This document summarizes crime statistics for Salt Lake City, Utah. It shows the number of offenses in 2017 compared to 2016 and average numbers over three and five year periods. Most categories saw declines in offenses from 2016 to 2017 and were below three and five year averages, with the exception of criminal homicide, sexual assault, and aggravated assault - family, which all saw increases. The document provides detailed data on monthly, yearly, and weekly trends.
This document provides crime statistics for the Salt Lake City Police Department. It shows crime data for 2017 and 2016, as well as 3-year and 5-year averages. For most categories, crime decreased in 2017 compared to 2016, including a 38.2% decrease in total crimes. However, sexual assaults increased by 5.6% and homicides remained the same. The document also breaks down crime statistics by week to show trends over the past month.
According to the document:
- Criminal activity in Salt Lake City decreased slightly in the last 28 days compared to the previous 28 days, with 1,385 total offenses reported versus 1,434 respectively.
- However, homicides and aggravated assaults increased, with homicides rising from 0 to 1 and aggravated assaults rising from 62 to 69.
- Motor vehicle thefts saw the largest percentage increase, rising 36.7% from 121 to 150.
The document provides crime statistics for Salt Lake City, Utah for various time periods in 2018 and comparisons to previous years. Criminal homicides, sexual assaults, and robberies were down in the last 7 days compared to the same period in the previous year. Overall, most crime categories saw decreases in the last 7 days and last 28 days compared to the same periods the previous year, with total crime incidents down 66.7% and 58.2% respectively. Year-to-date totals for 2018 are also down compared to 2017 levels for many offense types.
The document is a crime statistics report from the Salt Lake City Police Department comparing crime data from 2017, 2016, and previous years. It shows that for the last 7 days, most crime categories saw little change from the previous 28 days, with robbery and aggravated assault seeing small increases while burglary and larceny saw small decreases. Overall, crime was down slightly for the last 7 days compared to the same period in previous years.
The document provides crime statistics for Salt Lake City, Utah for various time periods in 2017 and comparisons to 2016. For the last 7 days (May 29 - June 4), criminal homicide, sexual assault, and motor vehicle theft saw decreases compared to averages, while robbery, assault, and burglary saw some increases. Year-to-date totals for 2017 are lower than 2016 for most crimes except aggravated assault and residential burglary. The statistics are preliminary and subject to change upon further analysis.
This document provides crime statistics for Salt Lake City, Utah for various time periods in 2017 and comparisons to previous years. It shows totals for criminal offenses categorized by type of crime. For most crime categories, totals have decreased in 2017 compared to the same time period in 2016 as well as decreasing averages over the last 3 and 5 years. However, some offenses such as robbery of a business and burglary of a residence have increased in 2017 compared to 2016. The report notes that the most current data may be incomplete and subject to change.
This document summarizes crime statistics from the Salt Lake City Police Department. It shows crime data from 2018 compared to 2017, as well as monthly crime numbers from 2012 to 2018. The statistics cover various types of crimes such as homicide, sexual assault, robbery, aggravated assault, burglary, larceny, and motor vehicle theft. The data provides preliminary figures that are subject to ongoing analysis and revision.
This document provides crime statistics for the Salt Lake City Police Department. It shows crime data for 2017 and 2016, as well as 3-year and 5-year averages. For most categories, crime decreased in 2017 compared to 2016, including a 38.2% decrease in total crimes. However, sexual assaults increased by 5.6% and homicides remained the same. The document also breaks down crime statistics by week to show trends over the past month.
According to the document:
- Criminal activity in Salt Lake City decreased slightly in the last 28 days compared to the previous 28 days, with 1,385 total offenses reported versus 1,434 respectively.
- However, homicides and aggravated assaults increased, with homicides rising from 0 to 1 and aggravated assaults rising from 62 to 69.
- Motor vehicle thefts saw the largest percentage increase, rising 36.7% from 121 to 150.
The document provides crime statistics for Salt Lake City, Utah for various time periods in 2018 and comparisons to previous years. Criminal homicides, sexual assaults, and robberies were down in the last 7 days compared to the same period in the previous year. Overall, most crime categories saw decreases in the last 7 days and last 28 days compared to the same periods the previous year, with total crime incidents down 66.7% and 58.2% respectively. Year-to-date totals for 2018 are also down compared to 2017 levels for many offense types.
The document is a crime statistics report from the Salt Lake City Police Department comparing crime data from 2017, 2016, and previous years. It shows that for the last 7 days, most crime categories saw little change from the previous 28 days, with robbery and aggravated assault seeing small increases while burglary and larceny saw small decreases. Overall, crime was down slightly for the last 7 days compared to the same period in previous years.
The document provides crime statistics for Salt Lake City, Utah for various time periods in 2017 and comparisons to 2016. For the last 7 days (May 29 - June 4), criminal homicide, sexual assault, and motor vehicle theft saw decreases compared to averages, while robbery, assault, and burglary saw some increases. Year-to-date totals for 2017 are lower than 2016 for most crimes except aggravated assault and residential burglary. The statistics are preliminary and subject to change upon further analysis.
This document provides crime statistics for Salt Lake City, Utah for various time periods in 2017 and comparisons to previous years. It shows totals for criminal offenses categorized by type of crime. For most crime categories, totals have decreased in 2017 compared to the same time period in 2016 as well as decreasing averages over the last 3 and 5 years. However, some offenses such as robbery of a business and burglary of a residence have increased in 2017 compared to 2016. The report notes that the most current data may be incomplete and subject to change.
This document summarizes crime statistics from the Salt Lake City Police Department. It shows crime data from 2018 compared to 2017, as well as monthly crime numbers from 2012 to 2018. The statistics cover various types of crimes such as homicide, sexual assault, robbery, aggravated assault, burglary, larceny, and motor vehicle theft. The data provides preliminary figures that are subject to ongoing analysis and revision.
I downloaded data from from City of Chicago Data Portal and made the analysis of 2014 Crime Data. This is just a simple version. I can do more complicated analysis if needed. I used Excel to do this analysis.
NATIONAL CRIMES RECORDS BUREAU (NCRB) DATA ON JUVENILES IN CONFLICT WITH LAW 2001 – 2014
HAQ: Center for Child Rights
B1/2, Ground Floor,
Malviya Nagar
New Delhi - 110017
Tel: +91-26677412,26673599
Fax: +91-26674688
Website: www.haqcrc.org
FaceBook Page: https://www.facebook.com/HaqCentreForChildRights
- The document is a housing market analysis for Loudoun County prepared by Fulton Research and Consulting in December 2008.
- It provides data on existing home sales, inventory levels, median sales prices, and other housing market indicators for Loudoun County and various zip codes within the county for December 2008 compared to previous months and years.
- The data shows mixed results for December, with some areas seeing increases in sales, decreases in inventory, and higher median prices compared to previous periods, while other areas showed declines.
This document provides a housing market analysis for Fairfax County for December 2008 data. It includes sales numbers, median sales prices, inventory levels, and other key metrics for various cities and areas within the county. The analysis shows that while total sales were up in December 2008 compared to the previous year, median sales prices and average sale prices were down between 18-26% year-over-year. Inventory levels were also down across most areas.
This document is the results of a national selection for PPPK procurement in 2019. It lists 100 candidates for teacher positions, providing their technical, managerial, socio-cultural competency subtotals, total scores, and identification numbers. The candidates are ranked based on their total scores.
The document provides demographic information about The Woodlands, Texas as of January 1, 2015. It summarizes that The Woodlands has a population of 109,679 people living in 41,199 occupied dwellings. The median age is 38.7 and the median household income is $114,609. Regarding household composition, 41.6% of households have children and the average household size is 2.66 people.
- Record home sales were reported in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA) in April 2015, with 11,303 sales representing a 17% increase from April 2014.
- The average home price in the GTA rose 10% year-over-year to $635,932 in April 2015. Price growth was strongest for low-rise homes but condominium prices also increased above the rate of inflation.
- Demand continued to outpace new listings, and annual home price growth is expected to remain strong until listings grow at a faster pace than sales.
The document provides business summaries for the North & East Zone, Alliances, and New Delhi & NCR Zone for the first half of fiscal year 2010-2011. For the North & East Zone, 5 branches exceeded their targets while 4 were below 100%. Alliances achieved 67.21% of their target. The best performing branches for the North & East Zone were Jaipur, Jodhpur, and Kolkata. None of the branches in the New Delhi & NCR Zone met their targets and the home loan business was not growing. The document also outlines ways to improve performance in the second half including driving home loan initiatives and obtaining feedback.
The document presents voting results from the 2002 Colombian presidential election broken down by department. It shows the percentage of votes and number of votes received by each candidate (Santos, Mockus, Vargas, Sanín) in each department as well as the percentages for blank and null votes. Overall, Santos received the most votes totaling over 5.5 million, while Mockus received over 2.4 million votes.
This document provides demographic data on substance abuse treatment admissions across various agencies in Michigan for fiscal year 2012. It includes information on gender, age, race/ethnicity, primary substance reported, education level, employment status, income, and living arrangements for 61,093 total admissions. For each agency, the percentages of clients in different demographic categories are shown, along with the total number of admissions for that agency. Statewide demographic percentages are also provided at the bottom.
Recovery gathering momentum? Our latest report on the spending, saving and borrowing intentions of Irish consumers.
More here:
http://www.amarach.com/resources/economic-recovery-index.htm
Strong Start to 2015
The January results represented good news on multiple fronts. First, strong sales growth suggests home buyers continue to see housing as a quality long-term
investment, despite the recent period of economic uncertainty. Second, the fact that new listings grew at a faster pace than sales suggests that it has become easier for
some people to find a home that meets their needs.
Road safety statistics from Kenya between 2005-2014 show that:
1) The number of road fatalities declined from 3218 in 2013 to 2907 in 2014, a decrease of 9.66%.
2) Pedestrians, passengers, and motorcyclists made up the majority of road fatality victims.
3) Most fatal crashes occurred between 6pm-10pm, on weekends, and in the months of December and January.
4) Nairobi County had the highest number of fatalities, with specific roads identified as high risk.
ECO303- Introduction to Econometrics- term paperSamiya Yesmin
This document contains the results of a regression analysis with lnC as the dependent variable and lnI, lnL, lnH, and lnA as independent variables. The summary shows that the coefficients of lnI, lnL, and lnA are statistically significant, while the coefficient of lnH is not statistically significant. Residual analysis found evidence of positive autocorrelation. The Park test showed no evidence of heteroscedasticity in the relationship between residuals and lnH.
The 300+ slide deck is the comprehensive data book behind the 12th annual State of the Community Report, which was presented on Thursday, September 19, 2019 at the Friday Center in Chapel Hill, NC. Learn more at www.CarolinaChamber.org/SOTC.
This document contains information from various maps and tables about vehicle crashes in Washtenaw County, Michigan. It summarizes that rear-end crashes made up 32.5% of all crashes in the county while single vehicle crashes accounted for 26.4%. It also shows that 2.8% of drivers in crashes had a blood alcohol concentration over the legal limit and that alcohol was a factor in 27.6% of fatal crashes and 7.7% of injury crashes. Finally, it provides data on bicycle and pedestrian crashes, showing they mostly occurred in more urban areas of the county.
Analytics at Atlanta Police FoundationPeter Molnar
The document discusses opportunities and challenges around big data as well as potential use cases. It outlines plans for an Atlanta Police Foundation Technology Innovation Center that would serve as a platform for collaboration between the police department, other agencies, private sector partners, and academic institutions. It would work to develop best practices, provide access to technologies and analytics services, and help shape policing innovation through pilot programs. Current police record management systems are noted as not being designed for analytics and having data quality issues. Statistics on crime rates in Atlanta are also presented.
2015 crime states for Ward 6 StittsvilleDevyn Barrie
The document summarizes crime trend data for Ward 6 in Ottawa between 2014 and 2015. It finds that overall crime rates increased significantly, with violent crime up 30.9% and non-violent crime up 32.3%. Reported crime increased by 34.5% while the crime severity index rose 37%. Clearance rates decreased for both violent and non-violent offenses. The top concerns among residents remained distracted driving, speeding, theft from vehicles, and vandalism. Satisfaction with police services remained high.
This report summarizes crime statistics and trends in Ottawa, Canada between 2014 and 2015. Overall, most crime rates decreased slightly, with total criminal code offenses declining 1.1% and violent crimes decreasing 2.2%. However, rates of robbery and sexual assaults increased. Property crimes such as break and enters and fraud also witnessed small increases over the one-year period. Calls for police service declined slightly at 1.8% overall but priority 2 calls involving emergency responses increased substantially by 16.1%.
Descriptive statistics and analytics about human resources with in-depth look into turnover rate:
- annually / monthly
- among new hires
- among different types of employees (age groups, generation type, education, qualification etc.)
I downloaded data from from City of Chicago Data Portal and made the analysis of 2014 Crime Data. This is just a simple version. I can do more complicated analysis if needed. I used Excel to do this analysis.
NATIONAL CRIMES RECORDS BUREAU (NCRB) DATA ON JUVENILES IN CONFLICT WITH LAW 2001 – 2014
HAQ: Center for Child Rights
B1/2, Ground Floor,
Malviya Nagar
New Delhi - 110017
Tel: +91-26677412,26673599
Fax: +91-26674688
Website: www.haqcrc.org
FaceBook Page: https://www.facebook.com/HaqCentreForChildRights
- The document is a housing market analysis for Loudoun County prepared by Fulton Research and Consulting in December 2008.
- It provides data on existing home sales, inventory levels, median sales prices, and other housing market indicators for Loudoun County and various zip codes within the county for December 2008 compared to previous months and years.
- The data shows mixed results for December, with some areas seeing increases in sales, decreases in inventory, and higher median prices compared to previous periods, while other areas showed declines.
This document provides a housing market analysis for Fairfax County for December 2008 data. It includes sales numbers, median sales prices, inventory levels, and other key metrics for various cities and areas within the county. The analysis shows that while total sales were up in December 2008 compared to the previous year, median sales prices and average sale prices were down between 18-26% year-over-year. Inventory levels were also down across most areas.
This document is the results of a national selection for PPPK procurement in 2019. It lists 100 candidates for teacher positions, providing their technical, managerial, socio-cultural competency subtotals, total scores, and identification numbers. The candidates are ranked based on their total scores.
The document provides demographic information about The Woodlands, Texas as of January 1, 2015. It summarizes that The Woodlands has a population of 109,679 people living in 41,199 occupied dwellings. The median age is 38.7 and the median household income is $114,609. Regarding household composition, 41.6% of households have children and the average household size is 2.66 people.
- Record home sales were reported in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA) in April 2015, with 11,303 sales representing a 17% increase from April 2014.
- The average home price in the GTA rose 10% year-over-year to $635,932 in April 2015. Price growth was strongest for low-rise homes but condominium prices also increased above the rate of inflation.
- Demand continued to outpace new listings, and annual home price growth is expected to remain strong until listings grow at a faster pace than sales.
The document provides business summaries for the North & East Zone, Alliances, and New Delhi & NCR Zone for the first half of fiscal year 2010-2011. For the North & East Zone, 5 branches exceeded their targets while 4 were below 100%. Alliances achieved 67.21% of their target. The best performing branches for the North & East Zone were Jaipur, Jodhpur, and Kolkata. None of the branches in the New Delhi & NCR Zone met their targets and the home loan business was not growing. The document also outlines ways to improve performance in the second half including driving home loan initiatives and obtaining feedback.
The document presents voting results from the 2002 Colombian presidential election broken down by department. It shows the percentage of votes and number of votes received by each candidate (Santos, Mockus, Vargas, Sanín) in each department as well as the percentages for blank and null votes. Overall, Santos received the most votes totaling over 5.5 million, while Mockus received over 2.4 million votes.
This document provides demographic data on substance abuse treatment admissions across various agencies in Michigan for fiscal year 2012. It includes information on gender, age, race/ethnicity, primary substance reported, education level, employment status, income, and living arrangements for 61,093 total admissions. For each agency, the percentages of clients in different demographic categories are shown, along with the total number of admissions for that agency. Statewide demographic percentages are also provided at the bottom.
Recovery gathering momentum? Our latest report on the spending, saving and borrowing intentions of Irish consumers.
More here:
http://www.amarach.com/resources/economic-recovery-index.htm
Strong Start to 2015
The January results represented good news on multiple fronts. First, strong sales growth suggests home buyers continue to see housing as a quality long-term
investment, despite the recent period of economic uncertainty. Second, the fact that new listings grew at a faster pace than sales suggests that it has become easier for
some people to find a home that meets their needs.
Road safety statistics from Kenya between 2005-2014 show that:
1) The number of road fatalities declined from 3218 in 2013 to 2907 in 2014, a decrease of 9.66%.
2) Pedestrians, passengers, and motorcyclists made up the majority of road fatality victims.
3) Most fatal crashes occurred between 6pm-10pm, on weekends, and in the months of December and January.
4) Nairobi County had the highest number of fatalities, with specific roads identified as high risk.
ECO303- Introduction to Econometrics- term paperSamiya Yesmin
This document contains the results of a regression analysis with lnC as the dependent variable and lnI, lnL, lnH, and lnA as independent variables. The summary shows that the coefficients of lnI, lnL, and lnA are statistically significant, while the coefficient of lnH is not statistically significant. Residual analysis found evidence of positive autocorrelation. The Park test showed no evidence of heteroscedasticity in the relationship between residuals and lnH.
The 300+ slide deck is the comprehensive data book behind the 12th annual State of the Community Report, which was presented on Thursday, September 19, 2019 at the Friday Center in Chapel Hill, NC. Learn more at www.CarolinaChamber.org/SOTC.
This document contains information from various maps and tables about vehicle crashes in Washtenaw County, Michigan. It summarizes that rear-end crashes made up 32.5% of all crashes in the county while single vehicle crashes accounted for 26.4%. It also shows that 2.8% of drivers in crashes had a blood alcohol concentration over the legal limit and that alcohol was a factor in 27.6% of fatal crashes and 7.7% of injury crashes. Finally, it provides data on bicycle and pedestrian crashes, showing they mostly occurred in more urban areas of the county.
Analytics at Atlanta Police FoundationPeter Molnar
The document discusses opportunities and challenges around big data as well as potential use cases. It outlines plans for an Atlanta Police Foundation Technology Innovation Center that would serve as a platform for collaboration between the police department, other agencies, private sector partners, and academic institutions. It would work to develop best practices, provide access to technologies and analytics services, and help shape policing innovation through pilot programs. Current police record management systems are noted as not being designed for analytics and having data quality issues. Statistics on crime rates in Atlanta are also presented.
2015 crime states for Ward 6 StittsvilleDevyn Barrie
The document summarizes crime trend data for Ward 6 in Ottawa between 2014 and 2015. It finds that overall crime rates increased significantly, with violent crime up 30.9% and non-violent crime up 32.3%. Reported crime increased by 34.5% while the crime severity index rose 37%. Clearance rates decreased for both violent and non-violent offenses. The top concerns among residents remained distracted driving, speeding, theft from vehicles, and vandalism. Satisfaction with police services remained high.
This report summarizes crime statistics and trends in Ottawa, Canada between 2014 and 2015. Overall, most crime rates decreased slightly, with total criminal code offenses declining 1.1% and violent crimes decreasing 2.2%. However, rates of robbery and sexual assaults increased. Property crimes such as break and enters and fraud also witnessed small increases over the one-year period. Calls for police service declined slightly at 1.8% overall but priority 2 calls involving emergency responses increased substantially by 16.1%.
Descriptive statistics and analytics about human resources with in-depth look into turnover rate:
- annually / monthly
- among new hires
- among different types of employees (age groups, generation type, education, qualification etc.)
This document contains statistics on crimes in Bangladesh from 2010 to 2019. It shows the number of cases each year for various crimes like burglary, dacoity, kidnapping, murder, etc. It also breaks down the total cases and yearly changes by the police unit/range. The top three crime categories by number of cases are other cases (768k), women and child repression (175k), and theft (66k). The document also contains statistics on recovery of cases by category like narcotics, smuggling, arms act. The top recovery category is narcotics (507k).
The document provides crime statistics and activity summaries for the Sugar Land Police Department. Some key points:
1) Part I crime rates have declined each year from 2013 to 2017, with the 2017 rate being the lowest.
2) Traffic stops and citations have declined in recent years while non-injury collisions have remained steady and injury collisions have slightly declined.
3) Red light camera intersections have seen reductions in crashes from 2009-2010 to 2016-2017. Red light camera violations issued have fluctuated over time.
The document provides sales trend data for NR/KRC from December 2014. It includes the following key points:
- Monthly sales have increased 52% year-over-year with stable contribution from organized retailers.
- Major retailers like Croma, Jumbo, and Ezone saw increased January sell-through of 20%, 37%, and 20% respectively by focusing on sell-through and maximizing Republic Day foot traffic.
- The payment issues with retailer TMS were addressed by stopping supplies to franchisees.
- Big C maintained a good share through the months with sell-through focus.
This document contains traffic count data from a road location over multiple hourly intervals. It includes the number of light vehicles, buses, trucks, semi-trailers, and trailers observed each hour. The data is organized into tables with columns for each vehicle type and rows for the hourly counts. Percentages of the total traffic are also provided for each interval.
The document categorizes traffic crash data by road type and characteristics. It provides statistics on the number and percentage of crashes occurring on different types of primary and non-primary roads, including interstate freeways, other freeways, expressways, interchange ramps, multi-lane divided and undivided roads, and two lane roads. It also provides subcategories for paved and unpaved secondary roads as well as multi-lane undivided and two lane municipal roads. The extensive dataset is broken down and categorized to analyze traffic crashes across different road environments.
This document is the 2008 year-end report from the Hartford Police Department. It summarizes crime statistics for 2008, finding that overall Part 1 crime decreased 9.6% compared to 2007, with reductions in all crime categories except aggravated assault. It discusses initiatives undertaken in 2008 to reduce gun violence and homicides, noting most victims and perpetrators knew each other and conflicts escalated to gun use. The report provides statistics on homicides in 2008 and analyzes youth and gun violence trends. It outlines the department's 17-point initiative to increase collaboration and deploy resources to reduce crime.
This document discusses how the Texas Department of Public Safety's Highway Safety Operations Center collects and analyzes crash, criminal, and traffic enforcement data to help combat impaired driving. The HSOC provides analytical reports and data products to DPS and partner agencies. Analysis of holiday and weekend crash data found higher rates of impaired driving crashes on those days. Breaking data down by specific areas can help target enforcement efforts. The goals of the HSOC include statistical trend analysis and rapid assessment of incidents on Texas highways.
MTBPS 2020 – a realistic look at South Africa’s fiscal positionSTANLIB
The Minister of Finance delivered a realistic assessment of SA’s current economic situation in the Medium-Term Budget Policy Statement on Wednesday, 28 October 2020, but provided no blueprint for growth. Government urgently needs to adopt pro-growth policies to grow the economy on a sustainable basis.
This document summarizes the results of surveys on perceptions of corruption in the business environment in Mongolia from 2012 to 2016. Some key findings:
- Satisfaction with the general business environment decreased over time, with over 75% being dissatisfied by 2016.
- Perceptions that investment conditions had worsened increased substantially, with over 55% believing this by 2016.
- Obtaining/renewing licenses and permits and high taxes were most commonly cited as the top obstacles to investment.
- The tax office and customs were most often seen as the government agencies most affected by corruption.
- Over 75% saw at least 'some' level of corruption in the public sector in 2016.
Effort Report KPI's for salesman efficiencyEric Smith
I create this report each week. We call it the effort report and we use it in weekly one on ones. This allows us to identify strength and weaknesses in our team. Identify areas to improve, and take a minute to reflect on whats working.
We can pace our store sales. We can pace our individuals salesman's goals. We can pace our daily traffic and see its effect on sales.
On the far right of this scale is the effort score. This is not a simple sum of all the KPI's its weighted. Some items carry more weight then others.
I'm always looking to improve this system. Please Share your feed back.
Sheriff presentation to Saratoga City Council December 6thRishi Kumar
This document provides crime statistics and analysis for the city of Saratoga. It shows that residential burglaries decreased 25% from 2017 to 2018 while vehicle burglaries increased 114%. The data also examines burglary locations, times, and methods of entry. Response times for priority calls are provided, with the goal of a 6 minute response for priority 1 and 10 minutes for priority 2. Proactive law enforcement efforts discussed include targeted patrols, detective collaboration, covert enforcement actions, neighborhood watch meetings, bicycle patrol training, and automated license plate reader deployment.
- The document shows the number of emails received each month from January 2004 to August 2005 across various categories related to a public radio station.
- The most emails were received in the categories of news (23%), community events (12%), and general/miscellaneous (15%).
- The fewest emails were received in the categories of rates (1%), programming copies (1%), and sponsorship requests (1%).
Net sales increased 139.1% from 2001 to 2002. This significant increase in sales also led to increases in cost of goods sold (144.6%), gross profit (116.3%), and general and administrative expenses (93.8%). While advertising expenses more than quadrupled (455.2%), this large increase is likely not sustainable long-term. The increases in expenses resulted in income from operations and net income rising but at lower rates than the net sales increase (85.6% and 16.1% respectively).
This document contains statistical data for various variables related to traffic fatalities and demographics for US states. It includes the mean, standard deviation, minimum and maximum values for variables like traffic fatalities per 1000 people, percentage of heavy drinkers, elderly population, number of licensed drivers, uninsured drivers, seat belt fines, household wealth, racial demographics, population size, gas taxes, incarceration rates, urbanization, and public transit usage. It also shows the coefficients, t-statistics and p-values from a regression analysis with traffic fatalities as the dependent variable and the other variables as predictors.
Similar to SLCPD CompStat no.50 (week ending 12 17-17) (19)
The ELPCO community council is not holding meetings in November or December due to holidays. This document provides updates on local projects and events, including: construction finishing on the Mutual Beauty condo project; crime statistics in the area; the 9th and 9th Street Festival being an ELPCO-run event; funding secured for a roundabout at a 5-way intersection; a local orchid business; election results; opportunities to join the ELPCO board; and charitable giving opportunities. The next ELPCO meeting will be in January 2019.
ELPCO designed this anonymous survey in August/September 2018 to learn what residents think about the options to reconstruct the 900 S / 1100 E / Gilmer Drive intersection. These results incorporate feedback from 116 responses.
East Liberty Park Community Organization
Thursday October 25, 2018
7:00 PM Regular Meeting
About ELPCO
ELPCO is the East Liberty Park Community Organization—a local, city-sanctioned community organization that represents the residents and business in the East Liberty Park area of Salt Lake City. The area covered by ELPCO is defined by the boundaries of 700 E to 1300 E and 800 S to 1700 S. ELPCO meets on the fourth Thursday of every month at Tracy Aviary in Liberty Park starting at 7p.m. and broadcasts its meeting on Facebook Live at www.facebook.com/ELPCO - Contact ELPCO at elpcoslc@gmail.com
This month’s ELPCO meeting will be this Thursday, August 23, and we've got a very localized agenda for you. And remember that all ELPCO meetings are now broadcast on Facebook Live starting at 7pm MDT.
About ELPCO
ELPCO is the East Liberty Park Community Organization--a local, Open city-sanctioned community organization that represents the residents and business in the East Liberty Park area of Salt Lake City. The specific area covered by ELPCO is (roughly) defined by the boundaries of 700 E to 1300 E and 800 S to 1700 S. ELPCO meets on the fourth Thursday of every month at Tracy Aviary in Liberty Park
The document provides updates on projects and events in the ELPCO community of Salt Lake City. It announces the launch of a new online bike registry by the SLC Police Department, updates on home burglary rates, and a major water and sewer replacement project on 1300 East expected to last until fall 2019. Upcoming community events include National Night Out on August 7th, the 9th and 9th Street Festival volunteer signups and the event on September 15th, and the monthly ELPCO community meeting on August 23rd.
The City of Salt Lake has slowed down reconstruction of 900 South to gather more community input on designs for the Gilmer Drive/1100 East/900 South intersection. In May 2018, one or two temporary "pop-up" intersection designs will be tested for 1-2 weeks to get feedback. Construction has been postponed to 2019 to allow for design completion in Fall 2018. The project will repave the road, add bike lanes and pedestrian improvements, and enhance crosswalks while keeping on-street parking and considering diagonal parking.
February ELPCO meeting
Thursday, February 22, 2018
7pm-8:15pm
Tracy Aviary Education Room
SW Corner of Liberty Park
NEW Watch this meeting on Facebook Live: https://www.facebook.com/pg/ELPCO/videos
About ELPCO
ELPCO is the East Liberty Park Community Organization--a local, city-sanctioned community organization that represents the residents and business in the East Liberty Park area of Salt Lake City. The specific area covered by ELPCO is (roughly) defined by the boundaries of 700 E to 1300 E and 800 S to 1700 S.
The document provides crime statistics for City Council District #5 for January 2018. It summarizes that there were 291 Part I offenses, 557 Part II offenses, and 335 non-UCR offenses reported in the district for the month. Larceny/theft made up the largest percentage of offenses at 29%, followed by drug abuse at 16% and other assaults at 5%. Cocaine and heroin together accounted for over half of all seized drugs by weight and estimated street value for the month.
The document summarizes crime statistics for City Council District #5 in September 2017. There were 264 Part I offenses and 633 Part II offenses reported. Non-UCR offenses such as ambulance calls, deaths, and suspicious activity totaled 381. Drug seizures included over 2900 doses of various drugs worth approximately $19,000. Traffic citations and misdemeanor citations increased compared to September 2016.
CPTED is an approach to reducing crime through environmental design. It has 4 principles: natural surveillance through visibility, access control to guide people's movement, territorial reinforcement to express ownership, and maintenance to prevent reduction of these crime prevention measures. Following these principles in building and area design can reduce fear of crime, actual crime incidents, and improve quality of life.
The developers plan to renovate the vacant 28,400 square foot building at 1701 S 1100 East in Salt Lake City into 19 market-rate apartments, including 3 two-bedroom units and 16 one-bedroom or work/live units. They are requesting variances to increase the roof height from 30 to 35 feet, keep an iconic sign in place, and extend balconies 12 inches beyond the allowed 4 inches. The renovated apartments aim to provide housing while reusing an existing building that has been vacant for 12 years.
This document is a request from an architect for revisions to a planned development application to remodel an existing building in Salt Lake City. The key requests are: 1) Increase the allowed building height from 30' to 35' to allow flexibility in resolving structural connections. 2) Keep the existing iconic "Knight" sign in place and repair it. 3) Replace existing cell towers on the roof with decorative water towers. 4) Allow decorative balconies and planters to extend 12" rather than the required 4" from the building face. The overall proposal is to convert the building into apartments with a historical design theme from the 1920s era through techniques like adding brick, steel elements, flags and balconies to create urban living space
This document outlines a three phase plan to address issues in the Rio Grande area of Salt Lake City. Phase 1 focuses on increasing the number of treatment beds and jail beds to provide more options for individuals struggling with mental health or substance abuse issues. Phase 2 involves initial and clinical assessments of individuals to identify services needed, as well as more aggressive prosecution paired with treatment options. Phase 3 aims to restore public safety through increased law enforcement and street cleaning, with the goal of reducing criminal activity and arresting dangerous criminals. Both phases 2 and 3 also include efforts to provide employment opportunities and training to improve lives.
Fireworks are allowed in Salt Lake City from July 1-7 and July 21-27 between 11am and 11pm, extending to midnight on July 4th and 24th. Certain areas of the city have restrictions on fireworks use. Only Class 1.4G fireworks that cannot travel more than 15 feet in the air or 10 feet horizontally are approved for residential use. If a neighbor is breaking these rules and poses an imminent danger, call 911, otherwise call the non-emergency police line.
ELPCO is the East Liberty Park Community Organization--a local, city-sanctioned community organization that represents the residents and business in the East Liberty Park area of Salt Lake City. The specific area covered by ELPCO is (roughly) defined by the boundaries of 700 E to 1300 E and 800 S to 1700 S.
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
Combined Illegal, Unregulated and Unreported (IUU) Vessel List.Christina Parmionova
The best available, up-to-date information on all fishing and related vessels that appear on the illegal, unregulated, and unreported (IUU) fishing vessel lists published by Regional Fisheries Management Organisations (RFMOs) and related organisations. The aim of the site is to improve the effectiveness of the original IUU lists as a tool for a wide variety of stakeholders to better understand and combat illegal fishing and broader fisheries crime.
To date, the following regional organisations maintain or share lists of vessels that have been found to carry out or support IUU fishing within their own or adjacent convention areas and/or species of competence:
Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR)
Commission for the Conservation of Southern Bluefin Tuna (CCSBT)
General Fisheries Commission for the Mediterranean (GFCM)
Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission (IATTC)
International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT)
Indian Ocean Tuna Commission (IOTC)
Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Organisation (NAFO)
North East Atlantic Fisheries Commission (NEAFC)
North Pacific Fisheries Commission (NPFC)
South East Atlantic Fisheries Organisation (SEAFO)
South Pacific Regional Fisheries Management Organisation (SPRFMO)
Southern Indian Ocean Fisheries Agreement (SIOFA)
Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission (WCPFC)
The Combined IUU Fishing Vessel List merges all these sources into one list that provides a single reference point to identify whether a vessel is currently IUU listed. Vessels that have been IUU listed in the past and subsequently delisted (for example because of a change in ownership, or because the vessel is no longer in service) are also retained on the site, so that the site contains a full historic record of IUU listed fishing vessels.
Unlike the IUU lists published on individual RFMO websites, which may update vessel details infrequently or not at all, the Combined IUU Fishing Vessel List is kept up to date with the best available information regarding changes to vessel identity, flag state, ownership, location, and operations.
How To Cultivate Community Affinity Throughout The Generosity JourneyAggregage
This session will dive into how to create rich generosity experiences that foster long-lasting relationships. You’ll walk away with actionable insights to redefine how you engage with your supporters — emphasizing trust, engagement, and community!
AHMR is an interdisciplinary peer-reviewed online journal created to encourage and facilitate the study of all aspects (socio-economic, political, legislative and developmental) of Human Mobility in Africa. Through the publication of original research, policy discussions and evidence research papers AHMR provides a comprehensive forum devoted exclusively to the analysis of contemporaneous trends, migration patterns and some of the most important migration-related issues.
The Antyodaya Saral Haryana Portal is a pioneering initiative by the Government of Haryana aimed at providing citizens with seamless access to a wide range of government services
Indira awas yojana housing scheme renamed as PMAYnarinav14
Indira Awas Yojana (IAY) played a significant role in addressing rural housing needs in India. It emerged as a comprehensive program for affordable housing solutions in rural areas, predating the government’s broader focus on mass housing initiatives.
This report explores the significance of border towns and spaces for strengthening responses to young people on the move. In particular it explores the linkages of young people to local service centres with the aim of further developing service, protection, and support strategies for migrant children in border areas across the region. The report is based on a small-scale fieldwork study in the border towns of Chipata and Katete in Zambia conducted in July 2023. Border towns and spaces provide a rich source of information about issues related to the informal or irregular movement of young people across borders, including smuggling and trafficking. They can help build a picture of the nature and scope of the type of movement young migrants undertake and also the forms of protection available to them. Border towns and spaces also provide a lens through which we can better understand the vulnerabilities of young people on the move and, critically, the strategies they use to navigate challenges and access support.
The findings in this report highlight some of the key factors shaping the experiences and vulnerabilities of young people on the move – particularly their proximity to border spaces and how this affects the risks that they face. The report describes strategies that young people on the move employ to remain below the radar of visibility to state and non-state actors due to fear of arrest, detention, and deportation while also trying to keep themselves safe and access support in border towns. These strategies of (in)visibility provide a way to protect themselves yet at the same time also heighten some of the risks young people face as their vulnerabilities are not always recognised by those who could offer support.
In this report we show that the realities and challenges of life and migration in this region and in Zambia need to be better understood for support to be strengthened and tuned to meet the specific needs of young people on the move. This includes understanding the role of state and non-state stakeholders, the impact of laws and policies and, critically, the experiences of the young people themselves. We provide recommendations for immediate action, recommendations for programming to support young people on the move in the two towns that would reduce risk for young people in this area, and recommendations for longer term policy advocacy.
RFP for Reno's Community Assistance CenterThis Is Reno
Property appraisals completed in May for downtown Reno’s Community Assistance and Triage Centers (CAC) reveal that repairing the buildings to bring them back into service would cost an estimated $10.1 million—nearly four times the amount previously reported by city staff.
1. Salt Lake City Police Department
2017 2016 Chg % Chg 2017 2016 Chg % Chg 2017 Recent
Chg
Recent
% Chg
2017 2016 % Chg Avg** % Chg Avg** % Chg
Criminal Homicide 0 1 ‐1 ‐100.0% 1 2 ‐1 ‐50.0% 2 ‐1 ‐50.0% 11 14 ‐21.4% 9.00 22.2% 8.00 37.5%
Sexual Assault 4 7 ‐3 ‐42.9% 15 18 ‐3 ‐16.7% 24 ‐9 ‐37.5% 289 216 33.8% 185 56.5% 170 70.4%
Robbery ‐ Business 3 4 ‐1 ‐25.0% 7 10 ‐3 ‐30.0% 5 2 40.0% 161 157 2.5% 153 5.2% 137 17.5%
Robbery ‐ All Other 8 9 ‐1 ‐11.1% 29 28 1 3.6% 22 7 31.8% 345 350 ‐1.4% 323 6.9% 303 13.7%
Agg. Assault ‐ Family 4 3 1 33.3% 13 13 0 0.0% 12 1 8.3% 155 188 ‐17.6% 178 ‐12.9% 179 ‐13.3%
Agg. Assault ‐ NonFamily 9 10 ‐1 ‐10.0% 35 42 ‐7 ‐16.7% 33 2 6.1% 573 679 ‐15.6% 573 ‐0.1% 560 2.3%
Burglary ‐ Residential 19 17 2 11.8% 76 74 2 2.7% 68 8 11.8% 968 917 5.6% 1017 ‐4.8% 1071 ‐9.6%
Burglary ‐ All Other 9 12 ‐3 ‐25.0% 47 74 ‐27 ‐36.5% 63 ‐16 ‐25.4% 805 758 6.2% 754 6.8% 762 5.6%
Larceny ‐ Vehicle Burglary 73 96 ‐23 ‐24.0% 320 361 ‐41 ‐11.4% 357 ‐37 ‐10.4% 4,358 4,896 ‐11.0% 5075 ‐14.1% 4786 ‐9.0%
Larceny ‐ All Other 81 164 ‐83 ‐50.6% 472 619 ‐147 ‐23.7% 519 ‐47 ‐9.1% 7,517 8,020 ‐6.3% 8219 ‐8.5% 7841 ‐4.1%
Motor Vehicle Theft 25 41 ‐16 ‐39.0% 125 170 ‐45 ‐26.5% 164 ‐39 ‐23.8% 1,944 1,953 ‐0.5% 1981 ‐1.9% 1914 1.6%
TOTAL 235 364 ‐129 ‐35.4% 1,140 1,411 ‐271 ‐19.2% 1,269 ‐129 ‐10.2% 17,126 18,148 ‐5.6% 18465 ‐7.3% 17731 ‐3.4%
Nov 20Nov 27 Dec 04Dec 11‐Dec 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Homicide 0 1 0 0 8 6 7 7 6 14 11
Sex Assault 2 3 6 4 152 158 136 158 180 216 289
Robbery ‐ Business 1 1 2 3 116 91 135 143 159 157 161
Robbery ‐ All Other 6 10 5 8 256 253 296 309 309 350 345
Aggravated Assault ‐ Family 5 3 1 4 151 164 196 154 192 188 155
Aggravated Assault ‐ All Other 12 8 6 9 478 559 522 500 541 679 573
Burglary ‐ Residential 23 21 13 19 1046 989 1316 987 1146 917 968
Burglary ‐ All Other 13 11 14 9 571 819 730 691 812 758 805
Larceny ‐ Vehicle Burglary 77 86 84 73 3995 4585 4123 4895 5433 4896 4358
Larceny ‐ All Other 123 145 123 81 5934 6848 7702 8176 8461 8020 7517
Vehicle Theft 32 36 32 25 1502 1717 1909 1785 2204 1953 1944
TOTALS 294 325 286 235 14209 16189 17072 17805 19443 18148 17126 Year‐to‐Date Totals (Jan 1 through Dec 17)
Note: Charts may erroneously show an apparent drop in the most current data due to some cases not yet having been reported and/or recorded.
The figures included in this report are preliminary figures for general situational awareness and trend purposes only. They do not represent the official figures of the Salt Lake City Police Department and are
subject to further analysis and revision. Due to the statute‐driven, changing nature of crime classification and area boundaries over time, be advised that the figures contained may not fully coincide with
SLCPD statistical sources. Differences are reflective of the departmental procedures or policies that were in place at the time the events occurred and the date the data was compiled. In addition, data may
be approximate in relation to indicated areas. Additionally, they are not Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) or "crime rate" numbers and are not intended to be used as such. Rather, they are a breakdown of
every offense within every case that occurred during the given time periods. Although every reasonable effort is made to verify their accuracy, the accuracy of any data is subject to the constraints of the
report generation process as well as the manner, format, and point in time of any query.
*The above CompStat figures were generated on Monday, 1 day(s) after the closing date, which is indicated in the title. The figures are current as of the date generated.
CompStat Report…….
Citywide Data ‐
Breakdown of All Offenses
Volume 3 ‐‐ Number 50
Last 7 Days* Last 28 Days* Previous 28 Days*
(Prior to Last 28 Days)
Year to Date (YTD)* 3‐Year YTD
Average*
5‐Year YTD
Average*
**Averages greater than or equal to 100 are rounded to a whole digit to maintain a consistent column size.
Report Covering the Week 12/11/2017 Through 12/17/2017 (Mon‐Sun)
0
5
10
15
20
25
Nov 20‐Nov 26Nov 27‐Dec 03Dec 04‐Dec 10Dec 11‐Dec 17
Last 28 Day Breakdown by Week ‐ Part 1
Homicide
Sex Assault
Robbery‐Bus.
Robbery‐Other
Agg Aslt‐Family
Agg Aslt‐NonFam
Burg‐Res
Burg‐All Other
14209
16189 17072 17805
19443
18148
17126
0
5000
10000
15000
20000
25000
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Year‐to‐Date Totals (Jan 1 through Dec 17)
Homicide
Sex Assault
Robbery‐Bus.
Robbery‐Other
Agg Aslt‐Family
Agg Aslt‐NonFam
Burg‐Res
Burg‐All Other
Larc‐Veh Burg
Larc‐All Other
Vehicle Theft
77
86 84
73
123
145
123
81
32 36 32
25
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
Nov 20‐Nov 26 Nov 27‐Dec 03 Dec 04‐Dec 10 Dec 11‐Dec 17
Last 28 Day Breakdown by Week ‐ Part 2
Vehicle
Burglary
Other
Larceny
Vehicle
Theft
Page 1 of 9
2. Salt Lake City Police Department
2017 2016 Chg % Chg 2017 2016 Chg % Chg 2017 Recent
Chg
Recent
% Chg
2017 2016 % Chg Avg** % Chg Avg** % Chg
Criminal Homicide 0 0 0 /0 0 0 0 /0 0 0 /0 3 1 200.0% 1.00 200.0% 1.00 200.0%
Sexual Assault 1 1 0 0.0% 5 2 3 150.0% 6 ‐1 ‐16.7% 54 44 22.7% 42.33 27.6% 32.60 65.6%
Robbery ‐ Business 0 1 ‐1 ‐100.0% 0 1 ‐1 ‐100.0% 0 0 /0 20 20 0.0% 18.67 7.1% 16.20 23.5%
Robbery ‐ All Other 2 4 ‐2 ‐50.0% 8 11 ‐3 ‐27.3% 6 2 33.3% 122 139 ‐12.2% 131 ‐6.9% 113 8.0%
Agg. Assault ‐ Family 1 0 1 /0 2 0 2 /0 1 1 100.0% 14 11 27.3% 13.00 7.7% 11.20 25.0%
Agg. Assault ‐ NonFamily 0 4 ‐4 ‐100.0% 4 12 ‐8 ‐66.7% 7 ‐3 ‐42.9% 166 195 ‐14.9% 175 ‐5.1% 162 2.3%
Burglary ‐ Residential 0 0 0 /0 2 0 2 /0 4 ‐2 ‐50.0% 45 28 60.7% 26.33 70.9% 25.00 80.0%
Burglary ‐ All Other 3 0 3 /0 5 3 2 66.7% 3 2 66.7% 84 87 ‐3.4% 72.67 15.6% 73.60 14.1%
Larceny ‐ Vehicle Burglary 7 17 ‐10 ‐58.8% 36 76 ‐40 ‐52.6% 55 ‐19 ‐34.5% 635 771 ‐17.6% 769 ‐17.4% 821 ‐22.6%
Larceny ‐ All Other 8 21 ‐13 ‐61.9% 68 95 ‐27 ‐28.4% 66 2 3.0% 1,207 1,360 ‐11.3% 1351 ‐10.7% 1270 ‐4.9%
Motor Vehicle Theft 1 3 ‐2 ‐66.7% 10 10 0 0.0% 11 ‐1 ‐9.1% 175 167 4.8% 176 ‐0.4% 160 9.5%
TOTAL 23 51 ‐28 ‐54.9% 140 210 ‐70 ‐33.3% 159 ‐19 ‐11.9% 2,525 2,823 ‐10.6% 2776 ‐9.0% 2685 ‐6.0%
Nov 20Nov 27 Dec 04Dec 11‐Dec 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Homicide 0 0 0 0 2 1 1 2 0 1 3
Sex Assault 1 0 3 1 25 18 18 41 42 44 54
Robbery ‐ Business 0 0 0 0 15 10 15 14 22 20 20
Robbery ‐ All Other 2 2 2 2 62 68 104 118 136 139 122
Aggravated Assault ‐ Family 0 1 0 1 6 9 8 13 15 11 14
Aggravated Assault ‐ All Other 3 0 1 0 128 134 152 158 172 195 166
Burglary ‐ Residential 2 0 0 0 24 26 20 21 30 28 45
Burglary ‐ All Other 1 1 0 3 40 78 72 66 65 87 84
Larceny ‐ Vehicle Burglary 13 5 11 7 756 1037 760 684 852 771 635
Larceny ‐ All Other 16 20 24 8 799 997 1299 1311 1382 1360 1207
Vehicle Theft 6 1 2 1 142 124 148 149 211 167 175
TOTALS 44 30 43 23 1999 2502 2597 2577 2927 2823 2525 Year‐to‐Date Totals (Jan 1 through Dec 17)
Note: Charts may erroneously show an apparent drop in the most current data due to some cases not yet having been reported and/or recorded.
The figures included in this report are preliminary figures for general situational awareness and trend purposes only. They do not represent the official figures of the Salt Lake City Police Department and are
subject to further analysis and revision. Due to the statute‐driven, changing nature of crime classification and area boundaries over time, be advised that the figures contained may not fully coincide with
SLCPD statistical sources. Differences are reflective of the departmental procedures or policies that were in place at the time the events occurred and the date the data was compiled. In addition, data may
be approximate in relation to indicated areas. Additionally, they are not Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) or "crime rate" numbers and are not intended to be used as such. Rather, they are a breakdown of
every offense within every case that occurred during the given time periods. Although every reasonable effort is made to verify their accuracy, the accuracy of any data is subject to the constraints of the
report generation process as well as the manner, format, and point in time of any query.
*The above CompStat figures were generated on Monday, 1 day(s) after the closing date, which is indicated in the title. The figures are current as of the date generated.
**Averages greater than or equal to 100 are rounded to a whole digit to maintain a consistent column size.
***The Rio Grande District is defined as the area from North Temple to 700 South and State Street to I‐15. However, this area overlaps other districts covered with the SLCPD CompStat Report, namely
parts of Districts 3 & 4. As a result, the data contained within the Rio Grande District may also be listed in the data for other areas.
CompStat Report…….
Rio Grande District***
Breakdown of All Offenses Report Covering the Week 12/11/2017 Through 12/17/2017 (Mon‐Sun)
Volume 3 ‐‐ Number 50
Last 7 Days* Last 28 Days* Previous 28 Days*
(Prior to Last 28 Days)
Year to Date (YTD)* 3‐Year YTD
Average*
5‐Year YTD
Average*
0
1
2
3
4
Nov 20‐Nov 26Nov 27‐Dec 03Dec 04‐Dec 10Dec 11‐Dec 17
Last 28 Day Breakdown by Week ‐ Part 1
Homicide
Sex Assault
Robbery‐Bus.
Robbery‐Other
Agg Aslt‐Family
Agg Aslt‐NonFam
Burg‐Res
Burg‐All Other
1999
2502 2597 2577
2927 2823
2525
0
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
3000
3500
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Year‐to‐Date Totals (Jan 1 through Dec 17)
Homicide
Sex Assault
Robbery‐Bus.
Robbery‐Other
Agg Aslt‐Family
Agg Aslt‐NonFam
Burg‐Res
Burg‐All Other
Larc‐Veh Burg
Larc‐All Other
Vehicle Theft
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
Nov 20‐Nov 26 Nov 27‐Dec 03 Dec 04‐Dec 10 Dec 11‐Dec 17
Last 28 Day Breakdown by Week ‐ Part 2
Vehicle
Burglary
Other
Larceny
Vehicle
Theft
Page 2 of 9
3. Salt Lake City Police Department
2017 2016 Chg % Chg 2017 2016 Chg % Chg 2017 Recent
Chg
Recent
% Chg
2017 2016 % Chg Avg** % Chg Avg** % Chg
Criminal Homicide 0 0 0 /0 0 1 ‐1 ‐100.0% 0 0 /0 0 5 ‐100.0% 2.33 ‐100.0% 1.60 ‐100.0%
Sexual Assault 1 0 1 /0 4 2 2 100.0% 0 4 /0 31 17 82.4% 15.67 97.9% 15.00 106.7%
Robbery ‐ Business 0 1 ‐1 ‐100.0% 0 2 ‐2 ‐100.0% 0 0 /0 11 14 ‐21.4% 12.00 ‐8.3% 9.40 17.0%
Robbery ‐ All Other 1 1 0 0.0% 5 6 ‐1 ‐16.7% 2 3 150.0% 30 32 ‐6.3% 32.33 ‐7.2% 29.40 2.0%
Agg. Assault ‐ Family 0 0 0 /0 1 3 ‐2 ‐66.7% 2 ‐1 ‐50.0% 28 48 ‐41.7% 40.33 ‐30.6% 38.80 ‐27.8%
Agg. Assault ‐ NonFamily 0 1 ‐1 ‐100.0% 5 4 1 25.0% 4 1 25.0% 57 69 ‐17.4% 58.67 ‐2.8% 63.80 ‐10.7%
Burglary ‐ Residential 4 3 1 33.3% 8 16 ‐8 ‐50.0% 10 ‐2 ‐20.0% 110 104 5.8% 133 ‐17.3% 157 ‐29.8%
Burglary ‐ All Other 1 1 0 0.0% 5 6 ‐1 ‐16.7% 5 0 0.0% 51 47 8.5% 50.67 0.7% 55.40 ‐7.9%
Larceny ‐ Vehicle Burglary 2 9 ‐7 ‐77.8% 12 25 ‐13 ‐52.0% 26 ‐14 ‐53.8% 332 362 ‐8.3% 404 ‐17.9% 377 ‐12.0%
Larceny ‐ All Other 5 8 ‐3 ‐37.5% 26 37 ‐11 ‐29.7% 16 10 62.5% 370 444 ‐16.7% 474 ‐21.9% 483 ‐23.5%
Motor Vehicle Theft 6 5 1 20.0% 18 27 ‐9 ‐33.3% 32 ‐14 ‐43.8% 264 272 ‐2.9% 292 ‐9.7% 302 ‐12.7%
TOTAL 20 29 ‐9 ‐31.0% 84 129 ‐45 ‐34.9% 97 ‐13 ‐13.4% 1,284 1,414 ‐9.2% 1515 ‐15.3% 1533 ‐16.3%
Nov 20Nov 27 Dec 04Dec 11‐Dec 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Homicide 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 2 5 0
Sex Assault 1 1 1 1 15 14 14 11 19 17 31
Robbery ‐ Business 0 0 0 0 3 4 7 8 14 14 11
Robbery ‐ All Other 1 2 1 1 21 26 24 36 29 32 30
Aggravated Assault ‐ Family 1 0 0 0 38 31 42 30 43 48 28
Aggravated Assault ‐ All Other 2 2 1 0 54 72 71 51 56 69 57
Burglary ‐ Residential 0 2 2 4 122 142 243 139 156 104 110
Burglary ‐ All Other 1 1 2 1 39 55 70 42 63 47 51
Larceny ‐ Vehicle Burglary 4 4 2 2 301 334 339 431 420 362 332
Larceny ‐ All Other 9 7 5 5 483 513 483 470 507 444 370
Vehicle Theft 3 5 4 6 273 277 358 300 305 272 264
TOTALS 22 24 18 20 1350 1468 1652 1518 1614 1414 1284 Year‐to‐Date Totals (Jan 1 through Dec 17)
Note: Charts may erroneously show an apparent drop in the most current data due to some cases not yet having been reported and/or recorded.
The figures included in this report are preliminary figures for general situational awareness and trend purposes only. They do not represent the official figures of the Salt Lake City Police Department and are
subject to further analysis and revision. Due to the statute‐driven, changing nature of crime classification and area boundaries over time, be advised that the figures contained may not fully coincide with
SLCPD statistical sources. Differences are reflective of the departmental procedures or policies that were in place at the time the events occurred and the date the data was compiled. In addition, data may
be approximate in relation to indicated areas. Additionally, they are not Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) or "crime rate" numbers and are not intended to be used as such. Rather, they are a breakdown of
every offense within every case that occurred during the given time periods. Although every reasonable effort is made to verify their accuracy, the accuracy of any data is subject to the constraints of the
report generation process as well as the manner, format, and point in time of any query.
CompStat Report…….
Council District 1 ‐
Breakdown of All Offenses
*The above CompStat figures were generated on Monday, 1 day(s) after the closing date, which is indicated in the title. The figures are current as of the date generated.
Last 7 Days* Last 28 Days* Previous 28 Days*
(Prior to Last 28 Days)
Year to Date (YTD)* 3‐Year YTD
Average*
5‐Year YTD
Average*
Volume 3 ‐‐ Number 50
**Averages greater than or equal to 100 are rounded to a whole digit to maintain a consistent column size.
Report Covering the Week 12/11/2017 Through 12/17/2017 (Mon‐Sun)
0
1
2
3
4
5
Nov 20‐Nov 26Nov 27‐Dec 03Dec 04‐Dec 10Dec 11‐Dec 17
Last 28 Day Breakdown by Week ‐ Part 1
Homicide
Sex Assault
Robbery‐Bus.
Robbery‐Other
Agg Aslt‐Family
Agg Aslt‐NonFam
Burg‐Res
Burg‐All Other
1350
1468
1652
1518 1614
1414
1284
0
200
400
600
800
1000
1200
1400
1600
1800
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Year‐to‐Date Totals (Jan 1 through Dec 17)
Homicide
Sex Assault
Robbery‐Bus.
Robbery‐Other
Agg Aslt‐Family
Agg Aslt‐NonFam
Burg‐Res
Burg‐All Other
Larc‐Veh Burg
Larc‐All Other
Vehicle Theft
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Nov 20‐Nov 26 Nov 27‐Dec 03 Dec 04‐Dec 10 Dec 11‐Dec 17
Last 28 Day Breakdown by Week ‐ Part 2
Vehicle
Burglary
Other
Larceny
Vehicle
Theft
Page 3 of 9
4. Salt Lake City Police Department
2017 2016 Chg % Chg 2017 2016 Chg % Chg 2017 Recent
Chg
Recent
% Chg
2017 2016 % Chg Avg** % Chg Avg** % Chg
Criminal Homicide 0 0 0 /0 1 0 1 /0 2 ‐1 ‐50.0% 3 4 ‐25.0% 3.00 0.0% 2.60 15.4%
Sexual Assault 1 1 0 0.0% 2 1 1 100.0% 1 1 100.0% 36 30 20.0% 23.33 54.3% 21.80 65.1%
Robbery ‐ Business 1 1 0 0.0% 1 2 ‐1 ‐50.0% 2 ‐1 ‐50.0% 29 25 16.0% 26.67 8.7% 24.80 16.9%
Robbery ‐ All Other 1 1 0 0.0% 4 1 3 300.0% 8 ‐4 ‐50.0% 77 50 54.0% 48.33 59.3% 48.40 59.1%
Agg. Assault ‐ Family 2 1 1 100.0% 5 2 3 150.0% 3 2 66.7% 50 49 2.0% 47.33 5.6% 46.20 8.2%
Agg. Assault ‐ NonFamily 3 0 3 /0 5 4 1 25.0% 6 ‐1 ‐16.7% 116 125 ‐7.2% 104 11.9% 93.80 23.7%
Burglary ‐ Residential 4 3 1 33.3% 12 14 ‐2 ‐14.3% 11 1 9.1% 145 108 34.3% 131 10.4% 154 ‐6.0%
Burglary ‐ All Other 0 4 ‐4 ‐100.0% 12 18 ‐6 ‐33.3% 8 4 50.0% 152 171 ‐11.1% 185 ‐18.0% 176 ‐13.7%
Larceny ‐ Vehicle Burglary 5 8 ‐3 ‐37.5% 30 37 ‐7 ‐18.9% 44 ‐14 ‐31.8% 493 605 ‐18.5% 565 ‐12.8% 536 ‐8.0%
Larceny ‐ All Other 10 30 ‐20 ‐66.7% 73 81 ‐8 ‐9.9% 96 ‐23 ‐24.0% 1,088 1,103 ‐1.4% 1162 ‐6.4% 1156 ‐5.8%
Motor Vehicle Theft 9 9 0 0.0% 24 44 ‐20 ‐45.5% 41 ‐17 ‐41.5% 418 440 ‐5.0% 417 0.2% 409 2.3%
TOTAL 36 58 ‐22 ‐37.9% 169 204 ‐35 ‐17.2% 222 ‐53 ‐23.9% 2,607 2,710 ‐3.8% 2714 ‐3.9% 2668 ‐2.3%
Nov 20Nov 27 Dec 04Dec 11‐Dec 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Homicide 0 1 0 0 1 3 1 4 1 4 3
Sex Assault 0 1 0 1 18 26 13 20 20 30 36
Robbery ‐ Business 0 0 0 1 26 16 28 25 30 25 29
Robbery ‐ All Other 1 2 0 1 48 47 50 51 44 50 77
Aggravated Assault ‐ Family 0 2 1 2 34 46 43 38 55 49 50
Aggravated Assault ‐ All Other 2 0 0 3 76 90 68 96 90 125 116
Burglary ‐ Residential 2 2 4 4 199 152 225 145 141 108 145
Burglary ‐ All Other 5 2 5 0 179 172 153 163 222 171 152
Larceny ‐ Vehicle Burglary 8 9 8 5 549 452 531 509 582 605 493
Larceny ‐ All Other 20 25 18 10 1272 1130 1162 1202 1181 1103 1088
Vehicle Theft 3 8 4 9 351 393 399 351 461 440 418
TOTALS 41 52 40 36 2753 2527 2673 2604 2827 2710 2607 Year‐to‐Date Totals (Jan 1 through Dec 17)
Note: Charts may erroneously show an apparent drop in the most current data due to some cases not yet having been reported and/or recorded.
The figures included in this report are preliminary figures for general situational awareness and trend purposes only. They do not represent the official figures of the Salt Lake City Police Department and are
subject to further analysis and revision. Due to the statute‐driven, changing nature of crime classification and area boundaries over time, be advised that the figures contained may not fully coincide with
SLCPD statistical sources. Differences are reflective of the departmental procedures or policies that were in place at the time the events occurred and the date the data was compiled. In addition, data may
be approximate in relation to indicated areas. Additionally, they are not Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) or "crime rate" numbers and are not intended to be used as such. Rather, they are a breakdown of
every offense within every case that occurred during the given time periods. Although every reasonable effort is made to verify their accuracy, the accuracy of any data is subject to the constraints of the
report generation process as well as the manner, format, and point in time of any query.
CompStat Report…….
Council District 2 ‐
Breakdown of All Offenses
*The above CompStat figures were generated on Monday, 1 day(s) after the closing date, which is indicated in the title. The figures are current as of the date generated.
Last 7 Days* Last 28 Days* Previous 28 Days*
(Prior to Last 28 Days)
Year to Date (YTD)* 3‐Year YTD
Average*
5‐Year YTD
Average*
Volume 3 ‐‐ Number 50
**Averages greater than or equal to 100 are rounded to a whole digit to maintain a consistent column size.
Report Covering the Week 12/11/2017 Through 12/17/2017 (Mon‐Sun)
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
Nov 20‐Nov 26Nov 27‐Dec 03Dec 04‐Dec 10Dec 11‐Dec 17
Last 28 Day Breakdown by Week ‐ Part 1
Homicide
Sex Assault
Robbery‐Bus.
Robbery‐Other
Agg Aslt‐Family
Agg Aslt‐NonFam
Burg‐Res
Burg‐All Other
2753 2527 2673 2604
2827 2710 2607
0
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
3000
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Year‐to‐Date Totals (Jan 1 through Dec 17)
Homicide
Sex Assault
Robbery‐Bus.
Robbery‐Other
Agg Aslt‐Family
Agg Aslt‐NonFam
Burg‐Res
Burg‐All Other
Larc‐Veh Burg
Larc‐All Other
Vehicle Theft
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
Nov 20‐Nov 26 Nov 27‐Dec 03 Dec 04‐Dec 10 Dec 11‐Dec 17
Last 28 Day Breakdown by Week ‐ Part 2
Vehicle
Burglary
Other
Larceny
Vehicle
Theft
Page 4 of 9
5. Salt Lake City Police Department
2017 2016 Chg % Chg 2017 2016 Chg % Chg 2017 Recent
Chg
Recent
% Chg
2017 2016 % Chg Avg** % Chg Avg** % Chg
Criminal Homicide 0 1 ‐1 ‐100.0% 0 1 ‐1 ‐100.0% 0 0 /0 0 3 ‐100.0% 1.00 ‐100.0% 0.80 ‐100.0%
Sexual Assault 0 1 ‐1 ‐100.0% 2 2 0 0.0% 3 ‐1 ‐33.3% 26 15 73.3% 14.67 77.3% 14.80 75.7%
Robbery ‐ Business 0 0 0 /0 0 0 0 /0 0 0 /0 8 4 100.0% 5.00 60.0% 4.80 66.7%
Robbery ‐ All Other 1 0 1 /0 3 0 3 /0 0 3 /0 23 17 35.3% 15.00 53.3% 14.00 64.3%
Agg. Assault ‐ Family 0 1 ‐1 ‐100.0% 2 3 ‐1 ‐33.3% 3 ‐1 ‐33.3% 15 24 ‐37.5% 13.33 12.5% 12.60 19.0%
Agg. Assault ‐ NonFamily 0 3 ‐3 ‐100.0% 3 5 ‐2 ‐40.0% 3 0 0.0% 44 47 ‐6.4% 34.67 26.9% 30.80 42.9%
Burglary ‐ Residential 5 2 3 150.0% 12 9 3 33.3% 7 5 71.4% 156 137 13.9% 151 3.3% 147 6.0%
Burglary ‐ All Other 0 4 ‐4 ‐100.0% 3 10 ‐7 ‐70.0% 8 ‐5 ‐62.5% 91 93 ‐2.2% 80.33 13.3% 77.80 17.0%
Larceny ‐ Vehicle Burglary 14 19 ‐5 ‐26.3% 52 63 ‐11 ‐17.5% 53 ‐1 ‐1.9% 611 687 ‐11.1% 730 ‐16.3% 636 ‐3.9%
Larceny ‐ All Other 5 20 ‐15 ‐75.0% 24 48 ‐24 ‐50.0% 26 ‐2 ‐7.7% 400 433 ‐7.6% 460 ‐13.0% 441 ‐9.2%
Motor Vehicle Theft 1 4 ‐3 ‐75.0% 5 8 ‐3 ‐37.5% 13 ‐8 ‐61.5% 211 201 5.0% 193 9.3% 187 12.7%
TOTAL 26 55 ‐29 ‐52.7% 106 149 ‐43 ‐28.9% 116 ‐10 ‐8.6% 1,585 1,661 ‐4.6% 1698 ‐6.7% 1566 1.2%
Nov 20Nov 27 Dec 04Dec 11‐Dec 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Homicide 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 3 0
Sex Assault 0 0 2 0 24 16 14 11 18 15 26
Robbery ‐ Business 0 0 0 0 13 5 4 9 2 4 8
Robbery ‐ All Other 0 0 2 1 17 6 19 14 14 17 23
Aggravated Assault ‐ Family 2 0 0 0 9 9 14 8 8 24 15
Aggravated Assault ‐ All Other 2 1 0 0 30 30 20 24 33 47 44
Burglary ‐ Residential 6 1 0 5 140 122 161 142 174 137 156
Burglary ‐ All Other 1 1 1 0 53 66 82 85 63 93 91
Larceny ‐ Vehicle Burglary 8 11 19 14 426 472 515 785 719 687 611
Larceny ‐ All Other 4 11 4 5 394 402 422 491 455 433 400
Vehicle Theft 1 0 3 1 167 184 173 164 214 201 211
TOTALS 24 25 31 26 1274 1313 1424 1733 1700 1661 1585 Year‐to‐Date Totals (Jan 1 through Dec 17)
Note: Charts may erroneously show an apparent drop in the most current data due to some cases not yet having been reported and/or recorded.
The figures included in this report are preliminary figures for general situational awareness and trend purposes only. They do not represent the official figures of the Salt Lake City Police Department and are
subject to further analysis and revision. Due to the statute‐driven, changing nature of crime classification and area boundaries over time, be advised that the figures contained may not fully coincide with
SLCPD statistical sources. Differences are reflective of the departmental procedures or policies that were in place at the time the events occurred and the date the data was compiled. In addition, data may
be approximate in relation to indicated areas. Additionally, they are not Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) or "crime rate" numbers and are not intended to be used as such. Rather, they are a breakdown of
every offense within every case that occurred during the given time periods. Although every reasonable effort is made to verify their accuracy, the accuracy of any data is subject to the constraints of the
report generation process as well as the manner, format, and point in time of any query.
CompStat Report…….
Council District 3 ‐
Breakdown of All Offenses
*The above CompStat figures were generated on Monday, 1 day(s) after the closing date, which is indicated in the title. The figures are current as of the date generated.
Last 7 Days* Last 28 Days* Previous 28 Days*
(Prior to Last 28 Days)
Year to Date (YTD)* 3‐Year YTD
Average*
5‐Year YTD
Average*
Volume 3 ‐‐ Number 50
**Averages greater than or equal to 100 are rounded to a whole digit to maintain a consistent column size.
Report Covering the Week 12/11/2017 Through 12/17/2017 (Mon‐Sun)
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Nov 20‐Nov 26Nov 27‐Dec 03Dec 04‐Dec 10Dec 11‐Dec 17
Last 28 Day Breakdown by Week ‐ Part 1
Homicide
Sex Assault
Robbery‐Bus.
Robbery‐Other
Agg Aslt‐Family
Agg Aslt‐NonFam
Burg‐Res
Burg‐All Other
1274 1313
1424
1733 1700 1661
1585
0
200
400
600
800
1000
1200
1400
1600
1800
2000
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Year‐to‐Date Totals (Jan 1 through Dec 17)
Homicide
Sex Assault
Robbery‐Bus.
Robbery‐Other
Agg Aslt‐Family
Agg Aslt‐NonFam
Burg‐Res
Burg‐All Other
Larc‐Veh Burg
Larc‐All Other
Vehicle Theft0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18
20
Nov 20‐Nov 26 Nov 27‐Dec 03 Dec 04‐Dec 10 Dec 11‐Dec 17
Last 28 Day Breakdown by Week ‐ Part 2
Vehicle
Burglary
Other
Larceny
Vehicle
Theft
Page 5 of 9
6. Salt Lake City Police Department
2017 2016 Chg % Chg 2017 2016 Chg % Chg 2017 Recent
Chg
Recent
% Chg
2017 2016 % Chg Avg** % Chg Avg** % Chg
Criminal Homicide 0 0 0 /0 0 0 0 /0 0 0 /0 5 2 150.0% 1.67 200.0% 1.40 257.1%
Sexual Assault 1 3 ‐2 ‐66.7% 4 6 ‐2 ‐33.3% 11 ‐7 ‐63.6% 110 90 22.2% 76.00 44.7% 63.60 73.0%
Robbery ‐ Business 0 2 ‐2 ‐100.0% 2 4 ‐2 ‐50.0% 1 1 100.0% 62 49 26.5% 44.67 38.8% 39.20 58.2%
Robbery ‐ All Other 4 6 ‐2 ‐33.3% 11 16 ‐5 ‐31.3% 8 3 37.5% 149 166 ‐10.2% 155 ‐3.9% 140 6.7%
Agg. Assault ‐ Family 1 0 1 /0 4 0 4 /0 1 3 300.0% 31 22 40.9% 27.67 12.0% 31.40 ‐1.3%
Agg. Assault ‐ NonFamily 3 5 ‐2 ‐40.0% 10 23 ‐13 ‐56.5% 13 ‐3 ‐23.1% 227 275 ‐17.5% 240 ‐5.4% 225 1.0%
Burglary ‐ Residential 1 2 ‐1 ‐50.0% 13 9 4 44.4% 12 1 8.3% 183 170 7.6% 166 10.2% 167 9.8%
Burglary ‐ All Other 3 1 2 200.0% 8 10 ‐2 ‐20.0% 19 ‐11 ‐57.9% 201 165 21.8% 175 14.6% 183 9.7%
Larceny ‐ Vehicle Burglary 13 23 ‐10 ‐43.5% 69 93 ‐24 ‐25.8% 105 ‐36 ‐34.3% 1,246 1,228 1.5% 1392 ‐10.5% 1379 ‐9.6%
Larceny ‐ All Other 24 41 ‐17 ‐41.5% 134 187 ‐53 ‐28.3% 137 ‐3 ‐2.2% 2,398 2,558 ‐6.3% 2617 ‐8.4% 2535 ‐5.4%
Motor Vehicle Theft 1 8 ‐7 ‐87.5% 32 28 4 14.3% 38 ‐6 ‐15.8% 419 387 8.3% 406 3.1% 369 13.5%
TOTAL 51 91 ‐40 ‐44.0% 287 376 ‐89 ‐23.7% 345 ‐58 ‐16.8% 5,031 5,112 ‐1.6% 5302 ‐5.1% 5133 ‐2.0%
Nov 20Nov 27 Dec 04Dec 11‐Dec 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Homicide 0 0 0 0 2 1 1 3 0 2 5
Sex Assault 1 0 2 1 50 45 45 67 71 90 110
Robbery ‐ Business 0 0 2 0 30 26 36 36 49 49 62
Robbery ‐ All Other 2 3 2 4 90 106 127 140 159 166 149
Aggravated Assault ‐ Family 2 1 0 1 23 32 42 30 31 22 31
Aggravated Assault ‐ All Other 4 1 2 3 192 201 203 219 226 275 227
Burglary ‐ Residential 5 5 2 1 169 148 187 153 175 170 183
Burglary ‐ All Other 4 1 0 3 110 219 171 173 188 165 201
Larceny ‐ Vehicle Burglary 22 14 20 13 1134 1513 1205 1416 1533 1228 1246
Larceny ‐ All Other 34 34 42 24 1661 2086 2735 2669 2625 2558 2398
Vehicle Theft 12 11 8 1 267 280 347 346 486 387 419
TOTALS 86 70 80 51 3728 4657 5099 5252 5543 5112 5031 Year‐to‐Date Totals (Jan 1 through Dec 17)
Note: Charts may erroneously show an apparent drop in the most current data due to some cases not yet having been reported and/or recorded.
The figures included in this report are preliminary figures for general situational awareness and trend purposes only. They do not represent the official figures of the Salt Lake City Police Department and are
subject to further analysis and revision. Due to the statute‐driven, changing nature of crime classification and area boundaries over time, be advised that the figures contained may not fully coincide with
SLCPD statistical sources. Differences are reflective of the departmental procedures or policies that were in place at the time the events occurred and the date the data was compiled. In addition, data may
be approximate in relation to indicated areas. Additionally, they are not Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) or "crime rate" numbers and are not intended to be used as such. Rather, they are a breakdown of
every offense within every case that occurred during the given time periods. Although every reasonable effort is made to verify their accuracy, the accuracy of any data is subject to the constraints of the
report generation process as well as the manner, format, and point in time of any query.
CompStat Report…….
Council District 4 ‐
Breakdown of All Offenses
*The above CompStat figures were generated on Monday, 1 day(s) after the closing date, which is indicated in the title. The figures are current as of the date generated.
Last 7 Days* Last 28 Days* Previous 28 Days*
(Prior to Last 28 Days)
Year to Date (YTD)* 3‐Year YTD
Average*
5‐Year YTD
Average*
Volume 3 ‐‐ Number 50
**Averages greater than or equal to 100 are rounded to a whole digit to maintain a consistent column size.
Report Covering the Week 12/11/2017 Through 12/17/2017 (Mon‐Sun)
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
Nov 20‐Nov 26Nov 27‐Dec 03Dec 04‐Dec 10Dec 11‐Dec 17
Last 28 Day Breakdown by Week ‐ Part 1
Homicide
Sex Assault
Robbery‐Bus.
Robbery‐Other
Agg Aslt‐Family
Agg Aslt‐NonFam
Burg‐Res
Burg‐All Other
3728
4657
5099 5252 5543
5112 5031
0
1000
2000
3000
4000
5000
6000
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Year‐to‐Date Totals (Jan 1 through Dec 17)
Homicide
Sex Assault
Robbery‐Bus.
Robbery‐Other
Agg Aslt‐Family
Agg Aslt‐NonFam
Burg‐Res
Burg‐All Other
Larc‐Veh Burg
Larc‐All Other
Vehicle Theft0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
Nov 20‐Nov 26 Nov 27‐Dec 03 Dec 04‐Dec 10 Dec 11‐Dec 17
Last 28 Day Breakdown by Week ‐ Part 2
Vehicle
Burglary
Other
Larceny
Vehicle
Theft
Page 6 of 9
7. Salt Lake City Police Department
2017 2016 Chg % Chg 2017 2016 Chg % Chg 2017 Recent
Chg
Recent
% Chg
2017 2016 % Chg Avg** % Chg Avg** % Chg
Criminal Homicide 0 0 0 /0 0 0 0 /0 0 0 /0 2 0 /0 0.67 200.0% 1.00 100.0%
Sexual Assault 1 1 0 0.0% 2 5 ‐3 ‐60.0% 3 ‐1 ‐33.3% 52 44 18.2% 34.00 52.9% 30.20 72.2%
Robbery ‐ Business 1 0 1 /0 1 2 ‐1 ‐50.0% 1 0 0.0% 31 32 ‐3.1% 29.67 4.5% 29.60 4.7%
Robbery ‐ All Other 1 0 1 /0 5 3 2 66.7% 1 4 400.0% 47 56 ‐16.1% 51.00 ‐7.8% 48.40 ‐2.9%
Agg. Assault ‐ Family 0 1 ‐1 ‐100.0% 0 2 ‐2 ‐100.0% 2 ‐2 ‐100.0% 17 29 ‐41.4% 31.33 ‐45.7% 31.20 ‐45.5%
Agg. Assault ‐ NonFamily 2 1 1 100.0% 9 6 3 50.0% 6 3 50.0% 99 119 ‐16.8% 89.00 11.2% 89.60 10.5%
Burglary ‐ Residential 4 3 1 33.3% 21 10 11 110.0% 14 7 50.0% 176 192 ‐8.3% 207 ‐15.0% 209 ‐15.6%
Burglary ‐ All Other 1 1 0 0.0% 6 17 ‐11 ‐64.7% 10 ‐4 ‐40.0% 151 150 0.7% 130 15.9% 131 15.6%
Larceny ‐ Vehicle Burglary 12 11 1 9.1% 63 41 22 53.7% 49 14 28.6% 683 885 ‐22.8% 822 ‐16.9% 743 ‐8.1%
Larceny ‐ All Other 26 38 ‐12 ‐31.6% 137 147 ‐10 ‐6.8% 146 ‐9 ‐6.2% 1,925 2,053 ‐6.2% 2103 ‐8.5% 1873 2.8%
Motor Vehicle Theft 2 9 ‐7 ‐77.8% 25 34 ‐9 ‐26.5% 19 6 31.6% 326 345 ‐5.5% 338 ‐3.6% 310 5.2%
TOTAL 50 65 ‐15 ‐23.1% 269 267 2 0.7% 251 18 7.2% 3,509 3,905 ‐10.1% 3836 ‐8.5% 3495 0.4%
Nov 20Nov 27 Dec 04Dec 11‐Dec 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Homicide 0 0 0 0 2 0 3 0 2 0 2
Sex Assault 0 0 1 1 24 27 22 28 30 44 52
Robbery ‐ Business 0 0 0 1 23 26 33 29 28 32 31
Robbery ‐ All Other 1 3 0 1 49 37 52 51 46 56 47
Aggravated Assault ‐ Family 0 0 0 0 32 26 36 36 29 29 17
Aggravated Assault ‐ All Other 1 3 3 2 72 88 93 66 82 119 99
Burglary ‐ Residential 7 8 2 4 199 199 223 191 238 192 176
Burglary ‐ All Other 0 4 1 1 91 132 130 109 132 150 151
Larceny ‐ Vehicle Burglary 14 20 17 12 555 687 562 717 865 885 683
Larceny ‐ All Other 32 40 39 26 996 1509 1545 1956 2300 2053 1925
Vehicle Theft 7 9 7 2 179 240 295 308 361 345 326
TOTALS 62 87 70 50 2222 2971 2994 3491 4113 3905 3509 Year‐to‐Date Totals (Jan 1 through Dec 17)
Note: Charts may erroneously show an apparent drop in the most current data due to some cases not yet having been reported and/or recorded.
The figures included in this report are preliminary figures for general situational awareness and trend purposes only. They do not represent the official figures of the Salt Lake City Police Department and are
subject to further analysis and revision. Due to the statute‐driven, changing nature of crime classification and area boundaries over time, be advised that the figures contained may not fully coincide with
SLCPD statistical sources. Differences are reflective of the departmental procedures or policies that were in place at the time the events occurred and the date the data was compiled. In addition, data may
be approximate in relation to indicated areas. Additionally, they are not Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) or "crime rate" numbers and are not intended to be used as such. Rather, they are a breakdown of
every offense within every case that occurred during the given time periods. Although every reasonable effort is made to verify their accuracy, the accuracy of any data is subject to the constraints of the
report generation process as well as the manner, format, and point in time of any query.
CompStat Report…….
Council District 5 ‐
Breakdown of All Offenses
*The above CompStat figures were generated on Monday, 1 day(s) after the closing date, which is indicated in the title. The figures are current as of the date generated.
Last 7 Days* Last 28 Days* Previous 28 Days*
(Prior to Last 28 Days)
Year to Date (YTD)* 3‐Year YTD
Average*
5‐Year YTD
Average*
Volume 3 ‐‐ Number 50
**Averages greater than or equal to 100 are rounded to a whole digit to maintain a consistent column size.
Report Covering the Week 12/11/2017 Through 12/17/2017 (Mon‐Sun)
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Nov 20‐Nov 26Nov 27‐Dec 03Dec 04‐Dec 10Dec 11‐Dec 17
Last 28 Day Breakdown by Week ‐ Part 1
Homicide
Sex Assault
Robbery‐Bus.
Robbery‐Other
Agg Aslt‐Family
Agg Aslt‐NonFam
Burg‐Res
Burg‐All Other
2222
2971 2994
3491
4113 3905
3509
0
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
3000
3500
4000
4500
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Year‐to‐Date Totals (Jan 1 through Dec 17)
Homicide
Sex Assault
Robbery‐Bus.
Robbery‐Other
Agg Aslt‐Family
Agg Aslt‐NonFam
Burg‐Res
Burg‐All Other
Larc‐Veh Burg
Larc‐All Other
Vehicle Theft0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
Nov 20‐Nov 26 Nov 27‐Dec 03 Dec 04‐Dec 10 Dec 11‐Dec 17
Last 28 Day Breakdown by Week ‐ Part 2
Vehicle
Burglary
Other
Larceny
Vehicle
Theft
Page 7 of 9
8. Salt Lake City Police Department
2017 2016 Chg % Chg 2017 2016 Chg % Chg 2017 Recent
Chg
Recent
% Chg
2017 2016 % Chg Avg** % Chg Avg** % Chg
Criminal Homicide 0 0 0 /0 0 0 0 /0 0 0 /0 1 0 /0 0.00 /0 0.00 /0
Sexual Assault 0 0 0 /0 1 0 1 /0 1 0 0.0% 5 4 25.0% 6.00 ‐16.7% 6.60 ‐24.2%
Robbery ‐ Business 0 0 0 /0 1 0 1 /0 0 1 /0 6 4 50.0% 7.33 ‐18.2% 5.40 11.1%
Robbery ‐ All Other 0 0 0 /0 0 0 0 /0 1 ‐1 ‐100.0% 3 2 50.0% 3.00 0.0% 3.40 ‐11.8%
Agg. Assault ‐ Family 0 0 0 /0 0 1 ‐1 ‐100.0% 0 0 /0 5 4 25.0% 2.67 87.5% 2.20 127.3%
Agg. Assault ‐ NonFamily 0 0 0 /0 1 0 1 /0 0 1 /0 10 4 150.0% 5.00 100.0% 8.40 19.0%
Burglary ‐ Residential 1 1 0 0.0% 5 9 ‐4 ‐44.4% 8 ‐3 ‐37.5% 82 82 0.0% 87.67 ‐6.5% 87.00 ‐5.7%
Burglary ‐ All Other 2 0 2 /0 5 1 4 400.0% 4 1 25.0% 46 23 100.0% 27.67 66.3% 30.00 53.3%
Larceny ‐ Vehicle Burglary 8 5 3 60.0% 21 20 1 5.0% 24 ‐3 ‐12.5% 328 330 ‐0.6% 350 ‐6.2% 339 ‐3.2%
Larceny ‐ All Other 0 5 ‐5 ‐100.0% 12 22 ‐10 ‐45.5% 12 0 0.0% 208 202 3.0% 211 ‐1.4% 199 4.6%
Motor Vehicle Theft 0 0 0 /0 3 4 ‐1 ‐25.0% 5 ‐2 ‐40.0% 67 57 17.5% 77.33 ‐13.4% 81.20 ‐17.5%
TOTAL 11 11 0 0.0% 49 57 ‐8 ‐14.0% 55 ‐6 ‐10.9% 761 712 6.9% 777 ‐2.1% 762 ‐0.1%
Nov 20Nov 27 Dec 04Dec 11‐Dec 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Homicide 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
Sex Assault 0 1 0 0 6 10 5 8 6 4 5
Robbery ‐ Business 0 1 0 0 3 2 3 10 8 4 6
Robbery ‐ All Other 0 0 0 0 6 5 3 2 5 2 3
Aggravated Assault ‐ Family 0 0 0 0 6 1 2 2 2 4 5
Aggravated Assault ‐ All Other 0 1 0 0 7 18 9 4 7 4 10
Burglary ‐ Residential 3 1 0 1 83 76 96 84 97 82 82
Burglary ‐ All Other 1 0 2 2 30 26 41 27 33 23 46
Larceny ‐ Vehicle Burglary 5 4 4 8 413 339 307 311 408 330 328
Larceny ‐ All Other 6 2 4 0 192 195 166 220 211 202 208
Vehicle Theft 1 2 0 0 89 96 78 84 91 57 67
TOTALS 16 12 10 11 835 768 710 752 868 712 761 Year‐to‐Date Totals (Jan 1 through Dec 17)
Note: Charts may erroneously show an apparent drop in the most current data due to some cases not yet having been reported and/or recorded.
The figures included in this report are preliminary figures for general situational awareness and trend purposes only. They do not represent the official figures of the Salt Lake City Police Department and are
subject to further analysis and revision. Due to the statute‐driven, changing nature of crime classification and area boundaries over time, be advised that the figures contained may not fully coincide with
SLCPD statistical sources. Differences are reflective of the departmental procedures or policies that were in place at the time the events occurred and the date the data was compiled. In addition, data may
be approximate in relation to indicated areas. Additionally, they are not Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) or "crime rate" numbers and are not intended to be used as such. Rather, they are a breakdown of
every offense within every case that occurred during the given time periods. Although every reasonable effort is made to verify their accuracy, the accuracy of any data is subject to the constraints of the
report generation process as well as the manner, format, and point in time of any query.
CompStat Report…….
Council District 6 ‐
Breakdown of All Offenses
*The above CompStat figures were generated on Monday, 1 day(s) after the closing date, which is indicated in the title. The figures are current as of the date generated.
Last 7 Days* Last 28 Days* Previous 28 Days*
(Prior to Last 28 Days)
Year to Date (YTD)* 3‐Year YTD
Average*
5‐Year YTD
Average*
Volume 3 ‐‐ Number 50
**Averages greater than or equal to 100 are rounded to a whole digit to maintain a consistent column size.
Report Covering the Week 12/11/2017 Through 12/17/2017 (Mon‐Sun)
0
1
2
3
4
Nov 20‐Nov 26Nov 27‐Dec 03Dec 04‐Dec 10Dec 11‐Dec 17
Last 28 Day Breakdown by Week ‐ Part 1
Homicide
Sex Assault
Robbery‐Bus.
Robbery‐Other
Agg Aslt‐Family
Agg Aslt‐NonFam
Burg‐Res
Burg‐All Other
835
768
710
752
868
712
761
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
900
1000
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Year‐to‐Date Totals (Jan 1 through Dec 17)
Homicide
Sex Assault
Robbery‐Bus.
Robbery‐Other
Agg Aslt‐Family
Agg Aslt‐NonFam
Burg‐Res
Burg‐All Other
Larc‐Veh Burg
Larc‐All Other
Vehicle Theft0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Nov 20‐Nov 26 Nov 27‐Dec 03 Dec 04‐Dec 10 Dec 11‐Dec 17
Last 28 Day Breakdown by Week ‐ Part 2
Vehicle
Burglary
Other
Larceny
Vehicle
Theft
Page 8 of 9
9. Salt Lake City Police Department
2017 2016 Chg % Chg 2017 2016 Chg % Chg 2017 Recent
Chg
Recent
% Chg
2017 2016 % Chg Avg** % Chg Avg** % Chg
Criminal Homicide 0 0 0 /0 0 0 0 /0 0 0 /0 0 0 /0 0.33 ‐100.0% 0.40 ‐100.0%
Sexual Assault 0 1 ‐1 ‐100.0% 0 2 ‐2 ‐100.0% 3 ‐3 ‐100.0% 24 12 100.0% 10.67 125.0% 13.40 79.1%
Robbery ‐ Business 1 0 1 /0 2 0 2 /0 1 1 100.0% 13 27 ‐51.9% 26.33 ‐50.6% 21.80 ‐40.4%
Robbery ‐ All Other 0 1 ‐1 ‐100.0% 0 1 ‐1 ‐100.0% 2 ‐2 ‐100.0% 13 21 ‐38.1% 14.33 ‐9.3% 15.80 ‐17.7%
Agg. Assault ‐ Family 1 0 1 /0 1 2 ‐1 ‐50.0% 1 0 0.0% 8 11 ‐27.3% 12.67 ‐36.8% 14.20 ‐43.7%
Agg. Assault ‐ NonFamily 1 0 1 /0 2 0 2 /0 1 1 100.0% 15 36 ‐58.3% 36.00 ‐58.3% 39.00 ‐61.5%
Burglary ‐ Residential 0 2 ‐2 ‐100.0% 3 6 ‐3 ‐50.0% 6 ‐3 ‐50.0% 112 116 ‐3.4% 134 ‐16.2% 143 ‐21.5%
Burglary ‐ All Other 2 1 1 100.0% 8 10 ‐2 ‐20.0% 9 ‐1 ‐11.1% 103 99 4.0% 88.67 16.2% 91.80 12.2%
Larceny ‐ Vehicle Burglary 18 20 ‐2 ‐10.0% 67 77 ‐10 ‐13.0% 51 16 31.4% 596 707 ‐15.7% 710 ‐16.1% 651 ‐8.5%
Larceny ‐ All Other 9 22 ‐13 ‐59.1% 53 82 ‐29 ‐35.4% 69 ‐16 ‐23.2% 938 1,016 ‐7.7% 1002 ‐6.4% 937 0.1%
Motor Vehicle Theft 6 3 3 100.0% 16 18 ‐2 ‐11.1% 14 2 14.3% 177 181 ‐2.2% 190 ‐6.8% 186 ‐4.6%
TOTAL 38 50 ‐12 ‐24.0% 152 198 ‐46 ‐23.2% 157 ‐5 ‐3.2% 1,999 2,226 ‐10.2% 2225 ‐10.2% 2113 ‐5.4%
Nov 20Nov 27 Dec 04Dec 11‐Dec 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Homicide 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0
Sex Assault 0 0 0 0 7 17 18 10 10 12 24
Robbery ‐ Business 1 0 0 1 14 7 23 25 27 27 13
Robbery ‐ All Other 0 0 0 0 19 21 15 10 12 21 13
Aggravated Assault ‐ Family 0 0 0 1 8 18 15 8 19 11 8
Aggravated Assault ‐ All Other 1 0 0 1 37 43 44 32 40 36 15
Burglary ‐ Residential 0 1 2 0 124 138 174 126 159 116 112
Burglary ‐ All Other 1 2 3 2 56 128 65 73 94 99 103
Larceny ‐ Vehicle Burglary 13 24 12 18 513 602 524 617 807 707 596
Larceny ‐ All Other 16 18 10 9 720 755 925 989 1002 1016 938
Vehicle Theft 4 1 5 6 124 161 197 170 219 181 177
TOTALS 36 46 32 38 1623 1891 2000 2060 2390 2226 1999 Year‐to‐Date Totals (Jan 1 through Dec 17)
Note: Charts may erroneously show an apparent drop in the most current data due to some cases not yet having been reported and/or recorded.
The figures included in this report are preliminary figures for general situational awareness and trend purposes only. They do not represent the official figures of the Salt Lake City Police Department and are
subject to further analysis and revision. Due to the statute‐driven, changing nature of crime classification and area boundaries over time, be advised that the figures contained may not fully coincide with
SLCPD statistical sources. Differences are reflective of the departmental procedures or policies that were in place at the time the events occurred and the date the data was compiled. In addition, data may
be approximate in relation to indicated areas. Additionally, they are not Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) or "crime rate" numbers and are not intended to be used as such. Rather, they are a breakdown of
every offense within every case that occurred during the given time periods. Although every reasonable effort is made to verify their accuracy, the accuracy of any data is subject to the constraints of the
report generation process as well as the manner, format, and point in time of any query.
*The above CompStat figures were generated on Monday, 1 day(s) after the closing date, which is indicated in the title. The figures are current as of the date generated.
CompStat Report…….
Council District 7 ‐
Breakdown of All Offenses
Volume 3 ‐‐ Number 50
Last 7 Days* Last 28 Days* Previous 28 Days*
(Prior to Last 28 Days)
Year to Date (YTD)* 3‐Year YTD
Average*
5‐Year YTD
Average*
**Averages greater than or equal to 100 are rounded to a whole digit to maintain a consistent column size.
Report Covering the Week 12/11/2017 Through 12/17/2017 (Mon‐Sun)
0
1
2
3
4
Nov 20‐Nov 26Nov 27‐Dec 03Dec 04‐Dec 10Dec 11‐Dec 17
Last 28 Day Breakdown by Week ‐ Part 1
Homicide
Sex Assault
Robbery‐Bus.
Robbery‐Other
Agg Aslt‐Family
Agg Aslt‐NonFam
Burg‐Res
Burg‐All Other
1623
1891 2000 2060
2390
2226
1999
0
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
3000
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Year‐to‐Date Totals (Jan 1 through Dec 17)
Homicide
Sex Assault
Robbery‐Bus.
Robbery‐Other
Agg Aslt‐Family
Agg Aslt‐NonFam
Burg‐Res
Burg‐All Other
Larc‐Veh Burg
Larc‐All Other
Vehicle Theft0
5
10
15
20
25
30
Nov 20‐Nov 26 Nov 27‐Dec 03 Dec 04‐Dec 10 Dec 11‐Dec 17
Last 28 Day Breakdown by Week ‐ Part 2
Vehicle
Burglary
Other
Larceny
Vehicle
Theft
Page 9 of 9