Crime in the world today affects everyone. People all over the world handle different things from other people and opinions differ on classification methods. In the United States, crime is divided into three levels. Depending on the severity of the crime it may be one of these three crimes. At the highest level crime is deemed a "felony", in the middle it is called "military crime" and at the lowest level it is called "violation". Some people have different views on the impact of crime against society and may be biased by individuals; of these, three are directly related to crime.
The data in "American Crime" reflects the "level rule", and it is required to cover only the most serious crime among multiple crimes. The descending order of UCR's violent crime is murder and non-criminal robbery, rape, robbery and serious attack, followed by asset crime such as robbery, theft and car theft. Arson is a property crime, but grading rules do not apply to arson. If arson occurs simultaneously with other violent or property crimes, arson or other criminal activity will be reported.
For reporting purposes, criminal offenses fall into two broad categories. The first part of the violation and the second part of the Department of Justice and FBI. In the first part of the crime there are two categories: violent crime and property crime. Severe attacks, rape, murder and robbery were classified as violence, arson, robbery, theft and car theft were classified as property crimes. The first part of this crime is collectively called an index crime and this crime is considered to be very serious and is used to be reported more reliably than other crimes and is often reported directly to the police I will. In Part 2, the following categories are tracked: Simple attack, curfew and wandering, corruption, counterfeiting and counterfeiting, illegal behavior, affected driving, drug crime, fraud, gambling, alcohol breach, illegal act, prostitution, popular drinking, runaway, sexual crime, theft, vandalism , Wandering, weapons crime