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Law Enforcement & Juvenile Crime
Juvenile Arrest Rate Trends
Despite recent growth, juvenile arrest rates for larceny-theft remain low.

Juvenile Arrest Rates for Larceny-theft, 1980-2010

Year Total
1980 1,409.2
1981 1,395.0
1982 1,436.2
1983 1,402.7
1984 1,429.6
1985 1,504.4
1986 1,545.4
1987 1,590.2
1988 1,666.1
1989 1,637.0
1990 1,635.8
1991 1,668.4
1992 1,578.5
1993 1,539.9
1994 1,665.4
1995 1,643.1
1996 1,594.3
1997 1,545.7
1998 1,285.6
1999 1,129.6
2000 1,086.3
2001 1,015.9
2002 985.3
2003 937.5
2004 929.4
2005 848.8
2006 799.5
2007 866.5
2008 942.7
2009 937.6
2010 832.3

Note: Rates are arrests of persons ages 10-17 per 100,000 persons ages 10-17 in the resident population.

[ Graph version ] [Excel file]

  • The juvenile arrest rate for larceny-theft generally increased between 1980 and the mid 1990s, then fell 52% between 1994 and 2006, reaching its lowest point since 1980. This decline reversed as the juvenile arrest rate for larceny-theft increased 17% through 2009.
  • The recent increase in the juvenile arrest rate for larceny-theft was interrupted as the rate fell 11% in the last year, resting at a level just 4% above the 2006 low point.
  • In 2010, 77% of all juvenile arrests for Property Crime Index offenses were for larceny-theft. Thus, juvenile Property Crime Index arrest trends largely reflect the pattern of larceny-theft arrests (which itself is dominated by shoplifting—the most common larceny-theft offense).


Internet Citation: OJJDP Statistical Briefing Book. Online. Available:
http://www.ojjdp.gov/ojstatbb/crime/JAR_Display.asp?ID=qa05208. December 17, 2012.

Adapted from Puzzanchera, C. and Adams, B. (2012). Juvenile Arrests 2009. Washington, D.C.: Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention.

 

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