The crime incident rate per 100,000 people of Clearwater, FL was 2,201 for larceny in 2018. The crime incident rate per 100,000 people of Gainesville, FL was 3,214 for larceny in 2018.
Crime Incident Count
Crime Incident Rate per 100,000 People
Crime statistics are sourced from the FBI Uniform Crime Reporting Program and aggregated across year and crime type. The FBI does not gather statistics for all jurisdictions, so some localities may be missing. Normalization is based on the population values published with the UCR data itself, so rather than on US Census data, as the jurisdiction of the data may vary. Crime rates are normalized on a per 100K basis; specifically, the crime count is divided by the population count, the result is then multiplied by 100K and rounded to the nearest integer value. Latest data, displayed in charts and other visualizations, is from 2014.
Above charts are based on data from the FBI Uniform Crime Reporting Program | ODN Dataset | API -
Public Safety and Crime Datasets Involving Clearwater, FL or Gainesville, FL
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Crime Responses
data.cityofgainesville.org | Last Updated 2024-10-15T16:16:52.000ZDisclaimer: Crime Responses is provided by the Gainesville Police Department (GPD) to document initial details surrounding an incident to which GPD officers respond. This dataset contains crime incidents from 2011 to present and includes a reduced set of fields focused on capturing the type of incident as well when and where an incident occurred. The Incident location addresses have been rounded off and are not the exact location due to the constitutional amendment known as "Marsy's Law". In 2021, Florida reporting of crime data began a transition from Summary Reporting System (SRS) to National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS), causing an effect on crime statistics reported by Law Enforcement Agencies such as the Gainesville Police Department who made this transition on November 16, 2021. The effect would be an increase in crime due to the elimination of the SRS Hierarchy Rule which collected only the most serious offense in an incident while NIBRS will now capture up to 10 offenses per incident and specifies more offense categories than SRS. The inclusion of these crimes, particularly property crimes, will reflect an increase in crime when switching from SRS reporting to NIBRS' reporting. The apparent increase (usually not greater than 2.7%) is simply due to the difference between how crimes are counted in NIBRS versus the SRS and its application of the Hierarchy Rule. More information regarding NIBRS effect on crime statistics can be found on the following link: https://ucr.fbi.gov/nibrs/2014/resource-pages/effects_of_nibrs_on_crime_statistics_final.pdf.
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Dallas Police Active Calls
www.dallasopendata.com | Last Updated 2024-10-19T13:30:55.000Z<b><p>Due to technical issues the Active Calls dataset may experience intermittent delays in automated data refreshing.</b></p> <b>Staff is actively monitoring the situation.</b> <p>The calls listed here are only those where the element assigned to the call has arrived and is currently working the call. It does not include any calls for service, whether currently being worked or not, that are not releasable due to privacy laws. </p>
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Arrests
data.cityofgainesville.org | Last Updated 2024-10-15T12:00:29.000ZThis dataset reflects arrests in the City of Gainesville since 2011. Arrest data is provided by the Gainesville Police Department (GPD) and derived from Police reports. Disclaimer: Crime Responses is provided by the Gainesville Police Department (GPD) to document initial details surrounding an incident to which GPD officers respond. This dataset contains crime incidents from 2011 to present and includes a reduced set of fields focused on capturing the type of incident as well when and where an incident occurred. The Incident location addresses have been rounded off and are not the exact location due to the constitutional amendment known as "Marsy's Law". In 2021, Florida reporting of crime data began a transition from Summary Reporting System (SRS) to National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS), causing an effect on crime statistics reported by Law Enforcement Agencies such as the Gainesville Police Department who made this transition on November 16, 2021. The effect would be an increase in crime due to the elimination of the SRS Hierarchy Rule which collected only the most serious offense in an incident while NIBRS will now capture up to 10 offenses per incident and specifies more offense categories than SRS. The inclusion of these crimes, particularly property crimes, will reflect an increase in crime when switching from SRS reporting to NIBRS' reporting. The apparent increase (usually not greater than 2.7%) is simply due to the difference between how crimes are counted in NIBRS versus the SRS and its application of the Hierarchy Rule. More information regarding NIBRS effect on crime statistics can be found on the following link: https://ucr.fbi.gov/nibrs/2014/resource-pages/effects_of_nibrs_on_crime_statistics_final.pdf.
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Traffic Crashes
data.cityofgainesville.org | Last Updated 2024-10-15T12:12:24.000ZThis dataset shows information about each traffic crash since 2011 on city streets within the City of Gainesville limits and under the jurisdiction of Gainesville Police Department (GPD). Data shown are more than 60 days from when accidents occurred due to Florida Statutes 316.066. Disclaimer: In 2021, Florida reporting of crime data began a transition from Summary Reporting System (SRS) to National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS), causing an effect on crime statistics reported by Law Enforcement Agencies such as the Gainesville Police Department who made this transition on November 16, 2021. The effect would be an increase in crime due to the elimination of the SRS Hierarchy Rule which collected only the most serious offense in an incident while NIBRS will now capture up to 10 offenses per incident and specifies more offense categories than SRS. The inclusion of these crimes, particularly property crimes, will reflect an increase in crime when switching from SRS reporting to NIBRS' reporting. The apparent increase (usually not greater than 2.7%) is simply due to the difference between how crimes are counted in NIBRS versus the SRS and its application of the Hierarchy Rule. More information regarding NIBRS effect on crime statistics can be found on the following link: https://ucr.fbi.gov/nibrs/2014/resource-pages/effects_of_nibrs_on_crime_statistics_final.pdf.
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Police Unknown Suspects
www.dallasopendata.com | Last Updated 2024-10-19T13:01:22.000ZDallas Police Public Data - Unknown Suspects
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GRU Customer Electric Consumption 2012-2022
data.cityofgainesville.org | Last Updated 2023-05-23T14:43:38.000ZData is provided by Gainesville Regional Utilities
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Police Calls
stat.stpete.org | Last Updated 2024-10-19T12:15:30.000ZThe following data is from the St. Petersburg Police Department’s Computer-Aided Dispatch (CAD) system. Under Florida State Statute 119.071, victim information (i.e. addresses) associated with Sexual Battery, Sexual Offenses, Child Abuse, and Adult Abuse are considered confidential and exempt from public release. The data includes all officer responses to Priority 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7 and 9, calls for service. These calls for service don’t necessarily result in official police reports under UCR (Uniform Crime Reporting) standards. The calls do not include the Forensic Technicians, Off Duty, Administrative or similarly classified calls.
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Dallas Police Officer-Involved Shootings
www.dallasopendata.com | Last Updated 2023-03-08T14:06:33.000ZDallas Police Public Data - Officer Involved Shootings City Of Dallas
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311 Service Requests (myGNV)
data.cityofgainesville.org | Last Updated 2023-07-12T15:06:15.000ZNon-emergency requests like pothole repairs or damaged street signs can be reported through the Web: www.myGNV.org or app. iPhone Users: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/mygnv/id1011272233 Android Users: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.citysourced.gainesvillefl or online (http://www.cityofgainesville.org/openGNV/311GNV.aspx). ***Disclaimer: The data reflected on this page is through 06/18/2021. We have updated our MyGNV app. We are working to get the data uploaded from the new platform. We appreciate your patience
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Police Response to Resistance 2014
www.dallasopendata.com | Last Updated 2021-08-13T14:38:19.000ZPolice: 2014 Response to Resistance