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Emerio Boykins

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Aug 5, 2024, 10:38:52 AM8/5/24
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AllBPD data on Open Baltimore is preliminary data and subject to change. The information presented through Open Baltimore represents a summarized version of Part I victim based crime data. The data does not represent statistics submitted to the FBI's Uniform Crime Report (UCR); therefore any comparisons are strictly prohibited. For further clarification of UCR data, please visit -us/cjis/ucr/ucr.Please note that this data is preliminary and subject to change. Prior week data is likely to show changes when it is refreshed on a weekly basis.

In May, 2020, the Baltimore Police Department began a significant upgrade to its new Records Management Systems to allow the department to transition from a paper-based system into a fully digital reporting environment. As a result of this massive transformation, we have experienced some complexities in properly and accurately translating the data from the new records system into the traditional Open Data Baltimore system. Based on our review, data on Part 1 Crime Incident Reports provided by Open Data Baltimore have been impacted starting in May, 2021 when the new system went online. BPD and the City are actively working with the vendor on a daily basis in addressing this matter as quickly as possible, so that we can fully restore our public reporting of data that ensures transparency and accountability in BPD operations.


Visit the summary data at Open Baltimore to show the up-to-date Baltimore Police Department executive crime and arrest statistics (citywide and by police district) is updated by the BPD ComStat Unit on Thursday of each week. The document is available for viewing, printing, and downloading.


CrimeMapping.com allows residents to view where crimes are occurring and the types of crimes being committed. The website also allows residents to submit crime tips and even receive alerts to their mobile device when crime occurs within a certain distance of a selected location.


CrimeMapping.com is a mapping tool that provides the public with valuable information about crime activity in respective neighborhoods. Crime data provided by CrimeMapping.com is for informational purposes only. The data is preliminary, incomplete and subject to change upon receipt of updated information related to individual incidents.


The Kansas City Police Crime Laboratory currently services all of Kansas City, MO, as well as many surrounding communities in Missouri. It is a full-service laboratory offering forensic analysis and expert testimony in chemistry, crime scene processing, DNA analysis, digital evidence, firearms, fingerprint ID, latent prints and trace analysis.


The Kansas City Police Crime Laboratory, an adjunct to the Kansas City Missouri Police Department (KCPD), acknowledges as its mission the provision of expert and professional recovery and examination of evidentiary materials to aid in the investigation of criminal offenses. State-of-the-art instrumentation and/or scientific techniques are utilized in the forensic disciplines of chemistry, crime scene processing, firearms examinations, fingerprint recovery preservation and comparison, photography, digital and multimedia evidence, trace evidence examination and DNA profiling. Expert testimony is provided in all disciplines to aid in the prosecution and defense of criminal defendants. Training of law enforcement and criminal justice personnel is also recognized as an important function in the pursuit of this mission.


The Kansas City Police Crime Laboratory history extends back to the creation of the Region 1 (Northwest Missouri) Regional Criminalistics Laboratory (RCL) in 1972. This laboratory was part of the Regional Center for Criminal Justice which was primarily established to serve a five-county region of Jackson, Clay, Platte, Cass, and Buchanan counties. Later, due to boundary changes, Ray County replaced Buchanan in the regional assignment.


The RCL was tasked to be a professionally staffed forensic laboratory consisting of skilled employees and equipped with the latest scientific tools. The staff incorporated members of the KCPD Crime Laboratory originally formed in 1938. In addition to service to its regional area, the laboratory provided support to other law enforcement entities including evidence examination, testimony, and crime scene response.


In the late 1970s, the laboratory was administratively absorbed as an element of the Kansas City Missouri Police Department. The RCL maintained its role as a regional resource and continues to provide services to a number of law enforcement agencies using the laboratory as their primary resource, or as an ancillary resource, for forensic services. The lab was the first metropolitan regional crime laboratory to be accredited in 1985.


The laboratory has grown in size and complexity over the years and has graduated from a unit within the KCPD to its own division. The staff of the laboratory now numbers in excess of 70 persons. The Kansas City Police Crime Laboratory is an accredited laboratory and participates as a member of the Missouri State crime lab system.


While browsing the crime map, viewers can filter by incident type and sort by date. With the map controls, viewers can change the map style, enable heat mapping, view individual incident details, and view in multiple languages.


The Justice Department announced today that the city of Anoka, Minnesota, violated the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and the Fair Housing Act by denying tenants with mental health disabilities an equal opportunity to receive emergency assistance.


The department provided its findings and minimum remedial measures necessary in a letter to the city. Specifically, the department asks the city to change its policies and procedures, designate an ADA coordinator, and train staff.


Technology is growing ever more indispensable to many aspects of modern life. Consequently, ensuring that technology does not create new barriers for people with disabilities, and that disabled people can...


The Calumet City Crime Free Rental Housing Program is designed to help residents, owners, and managers of rental units keep drugs and other illegal activity off their properties. It emphasizes cooperation among property owners, tenants, and the City of Calumet City to help neighborhoods fight crime and disorder. This program has been underway in Calumet City since 2010 and has been updated in 2022. The program requires landlords to:




The program is a nationally recognized, effective way to reduce crime in rental properties. It utilizes a unique, three-part approach which ensures the crime prevention goal while maintaining a resident-friendly approach. This program covers all residential rental units, including apartments, single-family homes, individual condominiums, and townhomes. The program includes:


When drug criminals and other destructive residents operate out of rental properties, neighborhoods suffer, and landlords pay a high price. The Calumet City Crime Free Rental Housing Program is designed to enhance the safety for rental property tenants, managers, landlords, the surrounding neighborhood, and the entire community.


Welcome to the Crime Mapping System of the Rochester Police Department (RPD). Data shown in the map includes Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) Part I Crimes, which include Homicide, Robbery, Aggravated Assault, Burglary, Larceny and Motor Vehicle Theft.


Users may filter maps by crime type and date range. Data is available for Part I Crimes since 2011. Rapes are not displayed on the map to ensure victim privacy. Other crime types are not currently available for mapping. Not all police calls for service result in a written crime report. Please note: Since an investigation may reveal facts different than those originally reported, the data displayed in the map does not necessarily reflect the final status of an incident, only the status at the time of the initial report.


Any citizen may request a copy of any crime report from the Headquarters desk at the City Public Safety Building (PSB). When requesting a report, please provide the crime report number shown in the map.


The crime map should not be used to make a general decision about a neighborhood. For more information on a specific neighborhood, contact a Crime Prevention Officer at the Neighborhood Service Center.


The maps and statistics found on this page are not final official crime statistics and should not be compared to official numbers. The RPD is not responsible for any interpretation of this information and makes no inference or judgment as to the relative safety of any particular area or neighborhood. The RPD is not responsible for the use of or results obtained from the use of this information by anyone outside the agency.


The raw data itself can be downloaded through the Open Data Portal of the RPD. The data can be downloaded in a variety of different formats, including a shapefile or GeoJSON for users to build maps in their own applications.


The RPD follows national standards for counting crimes, which is known as the Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) System. This UCR system is maintained by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). Visit the FBI page for more information on how crime is classified and counted, according to UCR standards.


Let us know about your City of Rochester website experience by filling out our feedback form here. Didn't find what you were looking for? Visit our Contact Us page and connect with someone who can help.


The required hands-on labs are offered during the summer semester in accelerated one-week (40 hours) courses. During summer labs students will work on real cold cases and complete mock crime scene scenarios. Labs allow students to learn the proper techniques needed for evidence like blood spatter analysis, processing of fingerprints, bullet trajectories, and recovery of buried bodies and skeletal remains. All CSI specific labs are approved by the International Association of Identification (IAI) as training certification or continuing education hours.

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