You’re more likely to get murdered in San Angelo than in Austin, Fort Worth or Arlington, the latest crime statistics from the Texas Department of Public Safety show.
The statistics, culled from law enforcement agencies statewide on an annual basis, reveal the numbers and rates of crimes including murder, robbery, assault, burglary, theft and auto theft.
All of the rates are calculated based on population, broken down by the number of incidents in each category per 100,000 residents. In 2014, Tom Green County’s total murder rate was 4.3, which exceeded the rate in all of Tarrant County (4.1) and all of Travis County (2.8) for the same year. Tarrant County includes Fort Worth, Arlington and a number of smaller communities in between, while Travis County encompasses Austin and its outliers, such as Round Rock and Pflugerville.
Tom Green’s rate has hovered between 4.3 and 4.4 since 2012, taking a giant leap over 2010’s rate of 1.8. That rate is still far behind Ector County (Odessa), which reported a murder rate of 10.9 in 2014, far exceeding every major metroplex in the state.
To form a basis for comparison, we measured the rates in 10 Texas counties across all categories. Those counties include: Tom Green, Bexar (San Antonio), Dallas, Ector, Harris (Houston), Lubbock, Midland, Tarrant, Taylor (Abilene) and Travis.
Tom Green faired well with regard to the other nine counties in robberies, falling far behind all others at a rate of 32.5. That rate, however, is a big jump over the year prior, when the reported rate was 26.2. Robberies had been on the decline since 2010 (49.8), but leapt up again in 2014. The worst of those we measured was Harris County, whose rate is 316.1. Midland’s rate was closest to San Angelo at 45.9.
Also on the rise in Tom Green County is the rate of aggravated assault, which in 2014 equated to 213 incidents per 100,000 residents. The rate has been fluctuating over the past few years, lowering a few points and then leaping 15-20. In 2014 the rate increased by 16 incidents, and you were more likely to get assaulted in Tom Green County than in Dallas (197.8). Ector County was again alarmingly high at 743.7
The most shocking of the statistics, however, showed in the rate of San Angelo burglaries (814.4), which exceed Odessa’s rate (725.7) by a fairly large margin. In fact, San Angelo’s rate is so high it beat every major metroplex in the state, falling only behind Taylor and Lubbock counties for the highest burglary rate. Tom Green’s burglary rate spiked significantly from 2013 to 2014, increasing by nearly 20 points from 705.6 in 2013 and 754.2 in 2012.
Despite the extremely high rate of burglaries in Tom Green County, the rate of theft incidents has dropped quite a bit, down to 2,492.9 in 2014 from 2,578.3 in 2013. The rate is still well above Dallas, Tarrant and Midland counties. Auto thefts, by comparison, have risen steadily since 2012, but is only higher than Tarrant County.
Below are the statistics from the DPS report for 2014. Rates are calculated by incidents per 100,000 residents. Numbers from 2010-2014 for Tom Green County have been added for reference.
County | Murder | Rape | Robbery | Assault | Burglary | Larceny | Auto Theft |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tom Green (San Angelo) | |||||||
# of Offenses 2014 | 5 | N/A | 38 | 249 | 952 | 2,914 | 257 |
Rate per 100k 2014 | 4.3 | N/A | 32.5 | 213 | 814.4 | 2,492.90 | 219.9 |
Percent Cleared 2014 | 60 | N/A | 35 | 49 | 18 | 28 | 45 |
# of Offenses 2013 | 5 | 53 | 30 | 215 | 809 | 2,956 | 191 |
Rate per 100k 2013 | 4.4 | 46.2 | 26.2 | 187.5 | 705.6 | 2,578.30 | 166.6 |
Percent Cleared 2013 | 80 | 50 | 57 | 73 | 21 | 28 | 45 |
# of Offenses 2012 | 5 | 57 | 39 | 217 | 856 | 2,831 | 144 |
Rate per 100k 2012 | 4.4 | 50 | 34.4 | 191.2 | 754.2 | 2,494.30 | 126.9 |
# of Offenses 2011 | 0 | 48 | 45 | 194 | 883 | 2,871 | 148 |
Rate per 100k 2011 | 0 | 42.6 | 40 | 172.4 | 784.6 | 2,551 | 131.5 |
# of Offenses 2010 | 2 | 58 | 54 | 188 | 1,123 | 2,235 | 166 |
Rate per 100k 2010 | 1.8 | 53.5 | 49.8 | 173.3 | 1,035.30 | 2,060.40 | 153 |
Bexar (San Antonio) | |||||||
Item | Murder | Rape | Robbery | Assault | Burglary | Larceny | Auto Theft |
# of Offenses 2014 | 116 | N/A | 1,913 | 5,192 | 14,867 | 65,883 | 7,876 |
Rate per 100k 2014 | 6.2 | N/A | 103 | 279.4 | 800.2 | 3,546 | 423.9 |
Percent Cleared 2014 | 74 | N/A | 21 | 33 | 8 | 15 | 6 |
Dallas | |||||||
Item | Murder | Rape | Robbery | Assault | Burglary | Larceny | Auto Theft |
# of Offenses 2014 | 146 | N/A | 5,151 | 5,514 | 19,479 | 57,585 | 11,247 |
Rate per 100k 2014 | 5.2 | N/A | 184.8 | 197.8 | 698.9 | 2,066.20 | 403.5 |
Percent Cleared 2014 | 61 | N/A | 23 | 58 | 9 | 19 | 9 |
Ector (Odessa) | |||||||
Item | Murder | Rape | Robbery | Assault | Burglary | Larceny | Auto Theft |
# of Offenses 2014 | 17 | N/A | 168 | 1,158 | 1,130 | 4,179 | 736 |
Rate per 100k 2014 | 10.9 | N/A | 107.9 | 743.7 | 725.7 | 2,683.90 | 472.7 |
Percent Cleared 2014 | 53 | N/A | 22 | 45 | 5 | 16 | 12 |
Harris (Houston) | |||||||
Item | Murder | Rape | Robbery | Assault | Burglary | Larceny | Auto Theft |
# of Offenses 2014 | 325 | N/A | 14,084 | 16,396 | 36,199 | 111,673 | 22,540 |
Rate per 100k 2014 | 7.3 | N/A | 316.1 | 368 | 812.5 | 2,506.60 | 505.9 |
Percent Cleared 2014 | 70 | N/A | 14 | 39 | 6 | 14 | 5 |
Lubbock | |||||||
Item | Murder | Rape | Robbery | Assault | Burglary | Larceny | Auto Theft |
# of Offenses 2014 | 13 | N/A | 343 | 1,724 | 2,549 | 8,504 | 841 |
Rate per 100k 2014 | 4.4 | N/A | 117 | 588.3 | 869.8 | 2,901.80 | 287 |
Percent Cleared 2014 | 70 | N/A | 23 | 40 | 9 | 23 | 18 |
Midland | |||||||
Item | Murder | Rape | Robbery | Assault | Burglary | Larceny | Auto Theft |
# of Offenses 2014 | 8 | N/A | 71 | 377 | 807 | 2,908 | 287 |
Rate per 100k 2014 | 5.2 | N/A | 45.9 | 244 | 522.3 | 1,882 | 185.7 |
Percent Cleared 2014 | 63 | N/A | 27 | 62 | 14 | 23 | 21 |
Tarrant (Fort Worth) | |||||||
Item | Murder | Rape | Robbery | Assault | Burglary | Larceny | Auto Theft |
# of Offenses 2014 | 78 | N/A | 1,927 | 4,704 | 12,462 | 45,785 | 4,158 |
Rate per 100k 2014 | 4.1 | N/A | 101.5 | 247.9 | 656.7 | 2,412.70 | 219.1 |
Percent Cleared 2014 | 67 | N/A | 30 | 51 | 11 | 25 | 15 |
Taylor (Abilene) | |||||||
Item | Murder | Rape | Robbery | Assault | Burglary | Larceny | Auto Theft |
# of Offenses 2014 | 7 | N/A | 133 | 382 | 1,250 | 4,115 | 376 |
Rate per 100k 2014 | 5 | N/A | 94.1 | 270.3 | 884.6 | 2,912.20 | 266.1 |
Percent Cleared 2014 | 100 | N/A | 44 | 66 | 11 | 23 | 16 |
Travis (Austin) | |||||||
County | Murder | Rape | Robbery | Assault | Burglary | Larceny | Auto Theft |
# of Offenses 2014 | 34 | N/A | 947 | 2,648 | 6,972 | 34,267 | 2,534 |
Rate per 100k 2014 | 2.8 | N/A | 78.6 | 219.6 | 578.3 | 2,842.40 | 210.2 |
Percent Cleared 2014 | 65 | N/A | 33 | 65 | 12 | 17 | 17 |
Comments
Considering how many murders we have already had in 2015, we are on track to be king of the crime heap next year!! Go San Angelo! Wow...
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PermalinkEveryone accused me of being a crazy distraught mother. HIME invasions/robberies in country club estates?. Knock, knock. I guess I wasn't so crazy after all. The sad part is I knew. I wasn't in denial and even sold my paid for home to get my daughter out of there. And yet I paid the ultimate price.
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PermalinkYou can get a better comparison of Austin to San Angelo (versus the counties) if you check city-data.com and compare the actual cities.
http://www.city-data.com/city/San-Angelo-Texas.html
http://www.city-data.com/city/Austin-Texas.html
As far as a general crime index goes, San Angelo was above the national average per capita for years 2001-2010. We were below the national average in 2011 and 2013. Austin hasn't dipped below the national average at all, over the same period.
There are no numbers for 2014/2015 yet.
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PermalinkSan Angelo/TGC has 4 or 5 murders a year, no matter how you slice it. Any deviation from that number is going to make the percentages look wonky, especially if you compare it to the low numbers from 2010-11. The rate per 100,000 works the same way. I wouldn't have assumed that SA was the safest place in the state based on 0 homicides in 2011. With all the drug trafficking and gang activity in San Angelo I'm surprised it's not higher. The only way to make a true comparison is to take like-sized cities, with similar demographics, breaking down race, income, unemployment, poverty, etc...I'm only marginally safer in TGC than somewhere like Dallas because I know the parts of Dallas county to avoid. Houston proper, even in comparison to other parts of Harris county, is a toilet. Regardless of the current rate per 100,000, give me San Angelo and its 0-5 homicides per year over most cities in Texas our size and larger.
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PermalinkI am from a small California city called Modesto. There are triple murders often, executions, and don't forget Lacy Peterson. But the gangs there are like the ms13 persuasion. I feel safer here, but I worry most about being killed by what I would consider the most dangerous drivers I have ever seen in a small city.
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PermalinkThe murder rate in san angelo is about average for a city this size better than some worse than others . The problem is what do you do with the criminals after they murder some one . A person with a few bucks in his pocket and a good lawyer can beat almost any rap in san angelo . It's all about who you are and who you murder .
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