Victim Surveys

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Victim surveys are often flawed in ways that make the data that is extracted from them unreliable. For example, many of the crimes that are reported in the surveys are trivial and do not meet the legal elements of the crime for prosecution (Mosher, Miethe & Hart, 2011). As a law enforcement officer, I see this first hand when I respond to calls for service where citizens will want someone arrested based on their interpretation of the law. This can be an even larger problem if they surveys are completed using a mail in method or phone method as opposed to having a trained interviewer filter responses while collecting them (Mosher, et al., 2011). Another issue with victim surveys is that they will omit homeless people in their methodology and …show more content…

Without victim surveys many of these crimes may go unreported to law enforcement and unstudied by anyone. For a variety of reasons people will not report crimes that happen to them. The 2007 National Crime Victim Survey (NCVS) shows that 58% of rapes or sexual assaults that were reported in the victim survey went unreported to law enforcement and 52% of total violent crime was not reported to law enforcement (Mosher, et al., 2011). Without victim surveys these crimes would have no other way of being studied or documented. Additionally, a 1977 study showed only 45% of crimes victims who stated they reported crimes against them to law enforcement were ever reported in police records (Mosher, et al., 2011). A portion of that percentage can be attributed to the victim perceiving they were a victim of a crime and law enforcement determining the crime did not meet the elements for the crime. However, many of those crime may either have been only reported to dispatch and the victim was never contacted for a report or all together not reported for some other …show more content…

These can include the victim believing it was private matter, the crime was not important or there was a lack of proof of the crime (Mosher, et al., 2011). The victim may not want to report a crime that gets a loved one arrested or in further legal trouble. Victim surveys give these victims a way to report these crimes against them without the risk of arrest to a loved one. It is important for these victims to have a way to report these crimes and for researchers to have a way to study how these unreported crimes are effecting the victims and society as a whole. Another aspect of victim surveys that are useful to researchers is the details about the crime. It is believed that victim surveys provide more accurate details about the suspect, day and time of the crime, weapons used, and victim to offender relationships (Mosher, et al., 2011). Additionally since the Uniform Crime Report does not document many of these data points, there is not another reliable way for researchers to study these types of

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