MR1101 Chap2
MR1101 Chap2
MR1101 Chap2
CONTEXTUAL OVERVIEW
The 1997 crime rates were the lowest since 1974. Nationally, the
Crime Index rate fell 3 percent from the 1996 level, 10 percent from
the 1993 level, and 13 percent from the 1988 level (UCR, p. 7).
There were 2.7 million arrests for Index crimes in 1997; 1.5 million of
these were larceny-theft arrests. Overall, law enforcement agencies
reported a 22 percent clearance rate3 for Index crimes (UCR, p. 7).
The violent crime clearance rate was 48 percent. The clearance rate
for murders was 66 percent; for forcible rape it was 51 percent, and
for robbery it was 26 percent (UCR, p. 12).
Contextual Overview
that. Judicial and legal expenses to government are more than $21
billion (78 percent paid by state and local governments), and corrections costs are more than $32 billion (with 92 percent paid at the
state and local levels).5
Local governments pay more than $31 billion for police protection;
this is about 72 percent of the national total. Localities pay more than
$10 billion annually for corrections; state governments pay about
twice that (Sourcebook, p. 3).
On average, there are 250 full-time officers per 100,000 residents,
with 150 of these being local police officers (Sourcebook, p. 38).
About half are assigned to street patrol. Only about 8 percent of these
sworn officers are on the streets at any given time (Sherman, 1995,
p. 329).
able data files available to all officers (Bittner, 1990). There is interest
in improving computerized capability to make lists, produce maps,
and carry out statistical analyses, building on the Drug Market Analysis Project of NIJ (Manning, 1992). Information technology has great
promise for improving crime analysis (NIJ, 1996). More generally,
technology can act as a force multiplier (NIJ, 1995).
New technologiesincluding electronic surveillance, data access
and retrieval, and computerized decision aidsmay well improve
policing, but specific benefits are commonly not known, and some
seemingly useful technologies go unused when offered or fielded.
New technologies bring new skill requirements and can alter social
relations within an organization (Manning, 1992). For example, lack
of user expertise has been an obstacle to use of mapping software for
crime control and prevention (Rich, 1995). Earlier evaluations of
Computer Assisted Dispatching (CAD) concluded that CAD installations did not yield promised results. Laptop computers, cellular
phones, and expert systems have not been subject to published evaluations (Manning, 1992). By and large, the existence of patrol-car
allocation models has not created a demand for them (Petersilia,
1987). Without training and testing, new technologies cannot be
properly evaluated.
Modern urban police departments need to keep abreast of and,
where appropriate, make use of the latest developments in information processing, communications, and enforcement technology.
Improved technology has the potential to increase police effectivenessprovided it is wisely chosen, well implemented and integrated,
and appropriately used. But it is also possible for an organization to
waste money chasing after the latest whiz-bang technology, bringing
change so rapidly that everyone is always having to learn a new system and nothing ever seems to work right.
Given this state of affairs, it is no wonder that many law enforcement
agencies lack confidence in their ability to make good information
technology decisions.
Contextual Overview
and sheriff departments are responsible to them, not to some faraway authority. Yet, it is this very decentralization that has made it
difficult for local law enforcement to use advanced technologies to
fight crime. Decentralization poses obstacles to information sharing
and works against achieving economies of scale. In addition, many
municipalities face severe budget constraints.
Although crime control is primarily a state and local responsibility,
the federal government clearly has a role to play. In some respects
this role remains poorly developed. Areas in need of further development include (1) better collaboration with local police to interdict
illicit gun traffic and (2) provision of public goods that states and
localities need but cannot afford on their own.
These public goods include creation and maintenance of shared
operational databases such as the National Crime Information
Center (NCIC); fostering and evaluating a wide range of innovations
and disseminating the results of evaluations of those innovations so
that the successful ones can be replicated elsewhere; and organizing and sponsoring the information and new insights they generate
(Blumstein, 1998, pp. 1819, emphasis added).
10
and local agencies is outside the scope of this report, but we include
one quotation for readers to consider:
Almost $4 billion per year in federal crime prevention assistance is
given out primarily on the basis of population rather than homicide
rates. Put bluntly, the money goes where the votes are, not where
the crime is (Sherman, 1998, p. 42).
Contextual Overview
11