Open crime data helps communities make informed judgements about public safety, as well as providing transparency into how local police power is being exercised. For U.S. City Open Data Census purposes, crime report data should include at a minimum the following elements: date, time, location, incident type, and narrative information — best would be exact date, location, and type of crime, but per day per street or postal/zip code are acceptable for Census purposes. (More info)
Question | Answer | Comment |
---|---|---|
Openly licensed | Yes | |
Available in bulk | Yes | |
Up-to-date | Yes | |
Available free online | Yes | |
Available free of charge | Yes | |
In an open format | CSV, RDF, TSV, XML | |
findable | 4 | First Google result for "los angeles crime data" |
findable_steps | I went to https://data.lacity.org and searched "crime" | |
licence_url | https://data.lacity.org/A-Safe-City/Crime-Data-from-201 | Scroll down to the License section of the metadata |
Collected by government | Yes | |
usability | 3 | |
collector_name | Los Angeles Police Department | |
characteristics | Date and time, Location (may be coordinates or addresses; addresses may be at the block level, such as “5XX Main Street”), Incident type, Narrative information | It's unclear what counts as "narrative information," but the data has a crime description, victim information, premise description, and weapon description |
location | href="https://data.lacity.org/A-Safe-City/Crime-Data-from-2010-to-Present/y8tr-7khq" https://data.lacity.org/A-Safe-City/Crime-Data-from-201">rel="nofollow">https://data.lacity.org/A-Safe-City/Crime-Data-from-201 - City of LA Open Data Portal |