Enter Group B Arrest
Data
Arrestee data are to be reported for all persons apprehended for the commission
of Group B crimes. Listings of the Group B offenses, along with their
definitions can be found in the Group B UCR
Offense Codes Link .
It must be remembered that the object of this data set is to collect data on
persons arrested, not on charges lodged.
The arrestee data to be reported describe the arrestee (e.g., his/her age, sex,
race, etc.) and the circumstances of the arrest. Data are to be recorded
for each of the (up to 99) arrestees involved in each incident. If
there were no arrestees, no report is
required.
Record arrest data on all persons processed by arrest, citation, or summons
for committing an offense within the
reporting jurisdiction. Include:
1. Those persons arrested and
released without a formal charge being placed against them. (An
arrest occurred when a law enforcement officer detains an adult with the
intention of seeking charges against the person for a specific offense(s) and a
record is made of the detention.)
2. Juveniles taken into custody or arrested but merely warned and released
without being charged.
Data on persons taken into custody for other jurisdictions should not be
reported by the arresting agency. The agency for whom the arrest was made,
i.e., the jurisdiction where the offense occurred, will report the arrestee
data, and thus, duplication in reporting will be avoided. Most agencies
will, of course, maintain a separate record of such arrests for administrative
use.
Group B Arrest
Reports
Because of the different natures of Group A and Group B offenses, not all
details required for Group A Incident Reports are requested for Group B Arrest
Reports. ONLY arrestee data is required
for Group B crimes. Hence ONLY the designated information in this Help
Page, along with the appropriate ORI (Enter
Incident Data Link ), relate to Group B Arrest Reports. No other
information needs supplied for Group B offenses. Indications of whether
information is to be submitted for Group B
offenses:
Arrestee (Sequence)
Number (Group B)
Each arrestee reported in a Group B Incident Report is to be assigned a
sequence number from 01 to 99. A separate Group B Arrest Report is to
be supplied for each person arrested for a Group B
offense.
Example: If two persons were arrested for a commission of
a robbery, one arrestee would be numbered "01" and the other
"02".
Arrest (Transaction)
Number (Groups B)
This number is assigned by your agency to an arrest report to identify it
uniquely. It may be the Incident Number relating to the arrest or a
separate arrest transaction number. It is assigned by the reporting agency
and is used solely to identify the arrest and link it with other reports.
The number may be up to 12 characters in length. For Group B offenses,
data about two or more arrestees can be reported under the same Arrest
Transaction Number. The PA-IBR will use the "sequence number" above to
uniquely identify the arrestees.
Arrest Date
(Group B)
The month, day, and year (MM/DD/CCYY) the arrest took place is to be
reported.
Example: If an arrest was made on July 23, 1999, the
report would be "07/23/1999".
Type of Arrest
(Group B)
Describe the type of apprehension (at the time of initial contact with the
arrestee) by selecting one of the following:
On-View Arrest - taken into custody without a warrant or
previous incident report
Summoned/Cited - not taken into custody
Taken into
Custody -
based on warrant and/or previously submitted incident
report
Example (1); A female was arrested without a
warrant while in the act of soliciting for prostitution on a street
corner. The report would be "On View Arrest".
Example (2): A man was summoned to appear in
court. The report would be "Summoned/Cited".
Example (3): A suspect was taken into custody as a result
of a complaint being filed, an investigation being conducted, and a warrant
being issued. The report should be "Taken into
Custody".
Arrest Offense Code
(Group B)
The three-digit NIBRS UCR Offense Code of the offense for which the arrestee was
apprehended is to be reported. There are 11 possible codes, as the
perpetrator may have been arrested for the 11 Group B crime
categories. See Group B UCR
Offenses Link for a listing of the NIBRS UCR Offense
Codes.
Usually there is only one crime classification involved in an arrest. If
the arrestee was apprehended for more than one offense, the reporting agency is
to determine which was the most serious offense and report it as the arrest
offense. In the UCR Download Area the NIBRS Statute Cross-Reference Link will assist as a general guide in
determining whether the arrest offense is a Group B offense. A Group
B offense code can be recorded even for Group A Incident Reports, as long as the
Group B offense was in the view of the reporting agency the most serious
arrest offense. Remember, any arrest (regardless of arrest offense
reported) made in connection with a Group A Incident will result in
its clearance.
Example (1): A perpetrator was arrested for both robbery
and murder. The code for Murder and Nonnegligent Manslaughter, "09A",
should be reported as the arrest offense.
Example (2): An arrest was made for Driving Under the
Influence (DUI), a Group B offense. It was subsequently determined that
the arrestee was wanted for a previously reported robbery. The arrest data
would be reported in connection with the Group A Incident Report, relating to
the robbery, but the arrest offense code would be "09D" or DUI. No Group B
Arrest Report would be required.
Arrestee Was Armed With
(Group B)
Indicate whether the arrestee was armed with a commonly known weapon at the time
of his/her apprehension. Up to two weapons can be
reported.
If
the weapon was an automatic firearm an "automatic" is to be appended to the
weapon type. An "automatic firearm" is defined as any firearm that shoots,
or is designed to shoot, more than one shot at a time by a single pull of the
trigger without manual reloading.
Up
to two of the following weapon types can be recorded:
Unarmed
Firearm - type
unknown
Handgun
Rifle
Shotgun
Other
Firearm - type
known, but not covered by allowed categories, e.g., Machine
gun
Lethal Cutting Instrument - e.g., switchblade
knife
Club/Blackjack/Brass Knuckles
Example
(1):
When apprehended, an arrestee had in his possession a 357-magnum handgun and a
penknife. The handgun should be reported. Because the small
pocketknife is not generally considered to be a "weapon", it does not qualify
for reporting.
Example (2): A suspect resisted arrest using a liquor
bottle and a chair as weapons before being subdued. The report should
be "Unarmed". Although the arrestee used items as weapons, they were not
commonly known weapons.
Example (3): If the arrestee was armed with an automatic
assault rifle when apprehended, the report would be "Automatic
Rifle".
Age of Arrestee
(Group B)
The age of the arrestee is to be reported either as an exact number of years, a
range of years, or an unknown. Record one of the
following:
01 to 98 Years Old - Report the exact
age
99 - Over 98 Years Old
00 - Unknown
Example (1): If the arrestee was 23 years old, report
"23".
If
the exact age of the arrestee is unknown, an age range can be reported.
Any range of years is acceptable.
Example (2): An arrestee refused to give his date of
birth but appeared to be 35 to 40 years old. A valid report would be "35
to 40" years old.
Sex of Arrestee
(Group B)
The sex of the arrestee is to be indicated:
Male
Female
"Unknown" cannot be reported for sex of the arrestee.
Race of Arrestee
(Group B)
Use only one of the following to indicate the race of the
arrestee:
White - A person having origins in any of the original
peoples of Europe, North Africa, or the Middle East.
Black - A person having origins in any of the black racial
groups of Africa.
American Indian or Alaskan Native - A person having origins in
any of the original peoples of North America and who maintain Culture
identification through tribal affiliation or community
recognition.
Asian or Pacific Islander - A person having origins in any
of the original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, the India subcontinent,
or the Pacific Islands. This area includes, for example, China, India,
Japan, Korea, the Philippine Islands, and Samoa.
Ethnicity of Arrestee
(Group B)
For
each arrestee, the ethnic origin is to be recorded as one of the
following:
Hispanic
Origin - A
person of Mexican, Puerto Rican, Cuban, Central or South American, or other
Spanish culture or origin, regardless of race.
Not of Hispanic Origin
Unknown
Example: If the victim was Cuban, report "Hispanic
Origin".
Note: The racial and ethnic origin categories used in the
UCR program were adopted from the Statistical Policy Handbook published
by the Office of Federal Statistical Policy and Standards, U.S. Department of
Commerce.
Resident Status of Arrestee
(Group B)
Record whether the arrestee was a resident or nonresident of the locality where
the crime occurred. A resident is a person who maintains his/her permanent
home for legal purposes in the locality (i.e., town, city, or community) where
the crime took place. Federal, state, and county law enforcement agencies
should base their determinations of residency on the town, city, or community
where the crime occurred rather than their broader geographical
jurisdictions.
The allowed categories are:
Resident
Nonresident
Unknown
Example
(1): The
crime occurred in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and the arrestee maintained legal
residence in the city. The report would be
"Resident".
Example (2): An offense took place in
Harrisburg, but the arrestee maintained a legal residence in
Philadelphia, report "Nonresident".
Disposition of Arrestee Under 18
(Group B)
The information to be
reported in this category relates to law enforcement disposition of juveniles
(age 17 or younger only) who are taken into custody or arrested. An adult
is usually held for prosecution for some charge or is released for future
handling in court. However, a juvenile, depending on the seriousness of
the offense and the offender's criminal record, may be warned by the police and
released to parents, relatives, friends, or guardians. Juveniles may also
be referred to the probation department or some other branch of the juvenile
court; to welfare agencies; to other law enforcement agencies; or in the case of
serious offenders, to criminal or adult court by waiver of juvenile
court.
The word "arrest" as it applies to juveniles is intended to mean the law
enforcement handling of all juveniles (under age 18) who have committed a crime
and are taken into custody under such circumstances that, if the juvenile were
an adult, an arrest would have been reported. Police "contacts" with
juveniles where no offense has been committed and instances wherein juveniles
are taken into custody for their own protection should not be recorded as
arrests.
One of the following is to be reported only for arrestees less than 18 years of
age:
Handled Within Department - e.g., released to parents; released
with warning
Referred to Other Authorities - e.g., turned over to juvenile
court, probation department, welfare agency, other police agency, criminal or
adult court
Example (1): The arrestee, age 13, who is taken into
custody for vandalizing a school, is released to his parents with a
warning. The report would be "Handled Within
Department".
Example (2): The arrestee, age 17, who is arrested for
murder to be tried as an adult. The report would be "Referred to Other
Authorities".
Juvenile Arrest
Reporting
For purposes of Uniform Crime Reporting, a juvenile should be counted as
"arrested" when the circumstances are such that if he or she were an adult, an
arrest would be reported. Juvenile arrests should be reported under the
classification of the offense for which they were taken into custody. For
example, if a juvenile is arrested for committing an offense of larceny, the
arrest offense should be reported as Larceny/Theft, even though the technical
charge is "juvenile delinquency". Arrests should not be reported in cases
of:
1. Police "contacts" with juveniles where no offense was
committed.
2. Juveniles taken into custody for their own protection but no crime was
committed (e.g., neglect cases).
Two of the Group B offenses are Curfew/Loitering/Vagrancy Violations and
Runaway. Except for these two offenses, violations of local juvenile acts
should be included in the All Other Offenses classification. Not only
should "arrests" in the usual sense be included, but any situation where a young
person, in lieu of an actual arrest, is summoned, cited or notified to appear
before a juvenile or youth court or similar authority for a violation of the law
should likewise be reported as an arrest.
It
must be emphasized that only violations by young persons where some police or
official action is taken beyond a mere interview, warning, or admonishment
should be reported. For example, children playing ball in the street who
are instructed by an officer to go to the playground for such activity would not
be counted as "arrested" any more than would an adult who is only warned against
burning leaves on a windy day. Do not include those situations where young
persons have committed no violation but are taken into custody because their
welfare is endangered. "Callbacks" or "Followup Contacts" with young
offenders by officers for the purpose of determining their progress should not
be counted as "arrests". It is useful to understand that statistics are
being gathered to measure law enforcement problems, not juvenile court
activity.
In a
situation where juvenile records are not readily available because they are kept
in a juvenile bureau, youth bureau, or other specific office, statistical
compilation problems involving juveniles can normally be resolved in one of the
following ways:
1. The "arrest" report (or copy) can be routed, by juvenile or youth
offices, through the main records operation to allow for retrieval of the
necessary information.
2. A statistical slip showing the required NIBRS information but not the
name can be routed to the employee who prepares NIBRS arrestee
reports.
Add
Button
After entering the data for the Group B Arrest Screen, click on the "Add"
button. The data you entered will be displayed on a recap line, under the
data entry area.
Change
Link
Notice
that the "Group B Arrest" data is displayed as per PA-IBR
guidelines. This recap area provides a review area for Group B Arrest
Screen data, and the ability to change or delete the data entered. If
during review, it is discovered that erroneous data was entered for a Group B
Arrest data, click the "Change" link in the Action column. The line
will move from the recap area back to the data entry area, where the data can be
corrected.
Save Button
After correction, click the "Save" button, and the data will move
back to the recap area.
Remove Link
To
delete a line from the recap area, select the line by clicking on "Remove" link
in the "Action" column next to the Group B Arrest data to delete.
OK Button
You will be presented with a confirmation screen. Click the "OK"
button to proceed with the delete.
Cancel Button
The
"Cancel" button to stop the delete process. The data will be removed from
the recap area.
Need Help Link
At any
time during the data input, Help for the completion of Group B Arrest
Screen is available by clicking on the "Need Help?" link on the
bottom of the page.
Save Submission
Link
Clicking
on the "Save Submission " link will save all data entered up to that
point, in the event you are not able to complete entering all data for the
current month's Group B Arrest Report in one session.
Continue
Link
Clicking the
"Continue" link will signal the system that you have completed entering
Group B Arrest data. The system will verify the data that has been
entered, and return any errors for correction before moving to the next
screen.
Group B NIBRS Offense
Codes
There are 11 Group B Offense
categories and they encompass all of the crimes that are not Group A offenses,
with the exception of most traffic offenses. Only arrestee data (or Group
B Arrest Reports) are reported fro Group B crimes. The three-digit codes
shown on the following listing are to be used for identifying NIBRS Group B
offenses in Group B Arrest Reports. The codes are unique to NIBRS but were
derived from the four-digit National Crime Information Center (NCIC) Uniform
Offense Classification Codes in order to facilitate interrelating offense data
between the NCIC and UCR systems.
NIBRS Group B
offense Definitions
1.
Bad Checks - 90A Crime Against
Property
Definition - Knowingly and intentionally writing and/or negotiating checks drawn
against insufficient or nonexistent funds.
2. Curfew/Loitering/Vagrancy Violations -
90B Crime Against Society
Definition - The violation of a court order, regulation, ordinance, or law
requiring the withdrawal of persons from the street or other specified areas;
prohibiting persons from remaining in the area or place in an idle or aimless
manner; or prohibiting persons from going from place to place without visible
means of support.
3. Disorderly Conduct - 90C Crime Against
Society
Definition - Any behavior that tends to disturb the public peace or decorum,
scandalizes the community, or shocks the public sense of
morality.
4. Driving Under the Influence - 90D Crime
Against Society
Definition - Driving or operating a motor vehicle or common carrier while
mentally or physically impaired as the result of consuming alcoholic beverage or
using a drug or narcotic.
5. Drunkenness - 90E Crime Against
Society
Definition: To drink alcoholic
beverages to the extent that one's mental faculties and physical coordination
are substantially impaired.
6. Family Offenses, Nonviolent - 90F Crime
Against Society
Definition - Unlawful, nonviolent acts by a family member (or legal guardian)
which threaten the physical, mental, or economic well-being or morals of another
family member and which are not classified as other offenses, such as Assault,
Incest, Statutory Rape, etc.
7. Liquor Law Violations - 90G Crimes
Against Society
Definition - The violation of laws or ordinances prohibiting the manufacture,
sale, purchase, transportation, possession, or use of alcoholic
beverages.
8. Peeping Tom - 90H Crimes Against
Society
Definition: To secretly look
through a window, doorway, keyhole, or other aperture for the purpose of
voyeurism.
9. Runaway - 90I Not a
Crime
Definition - A person under 18 years of age who has left home without permission
of his/her parent(s) or legal guardian.
10. Trespass of Real Property - 90J Crime
against Property
Definition - To unlawfully enter land, a dwelling, or other real
property.
11. All Other Offenses - 90Z Crimes Against
persons, Property and Society
Definition - All crimes that are not Group A offenses and not included in one of
the specifically named Group B crime categories list
above.