This is a list of all documents accepted for permanent retention under the subject classification 'Information management and resources: Information resources: Government statistics: Crime statistics'.
Information management and resources:
Information resources:
Government statistics:
Crime statistics
2004 Summary of Drug Enforcement Activities Across Illinois' Metropolitan Enforcement Groups and Task Forces
The Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authoritys Research and Analysis Unit has received funds under the federal Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1988 to document the extent and nature of drug and violent crime in Illinois and the criminal justice systems response to these offenses.This profile is intended to provide a general overview of the drug and violent crime problem in the jurisdictions covered by Illinois Metropolitan Enforcement Groups (MEGs) and task forces, and the response to these problems by the units.
2004-2007 Statewide Motor Vehicle Theft Prevention Council Strategy
The Illinois Motor Vehicle Theft Prevention Council collects and administers special trust funds and makes grants to those who implement programs to combat or prevent vehicle theft. The Council adopts a statewide motor vehicle theft prevention strategy each year derived from public comment, expert opinion, data analyses and the experiences of funded programs. The strategy describes the nature and extent of the vehicle theft problem in Illinois, the areas of the State where the problem is greatest, particular problems that the Council should focus on and the types of programs it should support. In the 2004-2007 strategy, the Council continues to support law enforcement infrastructure programs a key to long-range planning.
2005 Annual Report: Illinois Integrated Justice Information System (IIJIS)
Created in 2003 by Executive Order No. 16, the IIJIS Implementation Board is an intergovernmental effort dedicated to improving the administration of justice in Illinois by facilitating the electronic sharing of justice information throughout the state. It is a collaborative effort charged with enhancing public safety by making complete, accurate, and timely offender based information available to all justice decision makers. The executive order directs the Implementation Board to address the challenges identified in the IIJIS Strategic Plan and to set goals and objectives for future justice information systems. The Implementation Board promotes the electronic sharing of justice information by coordinating the development, adoption, and implementation of plans for systems designed to make justice information readily accessible to justice agencies. The responsibilities of the IIJIS Board center on promoting the integration of justice information systems and include: coordinating the development of systems that enhance integration; establishing standards to facilitate the electronic sharing of justice information; protecting individual privacy rights related to the sharing of justice information; and coordinating the funding of integration efforts.
2005 Annual Report: Motor Vehicle Theft Prevention Council
In 1991, the General Assembly established the Illinois Motor Vehicle Theft Prevention Council, an 11-member coalition uniquely comprising law enforcement and insurance industry officials, which has worked tirelessly to curtail vehicle theft, insurance fraud, and related crimes. This report describes the challenges the Council faced and documents the positive results achieved this past year.
An Evaluation of the Cook County Community Based Transitional Services for Female Offenders Program
In response to the rising rates of DUI offenses in Cook County, and in an attempt to break the cycle of offending for the women sanctioned to supervision as a result of a DUI offense, the Cook County Department of Social Services implemented the Community Based Transitional Services for Female Offenders (CBTSFO) program in June 2004. The program is designed to provide intensive, individualized services in addition to group substance abuse treatment for female offenders under the supervision of the Cook County Department of Social Services. All women participating in the program are identified as in need of substance abuse treatment, and charged with a DUI offense, which includes the influence of alcohol or major intoxicating compounds. The Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority contracted with researchers Southern Illinois University to conduct an independent assessment of the program. The assessment consisted of a two pronged approach that included a process evaluation with specific attention to the adherence of the program to best practices for female offenders, and an outcomes assessment based on existing data that allowed for an examination of the success of the CBTSFO program participants in comparison to other female offenders under supervision for a similar offense. Here, findings of the full report from this evaluation are summarized.
An Evaluation of the Cook County Sheriff's Day Reporting Center Program: Rearrest and Reincarceration After Discharge
Despite the documented successes of the Cook County Day Reporting Center in achieving its short-term goals, the longtermoutcomes of program participants have never before been examined. In assessing the longer-term impact of the Cook County Day Reporting Centeron program participants, the Criminal Justice Information Authority examined rearrest and reincarceration rates of participants following their discharge from the program. This report documents the findings of that examination.
An Evaluation of the Henry/Mercer Task Force
The Henry/Mercer Task Force covered Henry County and Mercer County in Illinois beginning from mid July 1991 and ending December 1996. The data presented in this report provide a general overview of drug crime in the two counties and the response and impact of the task force.
An Evaluation of the Moral Reconation Therapy of the Franklin/Jefferson County Evening Reporting Center Program
In March of 2003, the Policy Analysis and Public Administration Department (PAPA) of Southern Illinois University Edwardsville was awarded a contract by the Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority (The Authority) to conduct an evaluation of the Moral Reconation Therapy (MRT) of the Evening Reporting Centers (ERC) operating within Franklin and Jefferson counties of the Illinois Fourth Probation District of the Second Judicial Circuit. This report describes our approach to the research and presents our major observations and findings of the 18-month evaluation. It serves to document the history and the details of the provision of the MRT service component of the Franklin/Jefferson County reporting centers.
An Impact Evaluation of Specialized Sex Offender Probation Programs in Coles, Vermilion, and Madison Counties
This report presents the evaluation of the three Downstate Illinois projects conducted by researchers at the Center for Legal Studies at the University of Illinois at Springfield as phase two of an earlier implementation and impact evaluation of six different specialized sex offender probation projects. The purpose of the original impact evaluation study was to supply information that could improve the project and help project staff in seeking local funds to continue its support. The research team was also directed to give particular attention to each projects ability to meet the goals and objectives that were outlined in the initial project descriptions, and to determine how the projects were affecting their target populations.
An Impact Evaluation of the Juvenile Probation Projects in Christian, Peoria, and Winnebago Counties
The Center for Legal Studies at the University of Illinois at Springfield conducted an impact evaluation of the intensive juvenile probation projects in Christian, Peoria, and Winnebago counties to determine how and to what extent the three programs were affecting their respective target populations. The Authority supported development of these specialized, intensive juvenile probation programs with federal Anti-Drug Abuse Act funds.
