Crime_in_Western_Australia

Crime in Western Australia

Crime in Western Australia

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Crime in Western Australia is tackled by the Western Australia Police and the Western Australian legal system.

History

Massacres of indigenous Australians

A number of massacres of Aboriginal Australians, some as part of the frontier wars, occurred from the 1830s until well into the 20th century. Few of the perpetrators were ever brought to justice.

Bushrangers

The colony had its share of bushrangers in the 19th century, the most well-known of whom was "Moondyne Joe".

Death Penalty

Capital punishment in Western Australia was formally removed from the statutes of the state with the passage of the Acts Amendment (Abolition of Capital Punishment) Act 1984. Premier Brian Burke later called this his "proudest achievement".[1]

Western Australia was the second last state in which capital punishment was legal.

Crime statistics

2003-2004

Western Australia recorded lower rates than most other states in Australia for violent offences, but had the highest rate of burglary. In 2003 the prison population increased by 3.4% with a similar increase in 2004.[2]

2007–2008

84 homicides, 3,903 sexual assaults, 22,708 assaults and 1,849 robberies were recorded, with a total of 33,890 offences against the person.

39,482 incidents of burglary and 82,963 incidents of theft were recorded, with a total of 177,846 offences against property.[3]

2008–2009

The chance of being a victim of physical assault was 3.8%. In comparison, the Northern Territory rated 5.7% and New South Wales, South Australia and the Australian Capital Territory each rated 2.8%. The rate of assault was 2,199 offenders per 100,000 people, compared with the Northern Territory's 4,832 and the Australian Capital Territory's 1,096.[4]

The chance of being a victim of a break-in in Western Australia was 5.1%. This compared to the Northern Territory's 7.7% and Tasmania's rate of 2.6%.[5]

68 homicides, 3,753 sexual assaults, 22,869 assaults and 1,862 robberies were recorded, with a total of 34,492 offences against the person. 36,364 incidents of burglary and 86,487 incidents of theft were recorded, in a total of 169,263 offences against property.[6]

2009–2010

Australian Bureau of Statistics figures for 2009/10 showed that police action was taken against 2072.1 people per 100,000 head of population in WA.[7]

The chance of being a victim of break-in was 5.2%.[8]

76 homicides, 3,246 sexual assaults, 22,394 assaults and 1,70293 robberies were recorded in Western Australia, in a total of 32,922 offences against the person. 30,043 incidents of burglary, 73,215 incidents of theft were recorded in a total of 143,844 offences against property.[9]

2010–2011

The chance of being a victim of physical assault was 3.6%. This compared to the Northern Territory rate of 5.8% and the lowest, Victoria's, rate of 2.0%.[10]

The chance of being a victim of break-in was 3.7%, a significant drop from the previous two years. The highest-rating Northern Territory scored 6.8% and the lowest, Victoria, 2.2%.[8]

103 homicides, 2,900 sexual assaults, 22,854 assaults and 1,793 robberies were recorded in a total of 32,479 offences against the person. 35,555 incidents of burglary and 77,897 incidents of theft were recorded in a total of 152,649 offences against property.[11]

2011–2012

91 homicides, 2,645 sexual assaults, 22,818 assaults and 1,777 robberies were recorded in a total of 32,091 offences against the person. 36,551 incidents of burglary and 85,541 incidents of theft were recorded in a total of 160,445 offences against property.[12]

2013-2014

Police statistics showed 86 homicides, 3,645 sexual assaults, 16,236 violent assaults, and 106 robberies.[13]

2014-2015

Police recorded 88 homicides, 3,159 sexual assaults, 27,664 domestic and non-domestic assaults, and 1,359 robberies.[13]

2015-2016

3,946 sexual assaults, 33,348 assaults and 135 robberies.[14]

Indigenous imprisonment rates

A leading researcher in prison reform, Gerry Georgatos, said in 2014 that one in thirteen of all Aboriginal adult males in WA is in prison. He stated that this is the highest jailing rate in the world, with WA "...the highest jailer from a racialised lens of our Aboriginal people".[15]

See also


References

  1. O'Connor, Andrew (30 May 2015). "Cabinet papers released: Abolition of death penalty 'greatest achievement', former premier Brian Burke says". ABC News. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  2. La Canna, Xavier (24 February 2011). "Women increasingly target of police action". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  3. "Household Crime Summary". Australian Bureau of Statistics. 20 February 2012. Archived from the original on 4 January 2013. Retrieved 17 January 2013.
  4. "Personal Crime Summary". Australian Bureau of Statistics. 20 February 2012. Archived from the original on 4 January 2013. Retrieved 17 January 2013.
  5. "Monthly verified crime statistics 2011/12". Western Australia Police. 24 September 2012. Retrieved 17 January 2013.
  6. "Monthly and annual crime statistics". Western Australia Police. Archived from the original on 26 October 2016. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  7. Georgatos, Gerry. "Aboriginal deaths in custody bring focus to disturbing rate of imprisonment". ABC (Interview). 7:30 with Leigh Sales. Interviewed by Bronwyn Herbert. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 10 October 2019.

Further reading


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