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November 20, 2024
Council on Criminal Justice releases new report "Between the Aisles A Closer Look at Shoplifting Trends"
I received an email this morning flagging that "the Council on Criminal Justice (CCJ) today released a new report on shoplifting that examines trends through fall of this year and highlights a conflict in two sources of FBI data on the crime. A separate analysis explores in detail how shoplifting has shifted over time in two cities, Los Angeles and Chicago." Here is what the report lists as "Key Takeaways" at its start:
Data collected through the fall of 2024 for Chicago, Los Angeles, and New York suggest that shoplifting levels remain higher than pre-2020 rates. Chicago, in particular, experienced notably elevated rates of reported shoplifting through the first 10 months of this year. In 2023, rates were 10% lower in Chicago, 87% higher in Los Angeles, and 55% higher in New York than in 2019.
Over the past several years, shoplifting rates were higher in November and December than they were during earlier months of the year, coinciding with increased in-person retail activity. Because shoplifting rates in a 23-city sample for the first half of 2024 are higher than in 2023, it is likely that the reported shoplifting rate for the full year will rise from 2023 to 2024.
Two national sources of law enforcement data on reported shoplifting—both available from the FBI—show different trends. Statistics from the Summary Reporting System (SRS) suggest that reported shoplifting in 2023 was the same level as in 2019. However, rates from the National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS), show that shoplifting was 93% higher in 2023 than it was in 2019.
It is unclear why there is a sizable difference between these two sources. One possibility is that law enforcement agencies recently added to the group providing data through NIBRS reported disproportionally higher levels of shoplifting, even after adjusting for an increase in population coverage. Clear guidance from the FBI on the limitations of the data and the implications of using certain sources of FBI crime data is needed.
November 20, 2024 at 12:44 PM | Permalink
Comments
Yeah, ok, whatever. The countermeasures stores take is a royal pain, and it should be part of the equation.
Posted by: federalist | Nov 20, 2024 12:59:05 PM
Argh, typo. Should be "are a royal pain."
Posted by: federalist | Nov 20, 2024 12:59:35 PM