FBI Records First Violent Crime Drop in Two Years
This article is from the archive of The New York Sun before the launch of its new website in 2022. The Sun has neither altered nor updated such articles but will seek to correct any errors, mis-categorizations or other problems introduced during transfer.

WASHINGTON — Both violent and property crimes declined in 2007 from the previous year, the FBI reported today.
In preliminary figures for crimes reported to police, the bureau said the number of violent crimes declined by 1.4% from 2006, reversing two years of rising violent crime numbers. Violent crime had climbed 1.9% in 2006 and 2.3% in 2005, alarming federal and local officials.
Property crimes were down 2.1% last year from the previous year, the largest drop in the last four years.
“One preliminary report does not make a trend, but it’s going the way we want it to go,” a FBI spokesman, Richard Kolko, said.
The largest declines were in vehicle theft, down 8.9%, rape, down 4.3%, and murder, down 2.7%.
The crime trends were not uniform. Murders, for instance, were down in cities of more than 250,000, including an enormous 9.8% drop in cities of more than a million residents. But murders rose in some small cities — up 3.7% in cities of 50,000 to 100,000, up 1.9% in cities of 100,000 to 250,000, and up 1.8% in cities under 10,000. Historically, murder trends have begun in the largest cities and moved over several years to smaller ones.
The other violent crimes tracked by FBI statistics — robbery and aggravated assault — were both down 1.2%.
The other property crimes in the FBI figures also declined, larceny-theft by 1.2% and burglary by 0.8%.
Arson dropped by 7.0%, but it is not included in the FBI’s overall property crime figures, because fewer local jurisdictions provide arson statistics.
Violent crimes dropped most in the Northeast, down 5.4% with 1.7% declines in both the Midwest and West. But it rose 0.7% in the South.
Property crimes followed the same pattern: rising only in the South, where they were up 1.1%. The West recorded a 4.7% decline in property crimes, followed by the Midwest, down 3.6%, and the Northeast, down 2.9%.
The FBI’s preliminary crime report each year gives percentage changes rather than crime totals for national figures because not every jurisdiction has completed its reports yet.