FINDING CONTINUAL EVIDENCE of “the inadequacy of the available data on crime and the criminal justice system,” the President’s Commission on Law Enforcement and Administration of Justice (1967:269) recommended that “a National Criminal Justice Statistics Center should be established in the Department of Justice.” The commission anticipated that this center would:
serve as a central focus for other statistics related to the crime problem, such as costs of crime, census data, and victim surveys. It would have to work in close coordination with the FBI’s [Federal Bureau of Investigation’s] Uniform Crime Reports Section, the Children’s Bureau of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, the Federal Bureau of Prisons, and other existing agencies with continuing responsibility for collecting and reporting related statistics. It would combine their information into an integrated picture of crime and criminal justice.
The Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 created the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration (LEAA) within the U.S. Department of Justice to provide financial and technical support to state and local law enforcement agencies. The act specifically authorized LEAA to “collect, evaluate, publish, and disseminate statistics and other information on the condition and progress of law enforcement in the several States” (P.L. 90-351 § 515(b); 82 Stat. 207). To meet this mandate, a National Criminal Justice Information and Statistics Service (NCJISS) was founded within the new LEAA.1 The Justice Systems Improvement Act of 1979 (P.L. 96-157)
Below are the first 10 and last 10 pages of uncorrected machine-read text (when available) of this chapter, followed by the top 30 algorithmically extracted key phrases from the chapter as a whole.
Intended to provide our own search engines and external engines with highly rich, chapter-representative searchable text on the opening pages of each chapter.
Because it is UNCORRECTED material, please consider the following text as a useful but insufficient proxy for the authoritative book pages.
Do not use for reproduction, copying, pasting, or reading; exclusively for search engines.
OCR for page 23
–1–
Introduction
F
of “the inadequacy of the available
INDING CONTINUAL EVIDENCE
data on crime and the criminal justice system,” the President’s
Commission on Law Enforcement and Administration of Justice
(1967:269) recommended that “a National Criminal Justice Statistics Cen-
ter should be established in the Department of Justice.” The commission
anticipated that this center would:
serve as a central focus for other statistics related to the crime problem,
such as costs of crime, census data, and victim surveys. It would have
to work in close coordination with the FBI’s [Federal Bureau of Investi-
gation’s] Uniform Crime Reports Section, the Children’s Bureau of the
Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, the Federal Bureau of
Prisons, and other existing agencies with continuing responsibility for
collecting and reporting related statistics. It would combine their infor-
mation into an integrated picture of crime and criminal justice.
The Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 created the Law
Enforcement Assistance Administration (LEAA) within the U.S. Department
of Justice to provide financial and technical support to state and local law
enforcement agencies. The act specifically authorized LEAA to “collect,
evaluate, publish, and disseminate statistics and other information on the
condition and progress of law enforcement in the several States” (P 90-
.L.
351 § 515(b); 82 Stat. 207). To meet this mandate, a National Criminal
Justice Information and Statistics Service (NCJISS) was founded within the
new LEAA.1 The Justice Systems Improvement Act of 1979 (P 96-157)
.L.
1 The NCJISS originally bore the name “National Criminal Justice Statistics Center,” draw-
ing directly from the commission’s recommendation, but the name was changed in short order.
23
OCR for page 23
24 JUSTICE STATISTICS
renamed and authorized the NCJISS as the Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS)
within a new Office of Justice Assistance, Research, and Statistics. Subse-
quent reauthorization (the Justice Assistance Act of 1984, P 98–473) com-
.L.
pleted the process of converting the former LEAA into the Office of Justice
Programs (OJP), which remains BJS’s administrative parent agency within
the Justice Department.
From these beginnings, BJS has developed into one of the principal sta-
tistical agencies of the federal government. Armed with a broad mandate
to provide statistical measures on the justice system, the agency maintains
dozens of data collection series. Each year, it releases about 40 bulletins or
reports summarizing its findings, disseminated through BJS’s own website
(http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/) or through the OJP-administered National
Criminal Justice Reference Service (http://www.ncjrs.gov/). BJS data are gen-
erally made available in processed spreadsheets on the BJS website or in mi-
crodata form at the National Archive of Criminal Justice Data hosted by the
University of Michigan (http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/NACJD/). BJS also sup-
ports the maintenance of an online Sourcebook of Criminal Justice Statistics
(http://www.albany.edu/sourcebook). BJS’s report series and dissemination
venues are described more completely in Box 1-1, and an illustrative front
page of a BJS bulletin is shown in Figure 1-1.
BJS’s signature data collection, and its most demanding in terms of bud-
get resources, is the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS), an ef-
fort that—like BJS itself—is the direct result of a recommendation by the
President’s Commission on Law Enforcement and Administration of Justice
(1967). The NCVS serves as a critical indicator of crime and violence in the
United States because it includes crimes that are not reported to police as
well as those that are. In this respect, it serves as an important counterpart
to the Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) program of the FBI—the nation’s
other key indicator of violent crime levels—because the UCR is strictly lim-
ited to incidents reported to law enforcement authorities. More significantly,
the importance of the NCVS stems from its flexibility as a detailed survey
measurement tool, permitting valuable insight into the nature and etiology
of victimization incidents as well as public perceptions of and encounters
with other parts of the justice system.
Although the NCVS represents a dominant share of BJS’s budgetary re-
sources, the balance of BJS’s data collection portfolio covers an enormous
range of phenomena. BJS is well known for its body of data series on popu-
lations under correctional supervision; these provide important information
on the levels and dynamics of correctional populations, which are (like other
institutionalized populations) commonly excluded from household surveys
OCR for page 23
INTRODUCTION 25
Box 1-1 Bureau of Justice Statistics Publications and Data
Dissemination Venues
Historically, BJS publications have followed a few fairly well-defined types, as described
in the Bureau of Justice Statistics Style Book (Bureau of Justice Statistics, 1997a:5):
• Bulletins summarize findings from new data releases from BJS’s more permanent
data collections. They are meant to be relatively concise, having five to eight
tables, and frequently have a detailed methodology section that describes the
processes used to collect the data. The Criminal Victimization series based on
the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS; e.g., Rand and Catalano, 2007)
and the midyear count reports from the National Prisoner Statistics Program
(e.g., Harrison and Beck, 2006; Sabol and Couture, 2008) are examples of BJS
Bulletins.
• Special Reports cover “more restricted topics than do Bulletins, describing in 10
to 15 tables statistical relationships among findings from one or more datasets.”
They are meant to be more individual in nature than the Bulletins. Example
Special Reports include analyses of victimization rates by level of urbanicity
(Duhart, 2000), detailed concentration on violent felons using State Court
Processing Statistics data (Reaves, 2006), tabulations of citizen complaints
regarding police use of force from the Law Enforcement Management and
Adminstrative Statistics survey (Hickman, 2006), and results from a supplemental
survey of civil appeals (Cohen, 2006).
• Data Briefs are meant to cover a very limited set of findings and are generally
a maximum of two formatted pages. For instance, a special NCVS tabulation
of carjacking incidents covers three formatted pages (Klaus, 2004). However,
depending on the topic, they can run longer; for instance, the analysis by
Mumola (2007b) of cause-of-death information collected as part of the Deaths
in Custody Reporting Program has a three-page narrative but includes eight
pages of appendix tables. Because of space limitations, Data Briefs do not cover
methodology in any depth but can contain references to other, more extensive
reports. In recent years, very short reports have also been issued under the Fact
Sheet label (see, e.g., Hughes, 2007, on analysis of National Center for Health
Statistics data on unidentified human remains; and Hickman, 2003, on tribal law
enforcement departments).
• Selected Findings “gathe[r] the most important facts, statistics, and conclusions
from a number of data sources, usually separate statistical reporting programs
within BJS.” Examples of Selected Findings reports include summaries from
both inmate and probationer data sets on prior physical or sexual abuse (Harlow,
1999) and analysis of punitive damage awards in selected large counties (Cohen,
2005b).
Other BJS publications have been labeled as BJS Technical Reports, including the
results of pilot testing of computer security questions in the NCVS (Rantala, 2004)
and results from a special NCVS data file for the New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago
metropolitan statistical areas (Lauritsen and Schaum, 2005). Some longer publications
are left “unbranded” by any of these labels, such as BJS’s tabulation of statistics from
various sources of American Indians and their experience of crime (Greenfeld and Smith,
1999; Perry, 2004) and the Compendium of Federal Justice Statistics (Bureau of Justice
Statistics, 2006a).
(continued)
OCR for page 23
26 JUSTICE STATISTICS
Box 1-1 (continued)
Established by BJS’s parent Office of Justice Programs (OJP), the National Criminal
Justice Reference Service (NCJRS; http://www.ncjrs.gov) maintains a library of OJP
publications dating to the 1970s, many of which are downloadable online and others
that can be ordered in hard copy. In addition to OJP and its component agencies, the
NCJRS is also sponsored by the Office of National Drug Control Policy in the Executive
Office of the President. “By referral from BJS,” NCJRS also “handles major distributions
as needed for White House and [Department of Justice] events and attends major
conferences representing the statistical products available from BJS” (Bureau of Justice
Statistics, 2005a:24).
The National Archive of Criminal Justice Data (NACJD; http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/
NACJD/) is the designated official repository for data collections funded by three OJP
bureaus: BJS, the National Institute of Justice, and the Office for Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention. In addition to the OJP bureaus, NACJD also collects and
disseminates data sets from research projects that are contributed by investigators; it
also archives summary data files from the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Uniform
Crime Reporting and National Incident-Based Reporting System collections (Heraux,
2007). (Section 4–C describes both collections in more detail.) The NACJD archive was
created in 1978 and is hosted by the Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social
Research (ICPSR), University of Michigan, and receives funding from the John D. and
Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation in addition to the three OJP bureaus.
Arrangements with NACJD and ICPSR also give BJS an important venue for promoting
accurate and effective use of BJS data. As part of ICPSR’s regular Summer Training
Program in Quantitative Methods, BJS sponsors an annual 4-week seminar program on
the quantitative analysis of crime and criminal justice data; since 2000, the seminar
has focused on key methodological and presentation issues rather than attempting a
comprehensive review of all BJS data series. The seminar is open to researchers from
academia, nonprofit organizations, and government agencies, but annual attendance is
capped at 10 persons.
For fiscal year 2008, BJS’s contribution to the maintenance of NCJRS and NACJD were
estimated at $1,100,000 and $900,000, respectively.
administered by the government.2 The “justice system” that BJS monitors
with its data collections is sprawling, including not only correctional facil-
ities and offices but the entire infrastructure of law enforcement: police
departments at the state and local levels and their various support bureaus.
It also includes the judiciary: the full array of federal and state courts, which
vary strongly in organizational structure and information resources. BJS’s
2 An exception is the American Community Survey—the replacement for the traditional de-
cennial census long-form sample—which does include prison populations in its coverage of the
“group quarters” population. However, the BJS data series are likely better measures of cor-
rectional populations, particularly for shorter-term or mixed-term facilities such as local jails
where the decennial census definition of “usual residence” may lead to poor counts; see Sec-
tion 5–B.11. National Research Council (2006) provides additional discussion of correctional
populations and the decennial census.
OCR for page 23
INTRODUCTION 27
Figure 1-1 First page of example from BJS “Bulletin” series of data
releases
legal mandate is such that its work is not limited to the collection and anal-
ysis of data; it is also tasked with providing financial assistance to state and
local governments for the development and maintenance of information re-
sources such as background check databases. Some of BJS’s data collections
are performed on a regular basis whereas others are more sporadic (or one-
time efforts), and some involve direct field data collection and interviewing
whereas others are based on administrative and agency records.
OCR for page 23
28 JUSTICE STATISTICS
Despite this wide scope, BJS has endured effectively flat funding for most
of its existence. Figure 1-2 presents BJS’s budget requests and total appropri-
ated amounts for each fiscal year since 1981. Converting BJS’s final budget
allocations into real 2008 dollars, the funding has oscillated slightly but held
relatively constant over the entire range. The figure also shows the amount
of BJS’s budget allocated to the NCVS for each fiscal year since 1990, in
nominal dollars; that line suggests an upward creep in the basic costs of
survey data collection. During fiscal years 2001 through 2007, the NCVS
consumed at least 51.2 percent (in both 2001 and 2002) and as much as
64.0 percent (in 2004) of the total BJS appropriations. These fiscal con-
straints have led BJS to reduce the sample size of NCVS over time, along
with other cost-cutting measures; what began as a survey of 72,000 house-
holds in 1972 reached only 38,000 households in 2006. In recent years,
the diminishing NCVS sample size has combined with generally low and de-
creasing estimated overall victimization rates, with the result that only large
percentage changes in violent crime victimization rates—at least 8 percent—
would be a statistically significant year-to-year change.3 As noted in the U.S.
Office of Management and Budget (2007:8) annual review of statistical pro-
gram funding, “cost cutting measures applied to the NCVS continue to have
significant effects on the precision of the estimates—year-to-year change es-
timates are no longer feasible and have been replaced with two-year rolling
averages” in BJS reports on victimization. In addition to decreased precision
in the NCVS estimates, fiscal constraints and the large NCVS share of the
overall budget have raised trade-off decisions in the portfolio of BJS pro-
grams: Should some resources currently devoted to the NCVS be applied to
collections in other areas such as law enforcement or judicial processing (at
the expense of NCVS accuracy), or do the variety and extent of non-NCVS
collections detract from the accurate victimization-based measurement of
crime and violence?
In 2005, BJS was subjected to review under the U.S. Office of Manage-
ment and Budget’s Performance Assessment Rating Tool (PART).4 In general,
PART found fault with only a few areas and BJS received high marks. How-
ever, one need that the evaluation suggested was an independent assessment
of BJS’s effectiveness:
BJS would benefit from a comprehensive review that could provide spe-
cific evidence of BJS’s impact overall. Major reviews of BJS statistical
3 This figure is from a presentation by Michael Rand, BJS, at the panel’s first meeting. For
2005, the violent crime victimization rate was estimated as 21.2 per 1,000 population, and the
95 percent confidence interval of this rate is ±8.1 percent. Since 2000, the estimated annual
violent crime victimization rates have dipped from 27.9 to 21.2 per 1,000, and the 95 percent
intervals have been in excess of ±7 percent for each of those annual estimates. These figures
are discussed further in the panel’s interim report (National Research Council, 2008b:App. C).
4 The detailed report of the PART evaluation is accessible at http://www.whitehouse.gov/
omb/expectmore/detail/10003805.2005.html.
OCR for page 23
INTRODUCTION 29
(a) Expenditures in nominal fiscal year dollars (millions)
(b) BJS total allocations in real 2008 dollars (millions)
Figure 1-2 Bureau of Justice Statistics budget requests to Congress (fiscal
years 1981–2009), final total appropriations (1981–2008),
and National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) data
collection costs (1990–2008)
NOTES: Budget request and appropriations figures include both base and program costs. Final
appropriations reflect amounts after any applicable budget recission or across-the-board cut.
NCVS data collection costs exclude additional costs for developing and respecifying sample
based on new decennial censuses, as well as costs associated with the automation (conversion
to computer-based administration) of the survey. For fiscal year 2008, NCVS spending does
not include an additional $3.9 million designated for redesign activities. Consistent with the
approach used in National Research Council (2009:Table A-1), nominal dollars are converted to
real 2008 dollars by the gross domestic product chain-type price indexes for federal government
nondefense consumption expenditures (based on Table 3.10.4, line 34, at http://www.bea.gov/
national/nipaweb/SelectTable.asp?Selected=N#S3).
SOURCE: Data provided by the Bureau of Justice Statistics to the panel at its February 2007,
December 2007, and April 2008 meetings.
OCR for page 23
30 JUSTICE STATISTICS
activities conducted by the Census Bureau, the American Statistical As-
sociation, the National Academy of Sciences, and other external groups
have concluded that BJS adheres to standards of quality and practice
that are consistent with the expectations for a national statistics agency.
Such reviews are important for providing feedback and confirming suc-
cess at an operational level. However, they do not provide any infor-
mation on BJS’s ultimate impact, which focuses on the production of
national crime and justice statistics. Is BJS collecting the right kinds of
statistics to meet the nation’s needs? Are changes needed in the nation’s
system for collecting and producing crime and justice statistics? Would
the nation be better served by an alternative organization (e.g., a con-
solidated statistical agency) for producing crime and justice statistics?
These are the kinds of questions a more comprehensive review could
address.
1–A CHARGE TO THE PANEL
Embracing this suggestion for external, independent review—and near-
ing a milestone of 30 years of operation in its present form—BJS requested
that the National Research Council’s Committee on National Statistics, in
collaboration with the Committee on Law and Justice, establish a Panel to
Review the Programs of the Bureau of Justice Statistics. The full charge to
the panel is to:
examine the full range of programs of the Bureau of Justice Statistics
(BJS) in order to assess and make recommendations for BJS’ priorities
for data collection. The review will examine the ways in which BJS
statistics are used by Congress, executive agencies, the courts, state and
local agencies, and researchers in order to determine the impact of BJS
programs and the means to enhance that impact. The review will assess
the organization of BJS and its relationships with other data gathering
entities in the Department of Justice, as well as with state and local
governments, to determine ways to improve the relevance, quality, and
cost-effectiveness of justice statistics. The review will consider priority
uses for additional funding that may be obtained through budget ini-
tiatives or reallocation of resources within the agency. A focus of the
panel’s work will be to consider alternative options for conducting the
National Crime Victimization Survey, which is the largest BJS program.
The goal of the panel’s work will be to assist BJS to refine its priorities
and goals, as embodied in its strategic plan, both in the short and longer
terms. The panel’s recommendations will address ways to improve the
impact and cost-effectiveness of the agency’s statistics on crime and the
criminal justice system.
Given the prominence of the NCVS in BJS operations—and its domi-
nance of BJS budget resources—the panel was specifically asked to evaluate
options for conducting the NCVS in our first year of work before turning
OCR for page 23
INTRODUCTION 31
to the agency’s data collections in other areas. The panel’s interim report,
Surveying Victims: Options for Conducting the National Crime Victimiza-
tion Survey (National Research Council, 2008b), focuses on that portion of
the panel’s charge. To give our work a unified presentation, we include the
summary from the interim report as Appendix B. This summary includes all
of the formal recommendations from that interim report and, to be clear,
we stand by all of the guidance in that report—indeed, a few of the rec-
ommendations from the interim report are directly restated in this volume.
That said, our intent in this final report is to complement the interim report
rather than update it or incorporate it in full; the interim report delves into
the methodology of the NCVS and the range of possible models for the con-
duct of the NCVS in much greater detail than the treatment of the NCVS in
this report (as one part of the full suite of BJS programs) permits.
1–B WHAT IS THE BUREAU OF JUSTICE STATISTICS?
It is impossible to properly evaluate the programs of BJS without dis-
cussing the agency itself—its functions and mandates, and its placement in
both the U.S. Department of Justice and the overall federal statistical system.
In this section, to get a sense of the responsibilities of and demands placed on
BJS, we discuss various answers to the basic question, “What is the Bureau of
Justice Statistics?” To be clear, we do not imply any hierarchy of importance
through the ordering of this list, save that it makes sense to start with the
two most basic definitions of the agency under the law.5 In this section—and
throughout this report—we refer frequently to the enumerated duties of BJS
as they are presented in the agency’s authorizing legislation; these are listed
in Box 1-2.
1–B.1 Mission-Type Definitions
A first, basic definition of BJS is that it is a gatherer of information on
crime and on the justice system. The first stated purpose of the section of leg-
islation authorizing BJS is “to provide for and encourage the collection and
analysis of statistical information concerning crime, juvenile delinquency,
and the operation of the criminal justice system and related aspects of the
civil justice system” (42 USC § 3731).
The second, dual purpose of BJS under its authorizing language is to
serve as a developer of justice information systems on all governmental lev-
els. Specifically, BJS is tasked to “support the development of information
5 The portions of the Justice Systems Improvement Act of 1979 that created BJS (and subse-
quent revisions) are codified as Title 42, Chapter 46, Subchapter III of the U.S. Code (42 USC
§§ 3741–3745). Functions of BJS and its role within OJP are also defined in Title 28, Part 0,
Subpart P-1 of the Code of Federal Regulations (28 CFR §§ 0.90, 0.93).
OCR for page 23
32 JUSTICE STATISTICS
Box 1-2 Statutory Functions of the Bureau of Justice Statistics
The Bureau is authorized to—
1. make grants to, or enter into cooperative agreements or contracts with public
agencies, institutions of higher education, private organizations, or private
individuals for purposes related to this subchapter; grants shall be made subject
to continuing compliance with standards for gathering justice statistics set forth
in rules and regulations promulgated by the Director;
2. collect and analyze information concerning criminal victimization, including crimes
against the elderly, and civil disputes;
3. collect and analyze data that will serve as a continuous and comparable national
social indication of the prevalence, incidence, rates, extent, distribution, and
attributes of crime, juvenile delinquency, civil disputes, and other statistical
factors related to crime, civil disputes, and juvenile delinquency, in support of
national, State, and local justice policy and decisionmaking;
4. collect and analyze statistical information, concerning the operations of the
criminal justice system at the Federal, State, and local levels;
5. collect and analyze statistical information concerning the prevalence, incidence,
rates, extent, distribution, and attributes of crime, and juvenile delinquency, at
the Federal, State, and local levels;
6. analyze the correlates of crime, civil disputes and juvenile delinquency, by the use
of statistical information, about criminal and civil justice systems at the Federal,
State, and local levels, and about the extent, distribution and attributes of crime,
and juvenile delinquency, in the Nation and at the Federal, State, and local levels;
7. compile, collate, analyze, publish, and disseminate uniform national statistics
concerning all aspects of criminal justice and related aspects of civil justice,
crime, including crimes against the elderly, juvenile delinquency, criminal
offenders, juvenile delinquents, and civil disputes in the various States;
8. recommend national standards for justice statistics and for insuring the reliability
and validity of justice statistics supplied pursuant to this chapter;
9. maintain liaison with the judicial branches of the Federal and State Governments
in matters relating to justice statistics, and cooperate with the judicial branch in
assuring as much uniformity as feasible in statistical systems of the executive
and judicial branches;
10. provide information to the President, the Congress, the judiciary, State and local
governments, and the general public on justice statistics;
11. establish or assist in the establishment of a system to provide State and
local governments with access to Federal informational resources useful in the
planning, implementation, and evaluation of programs under this Act;
12. conduct or support research relating to methods of gathering or analyzing justice
statistics;
13. provide for the development of justice information systems programs and
assistance to the States and units of local government relating to collection,
analysis, or dissemination of justice statistics [Clause revised in 1984, replacing
more general “financial and technical assistance” language];
14. develop and maintain a data processing capability to support the collection,
aggregation, analysis and dissemination of information on the incidence of crime
and the operation of the criminal justice system [Clause added in 1984];
(continued)
OCR for page 23
INTRODUCTION 33
Box 1-2 (continued)
15. collect, analyze and disseminate comprehensive Federal justice transaction
statistics (including statistics on issues of Federal justice interest such as public
fraud and high technology crime) and to provide technical assistance to and
work jointly with other Federal agencies to improve the availability and quality of
Federal justice data [Clause added in 1984];
16. provide for the collection, compilation, analysis, publication and dissemination
of information and statistics about the prevalence, incidence, rates, extent,
distribution and attributes of drug offenses, drug related offenses and drug
dependent offenders and further provide for the establishment of a national
clearinghouse to maintain and update a comprehensive and timely data base on
all criminal justice aspects of the drug crisis and to disseminate such information
[Clause added in 1988];
17. provide for the collection, analysis, dissemination and publication of statistics
on the condition and progress of drug control activities at the Federal, State
and local levels with particular attention to programs and intervention efforts
demonstrated to be of value in the overall national anti-drug strategy and to
provide for the establishment of a national clearinghouse for the gathering of
data generated by Federal, State, and local criminal justice agencies on their
drug enforcement activities [Clause added in 1988];
18. provide for the development and enhancement of State and local criminal justice
information systems, and the standardization of data reporting relating to the
collection, analysis or dissemination of data and statistics about drug offenses,
drug related offenses, or drug dependent offenders [Clause added in 1988];
19. provide for improvements in the accuracy, quality, timeliness, immediate acces-
sibility, and integration of State criminal history and related records, support the
development and enhancement of national systems of criminal history and re-
lated records including the National Instant Criminal Background Check System,
the National Incident-Based Reporting System, and the records of the National
Crime Information Center, facilitate State participation in national records and
information systems, and support statistical research for critical analysis of the
improvement and utilization of criminal history records [Clause added in 1988
and revised in 2006, including reference to specific program names];
20. maintain liaison with State and local governments and governments of other
nations concerning justice statistics;
21. cooperate in and participate with national and international organizations in the
development of uniform justice statistics;
22. ensure conformance with security and privacy requirement of section 3789g
of this title and identify, analyze, and participate in the development and
implementation of privacy, security and information policies which impact on
Federal and State criminal justice operations and related statistical activities
[Clause added in 1984, replacing previous clause on privacy and security]; and
23. exercise the powers and functions set out in subchapter VIII of this chapter.
[These include authority to issue rules and regulations, consult with the Bureau
of Justice Assistance on grant evaluation programs, deny or terminate grants for
failure to comply with regulations, convene hearings (including subpoena power)
as necessary, and issue an annual report to Congress and the president.]
SOURCE: Excerpt, 42 USC § 3732(c); italicized comments based on revision history
and notes maintained by U.S. Code Service.
OCR for page 23
36 JUSTICE STATISTICS
Figure 1-3 Bureau of Justice Statistics organizational structure, June
2008
SOURCE: Adapted from organizational chart provided by BJS to the panel, July 2008.
51 (again, as of actual numbers in fiscal year 2006) was the smallest of the
10 major agencies, the next-smallest being the National Center for Educa-
tion Statistics at 91 (U.S. Office of Management and Budget, 2007:App. B).
Introducing a hearing on the limitations of existing crime statistics, then-
Representative Charles Schumer (D-New York) summarized the small re-
sources of BJS relative to those of its peers (U.S. House of Representatives,
Committee on the Judiciary, 1991:116):
Polls show that crime and the economy are the two most important
issues to most Americans, so let me draw a comparison between the
two. With the economy, we have the Labor Department’s Bureau of
Labor Statistics. It has a staff of well over 2,000 people, an annual
budget of $240 million, and it does an excellent job of measuring all
sorts of economic indicators. When the Bureau of Labor Statistics says
something, people know it is true. Markets go up and down, waiting
for those statistics to be announced. For crime, the lead agency is the
Bureau of Justice Statistics. It has a staff of 50 people, a budget of about
$20 million, less than one-quarter of 1 percent of what we spend at the
Federal level for the war on drugs and a miniscule proportion of what
we spend as a nation on law enforcement in general. It is no wonder we
have such an incomplete understanding of what is going on [in crime].
Referring to Box 1-2, it is useful to make another definitional point: BJS
is a statistical agency with one of the most elaborate and extensive lists of
noted in U.S. Office of Management and Budget (2007:Table 1), “the amounts for BJS [include]
estimated salaries and expenses that are not directly appropriated” and that “the FY 2006
amounts for BJS include carryover funds and any other prior year recoveries.”
OCR for page 23
INTRODUCTION 37
formal duties compared to those of its peers. By comparison, an entire title
of the U.S. Code is dedicated to “Census” issues (Title 13) but the code ar-
ticulates no formal list of duties for the Census Bureau or its director; rather,
the code outlines duties and responsibilities of the Secretary of Commerce,
and the Director of the Census is charged only to “perform such duties as
may be imposed upon him by law, regulations, or orders of the Secretary”
(13 USC § 21). The basic mandate of the Bureau of Labor Statistics is con-
cise: “to acquire . . . useful information on subjects connected with labor,
in the most general and comprehensive sense of that word, and especially
upon its relation to capital, the hours of labor, the earnings of laboring men
and women, and the means of promoting their material, social, intellectual,
and moral prosperity” (29 USC § 1). The legal duties of some of the newer
statistical agencies (such as BJS) tend to be more specific than those of the
older agencies: enabling law describes nine specific data collection themes
for the National Center for Health Statistics (42 USC § 242k(1)), while 9
specific duties and 13 data collection themes are outlined for the Bureau of
Transportation Statistics (49 USC § 111(c)). Still, relative to its peers, the
legal demands put on BJS are unusually detailed and wide-ranging, from
specific data collection types (e.g., duty 16 on collection of information on
drug-related crime) to administrative support functions for state and local
agencies.
1–B.3 Organizational Definitions
A shorthand definition that BJS commonly uses to describe itself is that
it is “the statistical arm of the U.S. Department of Justice.” This phrasing
is used in the agency’s strategic plan (Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2005a:1)
and in other materials (Greenfeld, 2004). The language used in the strate-
gic plan as context for this definition strikes a few slightly different notes
from language used in BJS’s legally defined duties (see Box 1-2), saying that
BJS is “responsible for the collection, analysis, publication, and dissemina-
tion of statistical information on crime, criminal offenders, victims of crime,
and the operations of justice systems at all levels of government” (Bureau
of Justice Statistics, 2005a:1). A semantic point, but an important one, is
that BJS’s self-description as a “statistical arm” of the Department of Justice
(rather than “statistical agency” or “statistical office,” or some such term)
subtly connotes a dedication to the furtherance of Department of Justice
policy objectives rather than the atmosphere of independence that statistical
agencies should be permitted. Indeed, as we describe in more detail later in
Section 5–A.2, BJS has endured incidents in which Justice Department pol-
icy practices have directly conflicted with statistical agency independence,
culminating in a high-profile (and damaging) removal of a BJS director.
Setting aside the semantics of “statistical arm” for the moment, the for-
OCR for page 23
38 JUSTICE STATISTICS
mulation of BJS as “the” statistical arm of the Justice Department is odd.
As it is presently operated, it is more correct to say that BJS is a statistical
arm of the U.S. Department of Justice. Although BJS is responsible for a
great deal of the statistical information collected by the Department of Jus-
tice (the organizational structure of which is described in Figure 1-4), it is far
from the only data-gathering entity in the department.7 Spanning the many
program branches, policy branches, and federal law enforcement agencies
in the department, an illustrative (but by no means exhaustive) list of major
data-driven activities includes:
• Use of census and other data by the Civil Rights Division to study
equity in legislative districting in certain states and the potential for
vote dilution;
• Maintenance of extensive administrative (purchase and transfer)
databases by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explo-
sives, as well as operation of a national database of images of bullet
and cartridge case evidence related to local crime scenes;
• Analysis of the effectiveness of “weed and seed” grants to localities by
the Community Capacity Development Office;
• Compilation of data on arrests and seizures made by Drug Enforce-
ment Administration officers;
• Population and inventory reports maintained by the Federal Bureau of
Prisons; and
• Analyses of drug markets by the National Drug Intelligence Center, in-
cluding fielding of a National Drug Threat Survey to law enforcement
agencies.
The UCR program—the record of crimes reported to the police—is arguably
the longest-standing and highest-profile of the department’s statistical series.
However, it is administered by the FBI, not BJS. Similarly, primary responsi-
bility for data collections on juvenile offenders and victims is generally held
by the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP), one
of BJS’s sister agencies in OJP; this is the case even though, as a reading of the
duties articulated in Box 1-2 suggests, BJS’ authorizing language is replete
in references to juvenile delinquency. (We discuss the relationships between
BJS and the FBI and OJJDP in particular, in Section 4–C and Section 2–C.3,
,
respectively.)
7 The fiscal year 2008 version of Statistical Programs of the U.S. Government (U.S. Office
of Management and Budget, 2007:Table 1) lists four Department of Justice agencies in its basic
table of agencies with direct funding for “statistical activities” of at least $500,000: BJS ($50.2
million in fiscal 2006), the Bureau of Prisons ($13.0 million), the FBI ($7.6 million), and the
Drug Enforcement Administration ($2.2 million).
OCR for page 23
INTRODUCTION
Figure 1-4 U.S. Department of Justice organizational structure, March 2009
NOTE: The Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) is a constituent agency of the Office of Justice Programs (OJP), indicated here by boldface type. Box 1-4
depicts the organizational structure within OJP, and Figure 1-3 shows the internal organization of BJS.
SOURCE: Adapted from http://www.usdoj.gov/dojorg.htm, organizational chart dated March 2, 2009.
39
OCR for page 23
40 JUSTICE STATISTICS
Administratively, BJS is an organ of OJP within the U.S. Department of
Justice. The current structure of OJP is described more fully in Box 1-4. This
administrative placement has two fundamental ramifications for BJS and its
work. First, it means that BJS is administratively nested within the Justice
Department; BJS’s director reports to the attorney general and the deputy at-
torney general through a designated assistant attorney general. This type of
administrative layering and reporting structure is increasingly common for
federal statistical agencies, although it is not ideal for a statistical agency’s
purpose as an independent broker of information. Second, the adminis-
trative tie to OJP means that, like other units in the office, BJS inherits a
strong focus of attention on the needs of state and local law enforcement,
since OJP is the legal successor of the previous Law Enforcement Assistance
Administration. OJP is a program agency that takes as its general mission
“provid[ing] federal leadership in developing the nation’s capacity to pre-
vent and control crime, administer justice, and assist crime victims” (Bureau
of Justice Statistics, 2005a:10). The closing sentence of BJS’s basic authoriz-
ing language explicitly directs that “[BJS] shall give primary emphasis to the
problems of State and local justice systems” (42 USC § 3731).
1–B.4 Functional Definitions
In terms of BJS’s functions, it may be said that BJS is principally a paying
sponsor of data collection efforts and a manager of grants. Although BJS staff
are actively engaged in the design of data collections and the analysis of re-
sulting data, many of BJS’s data series—including signature collections such
as the NCVS—are not conducted in-house. Instead, they are done by con-
tracting with an external data collection agent. Notably, BJS contracts with
the Census Bureau for many of its data series, including the NCVS and its
censuses of prisons and jails. It also issues contracts with, among others, the
National Opinion Research Center, Westat, the Police Executive Research
Forum, and the National Center for State Courts. For fiscal year 2008, bud-
get estimates called for BJS to spend $45 million out of an expected $61.5
million in direct funding on purchasing statistical services (73 percent). Of
that total, about half ($23.2 million) was budgeted to go to other federal
agencies (e.g., the Census Bureau), a smaller share to private-sector orga-
nizations ($18.2 million), and a small share to state and local governments
($3.6 million) (U.S. Office of Management and Budget, 2007:Table 3). In
addition to data collection–specific contracts, a major part of BJS’s work is
the provision of grants to state and local law enforcement units, consistent
with the strong state and local focus described above. In particular, BJS ad-
ministers the National Criminal History Improvement Program of grants to
state and local governments, and has issued grants to try to encourage coop-
OCR for page 23
INTRODUCTION 41
Box 1-4 Organizational Structure of the Office of Justice Programs
The Office of Justice Programs (OJP) was established in 1984, inheriting major functions
from the former Law Enforcement Assistance Administration (LEAA). LEAA had been
formed in 1968 to coordinate the flow of federal financial resources to state and local
law enforcement efforts. OJP’s mission is “to increase public safety and improve the fair
administration of justice across America through innovative leadership programs,” and it
has adopted as its “vision” the following (U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice
Programs, 2006:3):
To be the premier resource for the justice community by providing and coordi-
nating information, statistics, research and development, training, and support
to help the justice community build the capacity it needs to meet its public
safety goals; embracing local decision making and encouraging local innova-
tion through strong and intelligent national policy leadership.
Current law defines powers of OJP as follows (42 USC § 3712(a)):
The Assistant Attorney General [for OJP] shall—
(1) publish and disseminate information on the conditions and progress of
the criminal justice systems;
(2) maintain liaison with the executive and judicial branches of the Federal
and State governments in matters relating to criminal justice;
(3) provide information to the President, the Congress, the judiciary, State
and local governments, and the general public relating to criminal justice;
(4) maintain liaison with public and private educational and research insti-
tutions, State and local governments, and governments of other nations
relating to criminal justice;
(5) provide staff support to coordinate the activities of the Office and the Bu-
reau of Justice Assistance, the National Institute of Justice, the Bureau
of Justice Statistics, and the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency
Prevention; and
(6) exercise such other powers and functions [as may be defined or dele-
gated].
(continued)
OCR for page 23
42 JUSTICE STATISTICS
Box 1-4 (continued)
Section 5–A.2 describes the evolution of point (5) in this list in greater detail.
Aside from the Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS), major units within OJP include:
• The Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA) provides leadership in grant adminis-
tration and policy development to support state, local, and tribal criminal justice
strategies to achieve safe communities.
• The Community Capacity Development Office (CCDO) works with local
communities to analyze public safety and criminal justice problems, develop
solutions, and foster local-level leadership to implement and sustain these
solutions. For example, it oversees the “Weed and Seed” initiative—community-
based activities to promote the arrest and sanction of offenders (“weed”) and
crime prevention and community revitalization (“seed”).
• The National Institute of Justice (NIJ) is the research, development, and
evaluation agency of the U.S. Department of Justice, dedicated to researching
crime-control and justice issues.
• The Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP) provides
national leadership, coordination, and resources to prevent and respond to
juvenile delinquency and victimization.
• The Office for Victims of Crime (OVC) is committed to enhancing the nation’s
capacity to assist crime victims and to providing leadership in changing attitudes,
policies, and practices to promote justice and healing for all crime victims.
It provides federal funds to support victim compensation and assistance and
training programs.
• Most recently, the Office of Sex Offender Sentencing, Monitoring, Appre-
hending, Registering, and Tracking (or SMART Office) was created by law in
2006.
The assistant attorney general who oversees OJP operations is appointed by the
president with the advice and consent of the Senate, as are the heads of BJA, BJS,
NIJ, OJJDP and OVC. The CCDO director is appointed by the attorney general while the
,
SMART Office director is a presidential appointment without Senate confirmation.
SOURCES: Organizational chart adapted from http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/about/bureaus.
htm (8/1/08) and http://www.usdoj.gov/dojorg.htm (1/14/07). Capsule descriptions
of agencies adapted from http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/index.htm (1/14/07) and individual
bureau websites.
eration by local police departments with the FBI’s National Incident-Based
Reporting System.
BJS also functions as a synthesizer of information from other federal agen-
cies and from state governments. At the federal level, BJS acquires some of
its data through partnerships with other agencies inside and outside of the
Department of Justice, including the Bureau of Prisons and the Administra-
tive Office of the U.S. Courts. It also acquires some of its data directly from
state governments as, indeed, it is explicitly urged to do in its legal statement
of purpose: “The Bureau shall utilize to the maximum extent feasible State
OCR for page 23
INTRODUCTION 43
governmental organizations and facilities responsible for the collection and
analysis of criminal justice data and statistics” (42 USC § 3731).
In its relationship with the states, BJS has also cultivated a role as an ac-
tive broker for research and data dissemination within the states. Through
its State Justice Statistics program, BJS provides grant assistance to a strong
network of state Statistical Analysis Centers (SACs), some of which are colo-
cated with state government or law enforcement agencies and others of
which are installed at academic institutions. These SACs act as a source
of information to BJS as well as a conduit for dissemination of information
among state policy makers (e.g., in fielding questions from state legislators).
BJS funding also supports the Justice Research and Statistics Association,
which provides coordination to the SACs and which operates a research
journal.
BJS is also frequently called upon to play a role as a “criminal justice in-
vestigator,” typically when Congress mandates the collection of information
on some aspect of the criminal justice system. Several of these are described
in Box 3-3 and one major such request—for information on the occurrence
of sexual violence in correctional facilities, as mandated by the Prison Rape
Elimination Act of 2003—is described in detail in Section 5–A.1. On oc-
casion, it is not Congress but the administration—the Justice Department—
that creates an “investigatory” role for BJS, as with BJS’s role in coordinat-
ing an 18-city tour to corroborate perceived increases in violent crime with
accounts from local police officials (Rosenfeld, 2007). BJS has also been
directed by legislation to produce and calculate the formulas used in grant
programs administered by other OJP programs, such as the Bureau of Jus-
tice Assistance’s Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant program
(Hickman, 2005a). It has also assumed responsibility for producing certain
compilations and summaries of state law, such as an overview series of state
privacy and security laws that dates from the LEAA days (Bureau of Jus-
tice Statistics, 2003b) and, more recently, summaries of state laws and rules
governing firearm sales and transfers (Regional Justice Information Service,
2006).
1–C LIMITATIONS OF THE STUDY
The preceding review of the varied roles of BJS and the expectations
placed on the agency underscores the point that our panel’s charter to review
the full suite of BJS programs and suggest strategic priorities is a very broad
one. Accordingly, although we believe our review to be as comprehensive as
possible, it is important to make two caveats up front before proceeding to
the substance of our analysis.
OCR for page 23
44 JUSTICE STATISTICS
The first is that we intend our review to suggest directions for research,
development, and study to further BJS’s objectives and priorities for data
collection; it is neither intended as a set of specific budgetary priorities to
reduce BJS costs nor as an uncontrolled “wish list” of topics that only a
BJS with a massive funding increase could hope to accomplish. On several
occasions, BJS Director Jeffrey Sedgwick described the work of our panel in
the context of a broader examination of BJS’s mission and data series (Justice
Research and Statistics Association, 2006a:12; see also Sedgwick, 2006):
While we have routinely evaluated each of approximately four dozen
data series (and received high marks for each), we have not evaluated
whether we are doing the right things. . . . Put in econometric terms, we
haven’t asked whether the value of the least important data we collect
exceeds the value of the most valuable data we don’t collect.
Consonant with this direction, we have approached our study with an eye
toward gaps in substantive coverage that should be filled as well as collec-
tions that should be suspended or dropped. However, to expand a note we
struck in our interim report (National Research Council, 2008b:2), we rec-
ognize the fiscal constraints on BJS but do not intend to be either strictly
limited by them (assuming relatively flat funding for the indefinite future)
or completely indifferent to them. We approach our work as suggesting a
map of several possible avenues for a more effective BJS but not necessarily
a single, unique path with specific tasks to meet a certain budget constraint.
In that regard, we identify research questions and development issues that
necessarily precede a priority-setting agenda. Our panel is not constituted to
perform a full financial audit of BJS—and we do not think such a task is en-
visioned in our charge—but a consequence is that our capacity to completely
rank-order individual data collections and programs based on a cost-benefit
analysis is necessarily limited. We return to these concepts, in particular, in
Chapter 6 and our examination of priority setting in a climate of limited
resources.
The second caveat is a simpler limitation of space: The wide scope of
BJS programs and the magnitude of the task of assessing the whole portfo-
lio preclude us from delving too deeply into the details of any single data
series. Pursuant to BJS’s requests, we provided a book-length treatment of
one series—the NCVS—in our interim report. This report is not intended
as a comprehensive sourcebook in which every BJS data series is granted the
same level of review and analysis as we gave the NCVS; time is too short and
the terrain is too broad for that level of detail on every series. Indeed, some
of the measurement issues we touch on in our review have received extensive
treatment from other National Research Council panels and workshops, in-
cluding data needs in policing and prosecution (National Research Council,
2001b, 2004a) and measurement difficulties concerning the use of firearms
and illegal drugs (National Research Council, 2001a, 2005a). In this report,
OCR for page 23
INTRODUCTION 45
we provide a brief overview of BJS data series, but speak more in terms of
statistical coverage in major theme areas (e.g., law enforcement or adjudica-
tion, generally).
1–D REPORT CONTENTS
We begin our analysis in Chapter 2 by discussing general perspectives
on the justice system on which BJS is tasked to provide statistical measures.
Chapter 3 provides a brief inventory of BJS’s data collections in the broad
topic areas of victimization, law enforcement, corrections, and adjudication.
BJS’s partnership with the states through its SACs, and its grant programs
to state and local governments are outlined in Chapter 4. We describe and
assess BJS’s programs and functions relative to expected principles and prac-
tices of a federal statistical agency in Chapter 5. Chapter 6 articulates a set
of four strategic goals for BJS, and includes summaries of the mapping of
our detailed recommendations and findings to each strategic goal.
OCR for page 23