010 Census of Population and Housing and 2013 OMB Metropolitan Statistical Area designations. 32 3502-022 Page 32 of 53 EFTA_00001578 EFTA00156919

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and 2 (and for totals in tables 4, 9, 24, and 25 that are also presented in tables 1 and 2, and statistics in table 12 that are based on the new classification of urban, suburban, and rural areas). To generate standard errors around the victimization estimates found in tables 1 and 2 (and totals in tables 4, 9, 24, and 25, and statistics in table 12 that are based on the new classification of urban, suburban, and rural areas), BJS used a specialized version of Balanced Repeated Replication (BRR) estimation using Fay’s method.* BRR estimation is a type of direct-replication-variance estimation. Under replicate-variance-estimation, a set of replicate weights (e.g., the NCVS typically has a set consisting of 160 replicate weights) is used to capture the sampling variance. Fay's method is utilized for surveys that have rare outcomes in which the entire sample is necessary to properly estimate the variance. The standard error estimates for tables 1 and 2 (and totals in tables 4, 9, 24, and 25), estimated using BRR, differ from those previously reported in prior Criminal Victimization bulletins, which used GVF parameters. Year-to-year statistically significant differences may also vary from those previously reported. See table 32 for comparisons of significance testing between the two methods for 2014, 2015, 2016, and 2017 compared to 2018, as previously reported in Criminal Victimization, 2018 (NC] 253043, BJS, September 2019). The U.S. Census Bureau produces GVF parameters for BJS, which account for aspects of the NCVS's complex sample design and represent the curve fitted to a selection of individual standard errors, using a specialized version of BRR based on Fay’s method. GVFs express the variance as a function of the expected value of the survey estimate.? For more information on GVFs, see National Crime Victimization Survey, 2016 Technical Documentation (NCJ 251442, BJS, December 2017). Besides tables 1 and 2 (and totals in tables 4, 9, 24, and 25, and statistics in table 12 that are based on the new classification of urban, suburban, and rural areas), all standard errors for victimization and incident estimates in this report were generated using GVFs. Say, R. E. (1989). Theory and Application of Replicate Weighting for Variance Calculations. In Proceedings of the Survey Research Methods Section, American Statistical Association, 212-217. Wolter, K. M. (1984). An Investigation of Some Estimators of Variance for Systematic Sampling. Journal of the American Statistical Association 79, 781-790. 10Woodruff, R. S. (1971). A Simple Method for Approximating the Variance of a Complicated Estimate. Journal of the American Statistical Association 66, 411-414, CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 TABLE 32 Significant differences in the rate of victimizations, by variance-estimation method and type of crime, 2014-2017 versus 2018 2014-2015, 2016 = 2017, 2018* Type of crime GVF BRR GVF BRR GVF BRR GVF BRR GVF BRR Violent crime + +t tt ¢ ied Rape/sexual assault +t ttt ttt-- Robbery ied Assault t ft ~ Aggravated assault t ied Simple assault 3 t = ~ venice? ttt t t-- Property crime t ft t ft ~ Burglary/trespassing t # ied Burglary t ed Trespassing ied Motor-vehicle theft ~ - Other theft t ft t ft ied Note: In this report, standard error estimates for tables | and 2 were computed using Balanced Repeated Replication, while estimates reported in pnor Criminal Victimization bulletins used generalized-variance function parameters. Year-to-year statistically significant differences vary by method in some cases, as shown in this table. “Comparison year. Difference with comparison year is significant at the 95% confidence level. reared +Difference with comparison year is significant at the 90% confidence level. ~Not applicable as 2018 is the comparison year. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2014-2018. To generate standard errors around prevalence estimates, BJS used BRR and Taylor Series Linearization (TSL) methods. The TSL method directly estimates variances through a linearized function by combining variance estimates from the stratum and primary sampling units (PSUs) used to sample households and persons." In the NCVS, the design parameters used for computing TSL variances are PPUEDOSTRATA (stratum) and HALFSAMPLE (PSU). These design parameters are available for all years except the first half of 1993 and all of 2016; therefore, BRR methods were used for 2016 prevalence estimates. Direct-variance estimation—BRR and TSL—is generally considered more accurate, in terms of how closely the variance estimate approximates the true variance, than GVFs. With direct-variance estimation, each estimate is generated based on the outcome being estimated rather than being generated based on a generalized function. 33 3502-022 Page 33 of 53 EFTA_00001579 EFTA00156920

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BJS conducted statistical tests to determine whether differences in estimated numbers, percentages, and rates in this report were statistically significant once sampling error was taken into account. Using statistical analysis programs developed specifically for the NCVS, all comparisons in the text were tested for significance. The primary test procedure was the Student's t-statistic, which tests the difference between two sample estimates. Findings described in this report as increases or decreases passed a test at either the 0.05 level (95% confidence level) or 0.10 level (90% confidence level) of significance. Figures and tables in this report should be referenced for testing on specific findings. Estimates and standard errors of the estimates provided in this report may be used to generate a confidence interval around the estimate as a measure of the margin of error. The following example illustrates how standard errors may be used to generate confidence intervals: Based on the 2019 NCVS, the rate of violent victimization reported to police, excluding simple assault, in 2019 was 3.4 victimizations per 1,000 persons age 12 or older (see appendix table 3). Using the GVFs, BJS determined that the estimated victimization rate has a standard error of 0.38 (see appendix table 3). A confidence interval around the estimate is generated by multiplying the standard error by +1.96 (the t-score of a normal, two-tailed distribution that excludes 2.5% at either end of the distribution). Therefore, the 95% confidence interval around the 3.4 estimate from 2019 is 3.4 + (0.38 x 1.96) or (2.63 to 4.13). In other words, if BJS used the same sampling method to select different samples and computed an interval estimate for each sample, it would expect the true population parameter (rate of violent victimization) to fall within the interval estimates 95% of the time. For this report, BJS also calculated a coefficient of variation (CV) for all estimates, representing the ratio of the standard error to the estimate. CVs (not shown in tables) provide another measure of reliability and a means for comparing the precision of estimates across measures with differing levels or metrics. Revised 2016 data file For 2016, BJS greatly increased the NCVS sample size to facilitate the ability to produce state-level victimization estimates for the 22 most populous states. At the same time, the sample was adjusted to reflect the U.S. population counts in the 2010 decennial census. These CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 changes resulted in a historically large number of new households and first-time interviews in the first half of 2016 and produced challenges in comparing 2016 results to prior data years. Working with the U.S. Census Bureau, BJS subsequently devised the methodology that was used to create the revised 2016 NCVS data file. The result was revised criminal victimization estimates that were nationally representative for 2016 and could be compared with prior and future years. See National Crime Victimization Survey revised 2016 estimates text box (pp. 3-4) and Methodology (pp. 15-18) in Criminal Victimization, 2016: Revised (NCJ 252121, BJS, October 2018), for more information. NCVS measurement of rape or sexual assault The NCVS uses a two-stage measurement approach in the screening and classification of criminal victimization, including rape or sexual assault. In the first stage of screening, survey respondents are administered a series of short-cue screening questions designed to help respondents think about different experiences they may have had during the reference period. (See NCVS-1 at https://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/ncvs15_bsq.pdf) This design improves respondents’ recall of events, particularly for incidents that may not immediately come to mind as crimes, such as those committed by family members and acquaintances. Respondents who answer affirmatively to any of the short-cue screening items are subsequently administered a crime incident report (CIR) designed to classify incidents into specific crime types. (See NCVS-2 at https://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/ nevs15_cir.pdf) First stage of measurement. Two short-cue screening questions are specifically designed to target sexual victimization: 1. Other than any incidents already mentioned, has anyone attacked or threatened you in any of these ways— a. with any weapon, such as a gun or knife b. with anything like a baseball bat, frying pan, scissors, or stick c. by something thrown, such as a rock or bottle d. by grabbing, punching, or choking e. any rape, attempted rape, or other types of sexual attack 34 3502-022 Page 34 of 53 EFTA_00001580 EFTA00156921

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f. any face-to-face threats g. any attack or threat or use of force by anyone at all? Please mention it even if you are not certain it was a crime. 2. Incidents involving forced or unwanted sexual acts are often difficult to talk about. Other than any incidents already mentioned, have you been forced or coerced to engage in unwanted sexual activity by— a, someone you did not know b.a casual acquaintance c. someone you know well? Respondents may screen into a CIR if they respond affirmatively to another short-cue screening question. For instance, a separate screening question cues respondents to think of attacks or threats that took place in specific locations, such as at home, work, or school. Respondents who recall a sexual victimization that occurred at home, work, or school and answer affirmatively would be administered a CIR even if they did not respond affirmatively to the screening question targeting sexual victimization. Second stage of measurement. The CIR is used to collect information on the attributes of each incident. The key attributes of sexual violence that are used to classify a victimization as a rape or sexual assault are the type of attack and physical injury suffered. Victims are asked if “the offender hit you, knock[ed] you down, or actually attack[ed] you in any way”; if “the offender TRIED] to attack you”; or if “the offender THREATEN[ED] you with harm in any way?” The survey participant is classified as a victim of rape or sexual assault if he or she responds affirmatively to one of these three questions and then responds that the completed, attempted, or threatened attack was— = rape = attempted rape = sexual assault other than rape or attempted rape = verbal threat of rape # verbal threat of sexual assault other than rape = unwanted sexual contact with force (e.g., grabbing or fondling) ® unwanted sexual contact without force (e.g., grabbing or fondling). If the victim selects one of the following response options to describe the attack, he or she is also classified as a CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 Classification of rape and sexual assault in the National Crime Victimization Survey Measure Element of sexual violence Completed rape Type of attack = rape Type of injury = rape Type of attack = attempted rape Type of injury = attempted rape Type of threat = verbal threat of rape with weapon Type of attempted attack/threat = verbal threat of rape Type of attack = sexual assault other than rape or attempted rape Type of injury = sexual assault other than rape or attempted rape Type of attempted attack/threat = unwanted sexual contact with force Type of attempted attack/threat = unwanted sexual contact without force Type of attempted attack/threat = verbal threat of sexual assault other than rape Note: Victim is determined to be present in all measures of rape and sexual assault. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2019. Attempted rape Threatened rape Sexual assault victim of rape or sexual assault if the injuries suffered as a result of the incident are described as— = rape = attempted rape = sexual assault other than rape or attempted rape. Coercion. The CIR does not ask respondents if psychological coercion was used, nor make any explicit reference to the victim being unable to provide consent (e.g., in incidents involving drugs or alcohol use). One screening question targeted to rape and sexual assault asks respondents if force or coercion was used to initiate unwanted sexual activity. The final classification of incidents by the CIR results in the following definitions of rape and sexual assault used in the NCVS: Rape. Coerced or forced sexual intercourse. Forced sexual intercourse means vaginal, anal, or oral penetration by the offender(s). This category could include incidents where the penetration was from a foreign object such as a bottle. It includes attempted rape, threatened rape, male and female victims, and both heterosexual and same-sex incidents. Sexual assault. A wide range of victimizations, separate from rape, attempted rape, or threatened rape. These crimes include attacks or threatened attacks involving unwanted sexual contact between the victim and offender. Sexual assaults may or may not involve force and include such things as grabbing or fondling. 35 3502-022 Page 35 of 53 EFTA_00001581 EFTA00156922

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APPENDIX TABLE 1 Estimates and standard errors for figure 1: Percent of U.S. residents age 12 or older who were victims of violent crime excluding simple assault, 1993-2019 Number of persons Year Estimate Standard error 1993 2,654,090 50,781 1994 2,965,900 90,291 1995 2,514,400 83,061 1996 2,278,270 82,498 1997 2,306,400 100,289 1998 2,022,980 104,805 1999 1,821,830 70,205 2000 1,622,850 82,634 2001 1,448,910 76,785 2002 1,222,940 61,350 2003 1,277,400 67,957 2004 1,276,560 77171 2005 1,238,410 70,482 2006 - - 2007 1,210,660 69,266 2008 1,210,980 64,122 2009 1,107,630 63,144 2010 1,094,280 74,952 2011 1,205,460 60.858 2012 1,271,770 74512 2013 1,145,350 56,413 2014 1,235,290 66,223 2015 1,099,400 60,817 2016 1,123,190 78,887 2017 1,225,800 57,738 2018 1,367,270 65,626 2019 1,216,400 59,953 Estimate 1.26% 139 117 1.05 1.05 0.91 0.81 0.72 0.63 0.53 0.53 0.53 0.51 048 048 044 043 047 049 043 046 O41 O41 045 0.50 044 95% confidence interval Percent of persons Standard error Lower bound 0.023% 1.213% 0.040 1.315 0.036 1.101 0.035 0.981 0.040 0.972 0.043 0.830 0.032 0.751 0.035 0.650 0.032 0.571 0.025 0.481 0.025 0.486 0.031 0471 0.027 0.455 0.028 0.431 0.026 0.431 0.024 0.391 0.029 0.374 0.022 0427 0.027 0464 0.021 0.394 0.025 0417 0.023 0.365 0.029 0.356 0.021 0.410 0.023 0.453 0.021 0,399 Upper bound 1.305% 1.472 1.242 1.121 1.132 1.002 0.876 0.787 0.699 0.580 0.586 0.592 0.563 0.542 0.534 0.486 0.488 0513 0.542 0476 0515 0.455 0.469 0.493 0.545 0.483 ~Estimates for 2006 should not be compared to other years and are excluded from this table. See Criminal Victimization, 2007 (NCJ 224390, BJS, December 2008) for more information on changes to the 2006 National Crime Victimization Survey. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 1993-2019. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 36 3502-022 Page 36 of 53 EFTA_00001582 EFTA00156923

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APPENDIX TABLE 2 Estimates and standard errors for figure 2: Percent of U.S. households who were victims of burglary, 1993-2019 Percent of households 95% confidence interval Year 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 Number of households Estimate Standard error 1,282,240 47,291 2,908,560 82,550 2,699,990 90,709 2,516,680 82,560 2,491,980 99,083 2,236,960 88,836 1,984,120 86,325 1,901,640 83,087 1,782,480 80,301 1,787,400 74,716 1,953,040 86,638 1,895,120 84,424 1,982,230 97,844 1,737,940 75,913 1,694,440 76,960 1,809,050 84,159 1,775,970 72,335 1,797,370 74,809 1,976,440 82,245 1,775,400 79,872 1,638,920 66,013 1,562,130 74,217 1,455,720 57,417 1,273,410 58,760 1,333,600 58,052 1,040,730 50,120 Estimate 257% 289 2.66 245 240 212 1.85 1.76 163 1.62 wi 1.64 1.69 145 140 148 145 146 157 139 127 1.18 1.09 1.03 1.07 0.82 Standard error 0.087% 0.074 0.082 0.073 0.078 0.070 0.073 0.070 0.062 0.062 0.070 0.071 0.080 0.060 0.061 0.066 0.057 0.055 0.065 0.061 0.051 0.055 0.043 0.047 0.046 0.039 Lower bound 2.406% 2.749 2.503 2311 2.247 1.990 1714 1.622 1.509 1.503 1.578 1,502 1541 1.340 1.284 1.353 1.338 1356 1.446 1.276 1.169 1.080 1.007 0.947 0.982 0.750 Upper bound 2.748% 3.042 2.827 2598 2555 2.267 2.000 1.899 1.753 1.746 1.856 1.784 1.859 1578 1524 1.616 1.561 1.574 1.703 1517 1.371 1.297 1.176 1131 1.163 0.903 ~Estimates for 2006 should not be compared to other years and are excluded from this table. See Criminal Victimization, 2007 (NCJ 224390, BJS, December 2008) for more information on changes to the 2006 National Crime Victimization Survey. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 1993-2019. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 37 3502-022 Page 37 of 53 EFTA_00001583 EFTA00156924

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APPENDIX TABLE 3 Estimates and standard errors for figure 3: Rate of violent victimization excluding simple assault and rate of violent victimization reported to police, excluding simple assault, 1993-2019 Violent victimization, excluding simple assault Rate per 1,000 persons age 12 Year or older Standard error 1993 29.1 157 1994 27.0 135 1995 24 114 1996 218 1.26 1997 21.1 139 1998 16.6 1.16 1999 159 1.13 2000 124 0.93 2001 1.0 0.79 2002 10.0 0.92 2003 10.0 0.78 2004 95 0.67 2005 92 0.76 2006 - - 2007 90 0.72 2008 79 074 2009 78 0.64 2010 66 0.68 2011 72 0.63 2012 80 058 2013 73 0.72 2014 WW 0.65 2015 68 0.60 2016 66 047 2017 73 053 2018 86 0.66 2019 73 057 95% confidence interval 26.00 2439 20.12 1934 1838 1432 13.69 10.60 947 8.16 849 8.16 774 755 647 651 5.29 5.96 681 5.92 639 5.61 5.68 630 7.30 6.16 Lower bound Upper bound 3215 29.68 2459 2430 23.81 18.85 18.12 14.24 12.59 11.76 11.53 10.80 10.73 10.37 938 9.00 795 8.44 9.10 8.76 892 795 753 839 989 8.38 Violent victimizations reported to police, excluding simple assault Rate per 1,000 persons or older 149 134 Wl 101 5 91 80 64 63 64 58 60 54 5.0 44 38 38 44 43 45 43 37 35 38 43 34 12 95% confidence interval Standarderror Lowerbound Upper bound 117 12.58 17.15 092 11.64 15.23 082 9.53 12.77 084 8.45 11.75 101 9.50 13.45 083 7.50 10.74 0.79 6.48 9.56 0.68 5.11 7.78 061 5.15 7.54 073 5.02 7.88 0.62 4.62 7.07 056 4.36 7.05 059 429 6.61 058 3.88 6.16 054 3.38 5.51 054 2.79 4.89 052 2.79 481 051 3.41 541 0.45 3.44 5.22 059 3.33 5.62 050 3.29 5.24 047 2.80 4.65 037 2.78 4.23 039 3.02 453 0.46 3.39 5.19 038 2.63 4.13 Estimates for 2006 should not be compared to other years and are excluded from this table. See Criminal Victimization, 2007 (NCJ 224390, BJS, December 2008) for more information on changes to the 2006 National Crime Victimization Survey. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 1993-2019. Old NCVS definition Urban Suburban Rural 100% 0% % APPENDIX TABLE 4 Estimates for figure 5: Location of residence classification, by source of classification AHS respondent classification Location of residence Urban Suburban Rural Biggest principal city of MSA 58% 40% 2% Other principal city of MSA 3 67 2 In MSA but not principal city 14 64 2 In micropolitan area 20 29 52 Outside of metro/micro area 13 7 70 Note: Details may not sum to totals due to rounding. New NCVS definition Urban Suburban Rural 43% 56% 1% i 88 1 2 79 19 0 52 48 0 25 75 100 0 0 i] 100 0 ti) 0 100 ) 0 100 Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2019; Housing and Urban Development, American Housing Survey, 2017; and 2010 Census of Population and Housing and 2013 OMB Metropolitan Statistical Area designations. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 38 3502-022 Page 38 of 53 EFTA_00001584 EFTA00156925

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APPENDIX TABLE 5 Standard errors for table 1: Number and rate of violent victimizations, by type of crime, 2015-2019 Type of violent crime Violent crime Rape/sexual assault Robbery Assault Aggravated assault Simple assault Violent crime excluding simple assault Note: Standard errors were calculated using the Balanced Repeated Replication method of direct estimation. 2015 2016 2017 Number fats per Number rie Number aasper 301,600 = 1.12 244,399 252,760 0.93 79,793 030 54,696 a 63,031 0.23 70,612 0.26 45806 0.17 71,490 0.26 253,031 0.94 226,970 0.83 228,155 0.84 76,662 0.28 83,790 0.31 73,874 0.27 241,182 0.89 198,828 0.73 215,126 0.79 145,446 054 107,838 0.40 118460 0.44 Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2015-2019. me Nuraber rie 343,745 = 61685 022 37637115 69,272 0.25 316022. 1.15 126,295 0.46 2019 Rate Number 1 295,287 = 1.07 70,656 0.26 61,708 0.22 264,712 0.96 87,553 0.32 246,234 = 0.89 128,935 0.47 APPENDIX TABLE 6 Standard errors for table 2: Number and rate of property victimizations, by type of crime, 2015-2019 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 Rate per Rate Rate per Rate Rate Type of property crime Number 1,000 Number 1000 Number 1, Number 1,000 void Number 1000. Total 382579 2.96 367,255 = 2.72 247,507 «1.97 246,035 256412 1.96 Burglary/trespassing 119,068 0.92 131,523 (0.98 107,144 «(0.88 111,336 ss 96471 80.76 Burglary 96424 (0.74 115,021 0.86 79,260 0.65 93,132 0.75 86,822 0.68 Trespassing 63,906 0.49 72874 (0.54 61,171 0.50 43,738 035 51,388 = 0.40 Motor-vehicle theft 54,762 0.41 61,985 047 38,067 031 40,105 0.32 42872 034 Other theft 309048 2.38 291,599 2.17 199547 1.58 202,949 1.56 221,561 1.70 Note: Standard errors were calculated using the Balanced Repeated Replication method of direct estimation. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2015-2019. APPENDIX TABLE 7 Standard errors for table 3: Number and rate of violent victimizations, by selected characteristics of violent crime, 2018 and 2019 Selected characteristics of violent crime Domestic violence Intimate partner violence Stranger violence Violent crime involving injury Violent crime involving a weapon 2018 2019 Rate Rate per Number 1,000 Number 1,000. 137,389 = 0.50 122,641 0.44 100,436 = 0.36 6483 (031 212,208 = 0.77 192,610 0.70 145,604 = 0.53 129,796 = 0.47 137,150 0.50 119,364 0.43 Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2018 and 2019. Standard errors for table 4: Rate of completed, attempted, and threatened 2016 090 0.40 044 APPENDIX TABLE 8 violent victimizations, 2015-2019 Violent victimizations 2015 Total® 1.12 Completed 055 Attempted 058 Threatened 0.56 055 2017 0.93 0.45 051 057 2018 1.25 0.57 058 0.69 2019 1.07 0.47 0.55 0.63 Standard errors for the total victimization rates were calculated using the Balanced Repeated Replication method of direct estimation. Generalized variance function parameters were used to calculate standard errors for the rest of the table. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2015-2019. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 39 3502-022 Page 39 of 53 EFTA_00001585 EFTA00156926

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APPENDIX TABLE 9 Standard errors for table 5: Rates of crime reported to police in the Uniform Crime Reporting program and in the National Crime Victimization Survey, 2018 and 2019 Rate per 1,000 persons age 12 or older Type of crime 2018 NCVS 2019 NCVS Violent crime excluding simple assault 0.460 0.382 Murder ~ ~ Rape/sexual assault 0.130 O.117 Robbery 0.200 0.158 Aggravated assault 0.300 0.261 Rate per 1,000 households 2018 NCVS 2019 NCVS Property crime 1.110 wan Burglary? 0.444 0.422 Motor-vehicle theft 0.300 0.292 ~Not applicable. Standard errors differ from those previously published in the Criminal Victimization, 2018 report because a coding error that affected the generation of those earlier estimates has been corrected. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2018 and 2019. APPENDIX TABLE 10 Standard errors for table 6: Percent and rate of victimizations reported to police, by type of crime, 2018 and 2019 Percent of victimizations reported Rate of victimizations reported to to police police per 1,000 Type of crime 2018 2019 2018 2019 Violent crime 2.26% 2.26% 0.82 072 Rape/sexual assault 373 5.12 0.13 0.12 Robbery 4.96 5.22 0.20 0.16 Assault 242 239 0.70 0.63 Aggravated assault 4.06 417 0.30 0.26 Simple assault 252 252 0.55 051 Violent crime excluding simple assault 3.14% 3.26% 046 038 Selected characteristics of violent crime Domestic violence 3.75% 3.98% 0.30 0.29 Intimate partner violence 433 476 0.21 0.22 Stranger violence 3.03 3.04 044 037 Violent crime involving injury 3.69 3.85 0.35 0.29 Violent crime involving a weapon 377 4.04 0.35 0.28 Property crime 0.81% 0.86% i Ww Burglary/trespassing 1.76 2.00 0.53 051 Burglary® 207 238 044 0.42 Trespassing® 3.10 3.33 0.27 0.25 Motor-vehicle theft 307 3.22 030 0.29 Other theft 0.86 0.89 0.87 0.87 Standard errors differ from those previously published in the Criminal Victimization, 2018 report because a coding error that affected the generation of those earlier estimates has been corrected. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2018 and 2019. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 3502-022 Page 40 of 53 EFTA_00001586 EFTA00156927

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APPENDIX TABLE 11 Standard errors for table 7: Rate of violent victimization reported and not reported to police, by completed, attempted, and threatened crimes, 2015-2019 Rate of reported crime per 1,000 Rate of unreported crime per 1,000 Violent crime 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 Total 0.84 0.68 O71 0.82 0.72 0.89 0.79 0.79 0.98 091 Completed 0.44 0.29 032 038 032 037 030 031 0.40 034 Attempted 041 0.30 0.32 038 035 043 036 039 0.42 043 Threatened 034 0.37 0.37 039 036 0.46 0.46 0.43 0.55 052 Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2015-2019. APPENDIX TABLE 12 Standard errors for table 8: Percent of violent victimizations for which victims received assistance from a victim-service agency, by type of crime, 2018 and 2019 Type of crime 2018 2019 Violent crime 1.17% 0.99% Violent crime excluding simple assault 1.79 1.74 Simple assault 1.26 1.00 Intimate partner violence 3.06% 3.97% Violent crime involving injury 2.28% 2.69% Violent crime involving a weapon 2.03% 1.74% Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2018 and 2019. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 41 3502-022 Page 41 of 53 EFTA_00001587 EFTA00156928

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APPENDIX TABLE 13 Standard errors for table 9: Rate of violent victimization, by type of crime and demographic characteristics of victims, 2018 and 2019 Total violent Victim demographic victimization characteristic 2018 2019 Total? 1.25 1.07 Sex Male 174 164 Female 1.83 1.60 Race/ethnicity White 1.76 152 Black 249 232 Hispanic 2.10 225 Asian 2.64 163 Other 733 8.66 Age 1217 3.80 382 18-24 3.72 375 25-34 3.05 255 35-49 238 197 50-64 1.91 1.92 65 or older 1.01 0.95 Marital status Never married 253 234 Married 1.17 1.10 Widow/widower 232 213 Divorced 4.03 3.25 Separated 8.76 9.43 Household income Less than $25,000 3.46 3.28 $25,000-$49,999 2.18 1.92 $50,000-$99,999 159 157 $100,000-$199,999 2.14 1.83 $200,000 or more 274 279 Standard errors for the total victimization rates were calculated using the Balanced Repeated Replication method of direct estimation. Generalized variance function the rest of the table. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2018 and 2019. Violent victimization excluding simple assault 2018 2019 0.46 047 0.83 0.82 0.97 0.77 0.82 0.69 156 1.24 1.25 139 133 0.72 4.26 431 172 182 222 218 153 130 1.26 0.98 0.94 0.86 051 0.46 133 1.23 056 0.45 119 132 214 174 4.66 464 2.09 174 1.16 1.01 0.68 0.75 097 0.73 0.95 154 rameters were used to calculate standard errors for CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 APPENDIX TABLE 14 Standard errors for table 10: Percent and rate of violent victimizations reported to police, by type of crime and demographic characteristics of victims, 2019 Violent victimization excluding simple Total violent victimization —_ assault reported to reported to police police Victim demographi Ri Sareeseioae ‘ Percent 1000 Percent 1000 Total 2.26% 0.72 3.26% 0.38 Sex Male 2.72% 0.82 4.13% 0.49 Female 287 0.95 415 0.46 Race/ethnicity White 255% 0.78 4.00% 041 Black 4.96 147 7.24 0.82 Hispanic 4.15 141 542 0.88 Asian 9.14 1.04 16.20 044 Other 541 4.98 7.66 1.99 Age 1217 3.52% 1.54 6.45% 0.98 18-24 3.83 2.01 5.17 1.15 25-34 3.97 1.54 5.80 0.93 35-49 3.86 1.15 5.65 0.56 50-64 3.92 117 6.18 0.57 65 or older 6.27 0.55 10.13 0.34 Marital status Never married 2.63% 1.16 3.86% 0.69 Married 3.59 0.65 5.6 0.28 Widow/ widower 835 1.34 1131 1.01 Divorced 454 1.98 6.63 1.12 Separated 631 7.09 10.22 3.46 Household income Less than $25,000 3.33% 1.86 4.80% 1.06 $25,000-$49,999 371 1.13 5.33 0.70 $50,000-$99,999 3.54 0.90 5.30 044 $100,000-$199,999 4.04 0.89 749 0.43 $200,000 0rmore 5.62 1.30 5.98 0.47 Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2019. 42 3502-022 Page 42 of 53 EFTA_00001588 EFTA00156929

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APPENDIX TABLE 15 Standard errors for table 12: Rate of victimization, by type of crime and location of residence, 2018 and 2019 Rate per 1,000 Violent crime excluding Violent crime simple assault Property crime Location of residence 2018 2019 2018 2019 2018 2019 New definition Urban 244 203 153 1.06 6.19 7.66 Suburban 147 130 057 0.60 250 232 Rural 2.64 2.08 0.73 1.20 4.62 4.08 Old definition Urban 2.33 2.10 130 1.08 3.53 3.76 Suburban 151 135 071 0.66 233 2.29 Rural 2.86 2.79 145 1.26 431 470 Note: Standard errors for estimates using the new definition of location of residence were calculated using the Balanced Repeated Replication method of direct estimation. Standard errors for estimates using the old definition of location of residence were calculated using generalized variance function parameters. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2018 and 2019; and 2010 Census of Population and Housing and 2013 OMB Metropolitan Statistical Area designations. APPENDIX TABLE 16 Standard errors for table 13: Percent and number of violent incidents, by total population and victim and offender demographic characteristics, 2019 Percent of violent incidents Number of Offender Victim violent incidents 95% confidence interval 95% confidence interval Demographic characteristic Offender Victim _—_Standarderror Lowerbound Upperbound Standarderror Lowerbound Upper bound Total 305,087 305,087 ~ ~ ~ ~ - ~ Sex Male 275,778 = 216,194 222% 70.68% 79.36% 2.39% 44.36% 53.74% Female 116,923 221,906 182 17.83 24.96 240 46.24 55.66 Both male and female offenders 35,760 ~ 0.66 229 489 ~ ~ ~ Race/ethnicity White 194,634 254.209 253% 45.20% 55.12% 2.38% 57.45% 66.79% Black 120,912 76823 2.02 21.02 28.95 1.23 830 13.12 Hispanic 99,372 105,019 1.76 15.26 22.16 158 13.93 20.14 Asian 14,867 27,907 032 035 1.60 049 130 3.23 Other 38,991 62,544 0.80 3.00 612 1.03 5.85 9.89 Multiple offenders of various races 11,207 ~ 024 0.13 1.08 ~ ~ ~ Age 11 of younger 23,555 ~ 0.49% 1.07% 2.98% ~ - ~ 12-17 88,861 95,106 159 12.45 18.69 1.47% 11.84% 17.58% 18-29 135,533 153,467 215 2481 33.22 2.06 25.69 33.78 30 or older 196,642 235,462 252 45.07 54.93 241 50.83 60.28 Multiple offenders of various ages 32,576 ~ 0.66 209 468 ~ - ~ ~Not applicable. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2019. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 43 3502-022 Page 43 of 53 EFTA_00001589 EFTA00156930

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APPENDIX TABLE 17 Standard errors for table 14: Percent of violent incidents, by victim and offender sex, 2019 Offender sex Number of Both male Victim sex _violentincidents Male Female and female Total 291,164 2.22% 1.82% 0.62% Male 201,626 250 = 1.92 0.86 Female 215,926 288 252 0.86 Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2019. APPENDIX TABLE 18 Standard errors for table 15: Number of violent incidents, by victim and offender race or ethnicity, 2019 Victim race) Number of Offender race/ethnicity ethnicity _violentincidents White Black _ Hispanic Other White 223,256 160,168 66,797 65,942 30,010 Black 68,856 22,886 54360 14,707 7,734 Hispanic 93,010 34331 43,801 53,147 9.216 Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2019. APPENDIX TABLE 19 Standard errors for table 16: Percent of violent incidents, by victim and offender race or ethnicity, 2019 Victim race/ Number of Offender race/ethnicity ethnicity violent incidents White Black Hispanic Other White 223,256 2.94% 1.97% 1.95% 1.00% Black 68,856 3.87 5.08 271 151 Hispanic 93,010 3.55 4.13 449 1.15 Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2019. APPENDIX TABLE 20 Standard errors for table 17: Percent of violent incidents and percent of the U.S. population, by victim race or ethnicity, 2019 Percent of violent incidents committed by offenders Of the same race/ethnicity Of another race/ethnicity Victim race/ Standard 95% confidence interval Standard 95% confidence interval ethnicity error Lower bound Upper bound error Lower bound Upper bound White 294% 55.82% 67.34% 2.80% 32.93% 43.90% Black 5.08 60.05 79.96 4q7 20.64 39.35 Hispanic 4.49 3441 52.01 459 47.79 65.79 Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2019. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 44 3502-022 Page 44 of 53 EFTA_00001590 EFTA00156931

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APPENDIX TABLE 21 Standard errors for table 18: Number and percent of persons who were victims of violent crime, by type of crime, 2015-2019 Number of victims Percent of persons Type of crime 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 Total violent crime 115,649 98,610 105,403 106,453 101,966 0.041% 0.036% 0.038% 0.037% 0.036% Rape/sexual assault 27,828 22,990 18,642 33,619 22,482 0.010 «©0008 =60.007,— 0012S (0.008 Robbery 36,761 28,206 34,671 30,657 30,947 0.014 0.010 0.013 0.011 0.011 Assault 103,997 92,481 97,147 92,852 94,118 0.037 0.034 0.035 0.033 0.033 Aggravated assault 42,626 50,020 43,542 43,726 46,549 0.016 0.018 0.016 0.016 0.017 Simple assault 89,125 78,887 83,931 89,167 78,655 0.032 0029 0,031 0.032 0.028 Violent crime excluding simple assault 60,817 59,666 57,738 65,626 59,953 0.023% 0.022% 0.021% 0.023% 0.021% Selected characteristics of violent crime Domestic violence 42,869 35,899 36,762 44,973 36,583 0.016% 0.013% 0.013% 0.016% 0.013% Intimate partner violence 35,432 25,976 27,569 33,587 28,984 0.013 0010 0010 0.012 0.010 Stranger violence 67,176 65,338 71,404 70,402 69,343 0.025 0.024 0.027 0.025 0.025 Violent crime involving injury 55,235 48,732 41,379 47,606 49,955 0.020 0.018 0.015 0.017 0.018 Violent crime involving a weapon 42,101 50,710 50,006 46,485 50,036 0.016 0.019 0.018 0.017 0.018 Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2015-2019. APPENDIX TABLE 22 Standard errors for table 19: Number and percent of persons who were victims of violent crime, by demographic characteristics of victims, 2018 and 2019 Victim demographic Number of victims Percent of persons characteristic 2018 2019 2018 2019 Total 106,453 101,966 0.037% 0.036% Sex Male 65,162 73,179 0.047% 0.054% Female 75,560 63,367 0.053 0.044 Race/ethnicity White 85,112 69,559 0.047% 0.040% Black 40,446 34,928 0.121 0.105 Hispanic 39,611 49,069 0.082 0.100 Asian 16,806 15,645 0.094 0.088 Other 22,280 22,761 0.321 0.308 Age 12:17 35,628 40,242 0.143% 0.162% 18-24 41,447 41,157 0.136 0.134 25-34 48,172 47,319 0.106 0.099 35-49 42,044 43,256 0.067 0.068 50-64 41,860 42,167 0.065 0.068 65 or older 24,644 20,589 0.047 0,039 Marital status Never married 71,578 70,920 0.074% 0.070% Married 50,693 48,375 0.038 0.037 Widow/widower 21,435 15,213 0.137 0,099 Divorced 32,608 27,233 0.116 0.100 Separated 18,124 19,334 0.340 0.369 Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2018 and 2019. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 45 3502-022 Page 45 of 53 EFTA_00001591 EFTA00156932

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APPENDIX TABLE 23 Standard errors for table 20: Number and percent of households victimized, by type of property crime, 2015-2019 Number of households victimized Percent of households victimized Type of property crime 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 Total 253,856 188,207 166,394 169,072 163,275 0.167% 0.141% 0.124% 0.119% = 0.118% Burglary/trespassing 89,612 64,413 67,513 66,270 61,066 0.065% 0.048% 0.053% 0.051% 0.047% Burglary 74,217 57,417 58,760 58,052 50,120 0.055 = 0.043 0.047 | 0.046 = (0,039 Trespassing? 51,208 37,262 32,638 30,960 32,806 0.038 = 0.028» 0.026) 0.024 = 0,026 Motor-vehicle theft 37,269 37,809 31,188 29,684 30,870 0.028% 0.028% 0.025% 0.024% 0.024% Other theft 214,688 160,814 148,890 153,323 147,443 0.144% 0.120% 0.112% 0.113% 0.108% Standard errors differ from those previously published in the Criminal Victimization, 2018 report because a coding error that affected the generation of those earlier estimates has been corrected. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2015-2019. APPENDIX TABLE 24 Standard errors for table 21: Number and percent of persons who were victims of serious crime, 2015-2019 Number of victims Percent of persons Type of crime 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 20152016 = 2017, 2018 =~ 2019 Total serious crime 186,600 178,870 182,207 185,193 129,133 0.065% 0.066% 0.065% 0.064% 0.045% Serious violent crime 60,607 58,125 56,694 60,810 58,250 0.023% 0.021% 0.021% 0.022% 0.021% Rape/sexual assault excl threats and no-force contact 26,077 20,020 16,051 27,529 19,393 0.010 0.007 0.006 0010 0.007 Robbery 36,761 28,206 34,671 30,657 30,947 0014 0010 0013 0011 O01 Aggravated assault 42,626 50,020 43,542 43,726 46,549 0.016 = 0.018 0.016 0.016 0.017 Serious property crime = 179,271 165,105 178,302 168,239 108,924 0.063% 0.061% 0.064% 0.059% 0.039% Completed burglary 163,829 142,340 151,871 145,855 95,962 0.058 0.052 0.055 0052 0.034 chile theft 83,193 87,688 80,923 93,986 65,282 0.030 0.032. 0.030 0034 0.024 Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2015-2019. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 46 3502-022 Page 46 of 53 EFTA_00001592 EFTA00156933

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APPENDIX TABLE 25 Standard errors for table 22: Number and percent of persons who were victims of serious crime, by demographic characteristics of victims, 2018 and 2019 Victim demographic Number of victims Percent of persons characteristic 2018 2019 2018 2019 Total 185,193 129,133 0.064% 0.045% Sex Male 111,655 79,791 0.079% 0.059% Female 97,913 74,960 0.066 0.051 Race/ethnicity White 126,137 98,223 0.069% 0.054% Black 69,209 50,412 0.201 0.149 Hispanic 88,937 64,833 0.181 0.131 Asian 16,235 34377 0.092 0.198 Other 29,983 23,739 0.450 0.318 Age 12-17 51,157 36,181 0.198% 0.144% 18-24 42,983 47,613 0.141 0.156 25-34 62,050 53,206 0.132 0.116 35-49 71,120 47,458 0.108 0.076 50-64 63,881 49,229 0.101 0.077 65 or older 44,039 39,206 0.083 0.074 Marital status Never married 101,533 73,590 0.101% 0.074% Married 83,126 75310 0.062 0.057 Widow) widower 27,546 20,611 0.178 0.135 Divorced 45,501 36,142 0.157 0.128 Separated 22,900 17,731 0.431 0.348 Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2018 and 2019. Standard errors for table 23: Percent of violent victimizations reported to police, by completed, attempted, and APPENDIX TABLE 26 threatened crimes, 2015-2019 Violent crime 2015 2016 Total 2.7% 2.22% Completed 4.08 3.52 Attempted 3.94 3.26 Threatened 3.76 287 Note: Standard errors differ from those previously published in the Criminal Victimization, 2018 report because a coding error that affected the generation of those earlier estimates has been corrected. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2015-2019. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 47 3502-022 Page 47 of 53 EFTA_00001593 EFTA00156934

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APPENDIX TABLE 27 Standard errors for table 24: Number and rate of violent victimizations, by victim’s veteran and citizenship status, 2018 and 2019 2018 2019 Victim veteran and Rate per Rate citizenship status Number 1,000 Number 1,000 Total violent victimizations? 343,745 1.25 295287 = 1.07 Veteran status Veteran 57,883 3.03 54474 2.86 Non-veteran 349,032. 1.51 310,441 1.33 Citizenship status US. citizen 396,806 = 1.54 354,632 1.36 US.-bom citizen 385,079 1.63 345,644 1.45 Naturalized US. citizen 45,358 = 1.93 38,382 = 1.62 Non-US. citizen 37,295 230 45915 2.93 US-born 385,079 1.63 345,644 (1.45 Foreign-born 66,071 1.67 66,635 1.69 Standard errors for the total victimization numbers and rates were calculated using the Balanced Repeated Replication method of direct estimation. Generalized variance function parameters were used to calculate standard errors for the rest of the table. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2018 and 2019. APPENDIX TABLE 28 Standard errors for table 25: Firearm violence, 2018 and 2019 2018 2019 Total violent incidents 341,914 305,087 Firearm incidents 62,909 63,778 Total violent victimizations* 343,745 295,287 Firearm victimizations 67,155 67,676 Rate of firearm victimization 0.24 0.24 Firearm victimizations reported to police Number 50,636 48,467 Percent 5.23% 542% Standard errors for the total violent victimization numbers were calculated using the Balanced Repeated Replication method of direct estimation. Generalized variance function parameters were used to calculate standard errors for the rest of the table. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2018 and 2019. APPENDIX TABLE 29 Standard errors for table 26: Percent and number of violent incidents excluding simple assault, by total population and victim and offender demographic characteristics, 2019 Percent of violent incidents Number of Offender Victim violent incidents 95% confidence interval 95% confidence interval Demographic characteristic Offender Victim — Standarderror Lowerbound Upperbound Standarderror Lowerbound Upper bound Total 149,288 149,288 ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Sex Male 143,543 105,593 265% 78.94% 89.33% 3.37% 43.30% 56.53% Female 40,946 = 105,828 202 8.91 16.84 3.38 43.47 56.70 Both male and female offenders 16,345 ~ 0.90 1.23 474 ~ ~ ~ Race/ethnicity White 92,614 113,960 3.53% 40.75% 54.58% 3.39% 49.22% 62.50% Black 59,782 41,021 286 19.16 3038 1.90 830 15.76 Hispanic 56,893 63,002 277 17.56 2841 2.64 17.96 28.29 Asian 5,780 12,472 035 0.00 1.24 0.65 051 3.04 Other 15,671 29,537 0.93 1.19 483 144 440 10.03 Multiple offenders of various races 8,338 ~ 051 0.04 203 “ ad “ Age 11 or younger 6871 ~ 0.43% 0.00% 1.59% ~ ~ ~ 12:17 39,773 42,873 215 9.32 17.75 1.97% 9.01% 16.74% 18-29 74,527 79,103 3.29 28.65 4156 3.03 26.58 38.46 30 or older 90,182 112,212 3.54 39.70 53.57 3.39 47.96 61.24 Multiple offenders of various ages 18,361 ~ 1.09 1.83 6.12 ~ ~ ~ ~Not applicable. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2019. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 48 3502-022 Page 48 of 53 EFTA_00001594 EFTA00156935

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APPENDIX TABLE 30 Standard errors for table 27: Percent of violent incidents excluding simple assault, by victim and offender sex, 2019 Offender sex Number of Both male Victim sex violentincidents Male Female and female Total 142,416 241% 1.90% 0.87% Male 98,039 3.07 2.22 1.27 Female 103,465 3.55 2.92 1.12 Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2019. APPENDIX TABLE 31 Standard errors for table 28: Number of violent incidents excluding simple assault, by victim and offender race or ethnicity, 2019 Number of Offender race/ethnicity Victim race/ethnicity violent incidents White Black Hispanic Other White 105,812 7977 28,469 35,634 12,393 Black 35,965 8625 30,655 8,094 5,118 Hispanic 55.411 21,100 24,304 33,914 6,522 Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2019. APPENDIX TABLE 32 Standard errors for table 29: Percent of violent incidents excluding simple assault, by victim and offender race or ethnicity, 2019 Number of Offender race/ethnicity Victim race/ethnicity violent incidents White Black Hispanic Other White 105,812 4.21% 2.62% 3.11% 1.26% Black 35,965 430 6.77 407 268 Hispanic 55.411 481 5.27 6.09 177 Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2019. APPENDIX TABLE 33 Standard errors for table 30: Percent of violent incidents excluding simple assault and percent of the U.S. population, by victim and offender race or ethnicity, 2019 Percent of violent incidents committed by offenders Of the same race/ethnicity Of another race/ethnicity Victim race/ 95% confidence interval 95% confidence interval ethnicity Standarderror Lowerbound Upperbound _Standarderror Lowerbound Upper bound White 421% 55.34% 71.83% 4.01% 28.55% 44.28% Black 677 64.64 91.18 631 on 447 Hispanic 6.09 35.08 58.96 6.14 40.95 65.01 Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2019. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 49 3502-022 Page 49 of 53 EFTA_00001595 EFTA00156936

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APPENDIX TABLE 34 Population size for persons age 12 or older, by demographic characteristics, 2015- 2019 Demographic characteristic Total persons age 12 or older Sex Male Female Race/ethnicity White? Black? Hispanic Asian? Othera.b Age 12-17 18-24 25-34 35-49 50-64 65 or older Marital status‘ Never married Married Widow/widower Divorced Separated 2015 269,526,470 131,173,670 138,352,800 173,043,610 33,242,330 43,314,490 14,663,500 5,262,540 24,826,110 30,504,250 43,693,960 60,928,420 63,004,570 46,569,150 93,289,060 127,167,850 14,779,490 27,084,680 5,124,520 2016 2017 272,204,190 132,525,350 139,678,840 172,882,890 33,623,820 44,470,950 15,719,020 5,507,510 25,043,610 30,301,000 44,303,050 61,158,070 63,332,410 48,066,050 95,415,230 127,704,070 15,053,020 27,189,410 5,022,050 272,468,480 132,432,710 140,035,770 171,454,370 32,699,520 45,481,910 16,582,080 6,250,600 24,911,170 29,883,550 44,327,500 60,878,870 62,955,630 49,511,760 96,211,120 127,923,650 14,832,940 26,776,250 4,937,290 275,325,390 133,907,490 141,417,890 171,493,180 33,132,390 46,997,610 17,228,930 6,473,280 24,917,160 29,838,720 44,946 880 61,429,050 62,940,810 51,252,780 97,152,920 128,744,200 15,166,010 27,360,570 5,129,600 2019 276,872,470 134,693,660 142,178,810 171,423,480 33,397,100 47,890,870 17,401,410 6,759,600 24,941,440 29,646,500 45,289,720 61,483,410 62,643,880 52,867,520 97,943,560 129,699,090 15,160,640 27,184,390 4,970,250 Excludes persons of Hispanic origin (e.g., “white” refers to non-Hispanic whites and “black” refers to non- Hispanic blacks). ®includes Native Hawaiians and Other Pacific Islanders, American Indians and Alaska Natives, and persons of two or more races. “Does not sum to total due to missing data. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2015-2019. APPENDIX TABLE 35 Household population size, 2015-2019 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 Total 131,962,260 133,365,270 123,085,790 124,824,660 126,433,890 Note: The 8% decline in the household population from 2016 to 2017 is due to. an adjustment that modified the household weights, not to a decline in number of households. See Methodology for details. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2015-2019. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 50 3502-022 Page 50 of 53 EFTA_00001596 EFTA00156937

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APPENDIX TABLE 36 AANDB Urban places under new NCVS definition Table 36A: Urban places under the new NCVS definition that are listed in the name of a 500,000-person, Census- designated urbanized area Weighted housing-unit City or Census-designated density per 2010 Land area Urbanized area place (CDP) square mile _ population (square miles) Urbanized area population New York, N.Y. 29,345 8,175,133 303 New York-Newark, N.Y.-NJ.-Conn. 18,351,295 San Francisco, Calif. 17,316 805,235 47 San Francisco-Oakland, Calif. 3,281,212 Urban Honolulu CDP, Hawaii 13,756 337,256 61 Urban Honolulu, Hawaii 802,459 Boston, Mass. 12,708 617,594 48 Boston, Mass.-N.H.-R.l. 4,181,019 Chicago, Ill. 11,429 2,695,598 228 Chicago, IlL-Ind. 8,608,208 Washington, D.C. 10,115 601,723 61 Washington, D.C-Va.-Md. 4,586,770 Miami, Fla. 9,887 399,457 36 Miami, Fla. 5,502,379 Philadelphia, Pa. 9,706 1,526,006 134 Philadelphia, Pa-NJ.-Del.-Md. 5,441,567 Newark, NJ. 8,788 277,140 24 New York~Newark, N.Y.-NJ.-Conn, 18,351,295 Los Angeles, Calif. 6,961 3,792,621 469 Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim, Calif. 12,150,996 Long Beach, Calif. 6,882 462,257 50 Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim, Calif. 12,150,996 Seattle, Wash. 6,798 608,660 84 Seattle, Wash. 3,059,393 | Oakland, Calif. 6,778 390,724 56 San Francisco-Oakland, Calif. 3,281,212 Baltimore, Md. 6,251 620,961 81 Baltimore, Md. 2,203,663 Hartford, Conn. 5,304 124,775 17 Hartford, Conn. 924,859 Minneapolis, Minn. 4,942 382,578 54 Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minn.-Wis. 2,650,890 Bridgeport, Conn. 4874 144,229 16 Bridgeport-Stamford, Conn.-N.Y. 923311 Providence, RJ. 4,790 178,042 18 Providence, R.l-Mass. 1,190,956 Buffalo, N.Y. 4,658 261,310 40 Buffalo, NLY. 935,906 Albany, N.Y. 4584 97,856 21 Albany-Schenectady, N.Y. 594,962 Pittsburgh, Pa. 4,560 305,704 55 Pittsburgh, Pa. 1,733,853 Milwaukee, Wis. 4,503 594,833 96 Milwaukee, Wis. 1,376,476 Denver, Colo. 4,457 600,158 153 Denver-Aurora, Colo. 2,374,203 | | Stamford, Conn. gaee 122,643 38 Bridgeport-Stamford, Conn.-N.Y. 923,311 i Allentown, Pa. 4397 118,032 18 Allentown, Pa.-NJ. 664,651 New Haven, Conn. 4331 129,779 19 New Haven, Conn. 562,839 New Orleans, La. 4,139 343,829 169 New Orleans, La. 899,703 San Diego, Calif. 4,091 1,307,402 325 San Diego, Calif. 2,956,746 Portland, Ore. 3,924 583,776 133 Portland, Ore.-Wash. 1,849,898 St. Louis, Mo. 3,909 319,294 62 St. Louis, Mo.-tll. 2,150,706 Rochester, N.Y. 3,891 210,565 36 Rochester, N.Y. 720,572 Cleveland, Ohio 3,726 396,815 78 Cleveland, Ohio 1,780,673 Dallas, Texas 3,628 1,197,816 341 Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, Texas 5,121,892 Salt Lake City, Utah 3,351 186,440 nl Salt Lake City-West Valley City, Utah 1,021,243 San Jose, Calif. 3,261 945,942 177 San Jose, Calif. 1,664,496 Detroit, Mich. 3,223 713,777 139 Detroit, Mich. 3,734,090 Atlanta, Ga. 3,166 420,003 133 Atlanta, Ga. 4,515,419 Gincinnati, Ohio 3,120 296,943 78 Cincinnati, Ohio-Ky.-Ind. 1,624,827 Concord, Calif. 3,068 122,067 3 Concord, Calif. 615,968 Houston, Texas 3,006 2,099,451 600 Houston, Texas 4,944 332 Criteria by which a place was classified as urban (coding at right}: | | bg main city (or Census-designated place) in a 500,000-person urbanized area, with a weighted housing-unit density of 3,000+ per square mile within the city limits. Anamed city (or Census-designated place) in a 500,000-person urbanized area, with a weighted housing-unit density of 4,000+ per square mile within the city limits. BB A city (or Census-designated place) with a population of 50,000+ and a weighted housing-unit density of 5,000+ per square mile within the city limits. BB A city (or Census-designated place) with a population of 10,000+ and a weighted housing-unit density of 10,000+ per square mile within the city limits. Note: A place's boundaries may not be entirely contained within the urbanized area listed. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2019; and 2010 Census of Population and Housing and Census designations of urbanized areas. CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION, 2019 | SEPTEMBER 2020 51 3502-022 Page 51 of 53 EFTA_00001597 EFTA00156938

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Table 36B: Other urban places under the new NCVS definition, by Census-designated urbanized area Weighted Cy orCensus-designated Gensityver” —-2010—cLandarea Urbanized area place (CDP) square ie population (square miles) Urbanized area jn Guttenberg, NJ. 29,171 11,176 02 New York-Newark, N.Y.-NJ.-Conn. 18,351,295 Hoboken, NJ. 25,870 50,005 1 New York-Newark, N.Y.-NJ.-Conn. 18,351,295 West New York, NJ. 21,763 49,708 1 New York-Newark, N.Y.-NJ.-Conn. 18,351,295 Union City, NJ. 20,477 66,455 1 New York-Newark, N.Y.-NJ.-Conn. 18,351,295 Jersey City, NJ. 13,837 247,597 15 New York-Newark, N.Y.-NJ.-Conn. 18,351,295 Cliffside Park, NJ. 12,001 23,594 1 New York-Newark, N.Y.-NJ.-Conn. 18,351,295 Mount Vernon, N.Y. 8811 67,292 4 New York-Newark, N.Y.-NJ.-Conn. 18,351,295 East Orange, NJ. 8,763 64,270 4 New York-Newark, N.Y.-NJ.-Conn. 18,351,295 Bayonne, NJ. 8,263 63,024 6 New York-Newark, N.Y.-NJ.-Conn. 18,351,295 Yonkers, N.Y. 7,930 195,976 18 New York-Newark, N.Y.-NJ.-Conn. 18,351,295 Blizabeth, NJ. 7,468 124,969 12 New York-Newark, N.Y.-NJ.-Conn. 18,351,295 Passaic, N.J. 7,424 69,781 3 New York-Newark, N.Y.-NJ.-Conn. 18,351,295 Paterson, NJ. 6,739 146,199 8 New York-Newark, N.Y.-NJ.-Conn. 18,351,295 White Plains, NLY. 5,671 56,853 10 New York-Newark, N.Y.-NJ.-Conn. 18,351,295 West Hollywood, Calif. 14343 34,399 2 Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim, Calif. 12,150,996 Santa Monica, Calif. 8,296 89,736 8 Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim, Calif. 12,150,996 Hawthome, Calif. 7,930 84,293 6 Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim, Calif. 12,150,996 Huntington Park, Calif 6,260 58,114 3 Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim, Calif. 12,150,996 Glendale, Calif. 6,103 191,719 x0 Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim, Calif. 12,150,996 Inglewood, Calif. 5,640 109,673 9 Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim, Calif, 12,150,996 Redondo Beach, Calif. 5,583 66,748 6 Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim, Calif. 12,150,996 Oak Park, Ill 6,920 51,878 5 Chicago, Ill-Ind. 8,608,208 Berwyn, lll. 5,863 56,657 4 Chicago, Ill-ind. 8,608,208 Evanston, lll. 5,553 74,486 8 Chicago, Ill-Ind. 8,608,208 Sunny Isles Beach, Fla. 22,233 20,832 1 Miami, Fla. 5,502,379 Miami Beach, Fla. 17,063 87,779 8 Miami, Fla. 5,502,379 Hallandale Beach, Fla. 15,332 37,113 4 Miami, Fla. 5,502,379 Aventura, Fla. 14,553 35,762 3 Miami, Fla. $5,502,379 Key Biscayne, Fla. 11,252 12,344 1 Miami, Fla. 5,502,379 Fountainebleau CDP, Fla. 7,023 59,764 4 Miami, Fla. 5,502,379 Hialeah, Fla. 5,267 224,669 21 Miami, Fla. 5,502,379 Hollywood, Fla. 5,009 140,768 27 Miami, Fla. 5,502,379 Wilmington, Del. 5,919 70,851 u Philadelphia, Pa.~NJ.-Del-Md. 5,441,567 Arlington CDP, Va. 10,485 207,627 26 Washington, D.C-Va.-Md. 4,586,770 Huntington CDP, Va. 10,430 11,267 1 Washington, D.C-Va.-Md. 4,586,770 Alexandria, Va. 7714 139,966 15 Washington, D.C-Va.-Md. 4,586,770 Silver Spring CDP, Md 6,135 71,452 8 Washington, D.C-Va.-Md. 4,586,770 Cambridge, Mass. 10,377 105,162 6 Boston, Mass.-NH.-R.L. 4,181,019 Somerville, Mass. 9,770 75,754 4 Boston, Mass.-NH.-R.L. 4,181,019 Brookline CDP, Mass. 8,403 58,732 7 Boston, Mass.-NH.-R.l. 4,181,019 Lynn, Mass. 5,985 90,329 u Boston, Mass.-NH.-R.L. 4,181,019 Malden, Mass, 5,432 59,450 5 Boston, Mass.-NH.-R.L. 4,181,019 Berkeley, Calif. 7,377 112,580 10 San Francisco-Oakland, Calif. 3,281,212 Daly City, Calif. 5,435 101,123 8 San Francisco-Oakland, Calif. 3,281,212 Lakewood, Ohio 7,079 $2,131 6 Geveland, Ohio 1,780,673 Waimalu CDP, Hawaii 11,402 13,730 2 Urban Honolulu, Hawail 802,459 Lancaster, Pa. 6,078 59,322 7 Lancaster, Pa. 402,004 Trenton, NJ. 5,264 £4,913 8 Trenton, NJ. 296,668 Reading, Pa. 6,326 88,082 10 Reading, Pa. 266.254 Criteria by which a place was classified as urban (coding at right}: | | The main city (or Census-designated place) in a 500,000-person urbanized area, with a weighted housing-unit density of 3,000+ per square mile within the city limits. Anamed city (or Census-designated place) in a 500,000-person urbanized area, with a weighted housing-unit density of 4,000+ per square mile within the city limits. i | A city (or Census-designated place) with a population of $0,000+ and a weighted housing-unit density of 5,000+ per square mile within the city limits. I A city (or Census-designated place) with a population of 10,000+ and a weighted housing-unit density of 10,000+ per square mile within the city limits. Note: A place’s boundaries may not be entirely contained within the urbanized area listed. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Crime Victimization Survey, 2019, and 2010 Census of Population and Housing and Census designations of urbanized areas. 3502-022 Page 52 of 53 EFTA_00001598 EFTA00156939

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The Bureau of Justice Statistics of the U.S. Department of Justice is the principal federal agency responsible for measuring crime, criminal victimization, criminal offenders, victims of crime, correlates of crime, and the operation of criminal and civil justice systems at the federal, state, tribal, and local levels. BJS collects, analyzes, and disseminates reliable statistics on crime and justice systems in the United States, supports improvements to state and local criminal justice information systems, and participates with national and international organizations to develop and recommend national standards for justice statistics. Jeffrey H. Anderson is the director. This report was written by Rachel E. Morgan and Jennifer L. Truman. Erika Harrell and Alexandra Thompson verified the report. Amy Lauger also contributed to verification. Theodore Robinson edited and produced this report. Edrienne Su and Carrie Epps-Carey provided editorial and design assistance. September 2020, NCJ 255113 S40 NCJ 255113 Office of Justice Programs Building Solutions - Supporting Communities « Advancing Justice Wwww.ojp.gov 3502-022 Page 53 of 53 EFTA_00001599 EFTA00156940