Violent crime in the United States fell 4.5% in 2024, according to a new FBI report, while property crime dropped 8.1% from the previous year, reported Pennsylvania Capital-Star.
The declines continue a trend seen since crime surged during
the COVID-19 pandemic, when homicides jumped nearly 30% in 2020 — one of the
largest one-year increases since the FBI began keeping records in 1930. By
2022, violent crime had fallen close to pre-pandemic levels.
Homicides, which the FBI classifies as murder and
nonnegligent manslaughter, dropped nearly 15% in 2024. Reports of other violent
offenses also decreased, including rape by 5.2%, robbery by 8.9% and aggravated
assault by 3%.
Property crime also fell across all major categories, with
motor vehicle theft down 18.6%, burglary down 8.6% and larceny-theft down 5.5%.
Reported hate crimes decreased 1.5% from the previous year.
The 2024 report draws on submissions from 16,675 law
enforcement agencies — 2.1% more than last year — representing more than 95% of
the U.S. population. Every city agency serving a population of 1 million or
more people provided a full year of data. Participation in the FBI’s crime data
collection is voluntary, and the data is based on crimes reported to police.
About 75% of participating agencies submitted information
through the FBI’s new, more detailed National Incident-Based Reporting System,
or NIBRS, which covered 87% of the population.
The data release marks a shift from recent years when
participation lagged following the FBI’s 2021 transition to the new system,
which required many law enforcement agencies to invest in training and
technology upgrades. In 2021, national reporting rates fell below 70% for the first
time in two decades, forcing the FBI to estimate results for many
jurisdictions.
The FBI’s crime trends report also includes new law
enforcement safety data. Sixty-four officers were feloniously killed in the
line of duty in 2024, 43 officers were accidentally killed and 85,730 officers
were assaulted.
Although the FBI’s 2024 report is a year behind, it aligns
with other crime trend reports. The Council on Criminal Justice, a nonpartisan
think tank, recently found that homicides and other serious offenses,
including gun assaults and carjackings, fell in the first half of 2025 across
42 major cities compared to the same period in 2024.
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