Current Trends

Reported Crime Overview

Reported Crime Overview

Selected Data Sample


Agencies
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N/A of N/A total
Population covered
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N/A of N/A total

2026 Year to Date


Change in violent crime

Jan-Feb 2026 vs. Jan-Feb 2025
0%

Count of reported violent crime

Jan-Feb 2026
0N/A
Jan-Feb 2025
0N/A

5-Year Trend


Annual and YTD violent crime

2022 to 2026

  • Annual total
  • Year-to-date total (Jan-Feb)
N/A

YTD Change by Agency


Agencies with decreases in violent crime

Jan-Feb 2026 vs. Jan-Feb 2025

0%N/A

Agencies with increases in violent crime

Jan-Feb 2026 vs. Jan-Feb 2025

0%N/A

Reported Crime Agency Map

Year over year change in violent crime

YTD 2025 vs. YTD 2026

Filter agencies
Size of arrow represents magnitude of year-over-year change

Reported Crime Data Table

Table rows
Reported Crime Data Table
YTD Periods
1-0 of 0

Reported Crime Notes

Disclaimers

Crime counts are preliminary, unofficial and subject to change. Methodologies used to report data may vary from agency to agency, so comparisons are not advised. Population covered is derived from most recent FBI estimates (2023). Nationwide, and within states, aggregations including “Full Sample,” “Population Groups,” and “Regions” only include agencies with complete murder data through the most recent month.

About the Current Trends

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Current Crime Data is a sample of reported crime data from hundreds of law enforcement agencies nationwide which mimics national crime trends with as little lag and the most accuracy possible. Crime statistics are inexact, but sampling agencies in this way is a proven method for accurately measuring trends while waiting for national crime estimates published each year. Standardizing the offenses collected and time periods measured from hundreds of agencies makes it possible to evaluate trends up or down as they develop.

Not all crimes are reported to police, and the Current Crime Data can only measure those offenses that are reported to police. Crime data is inherently imprecise with frequent (usually small) variations between different data sources. This methodology is designed to ensure that crime trends are being captured accurately even if the exact figures reported either publicly by an agency or by the FBI may differ depending on the available data source. These figures represent reported crimes published by agencies, which may not represent the entirety of crimes in a city or county, if served by multiple agencies or when accounting for offenses that do not get reported to police. Agencies also can report crimes months after they occur, so figures for each agency are subject to change. The data collection methodology differs between cities, not every agency reports every offense type, and not every agency has complete data through the most recent reporting period. As such, ranking between cities or counties is imprecise and inadvisable, and users should be cautious when comparing crime counts for one location against another location’s counts.