Stolen property
The Miami Tribe of Oklahoma Criminal History Record Improvement Program
Oregon State Police CRIMEvue Project
Firearms Stolen during Household Burglaries and Other Property Crimes, 2005-2010
Crime in North Dakota, 1998: A Summary of Uniform Crime Report Data
Analysis of Crime in Oregon - January-December, 1982
Indicators of School Crime and Safety, 1998; Executive Summary
Crime in South Dakota 1990
Compendium of State Privacy and Security Legislation: 1997 Overview - Colorado; Colorado Revised Statutes Annotated
Robbery Victims
Crime in South Dakota 1991
Computer Crime - Legislative Resource Manual
State of Arkansas Annual Crime Summary, 1992
Crime on Campus, Annual Report, 1992: A Statistical Summary of Crimes Reported on the Campuses of all Tennessee Institutions of Higher Education
Crime in Arkansas 1988
Criminal Justice Hot Files
Crime in Arkansas, 1997
Property offenses
Burglary—Includes only crimes where the offender committed or attempted a theft.
Trespassing—Includes crimes where the offender did not commit or attempt a theft. Does not include trespassing on land.
Larceny/theft—Includes grand theft, grand larceny, and any other felony theft, including burglary from an automobile, theft of rental property, and mail theft. It does not include motor vehicle theft, receiving or buying stolen property, fraud, forgery, or deceit.
Motor vehicle theft—Includes auto theft, conversion of an automobile, receiving and transferring an automobile, unauthorized use of a vehicle, possession of a stolen vehicle, and larceny or taking of an automobile.
Forgery—Includes forging of a driver's license, official seals, notes, money orders, credit or access cards or names of such cards or any other documents with fraudulent intent, uttering a forged instrument, counterfeiting, and forgery.
Fraud—Includes possession and passing of worthless checks or money orders, possession of false documents or identification, embezzlement, obtaining money by false pretenses, credit card fraud, welfare fraud, Medicare fraud, insurance claim fraud, fraud, swindling, stealing a thing of value by deceit, and larceny by check.
Other property offenses—Includes receiving or buying stolen property, arson, reckless burning, damage to property, criminal mischief, vandalism, criminal trespassing, possession of burglary tools, and unlawful entry for which the interest is unknown.