U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government, Department of Justice.

NCJRS Virtual Library

The Virtual Library houses over 235,000 criminal justice resources, including all known OJP works.
Click here to search the NCJRS Virtual Library

An Evaluation of Compstat's Effect on Crime: The Fort Worth Experience

NCJ Number
253669
Journal
Police Quarterly Volume: 13 Issue: 4 Dated: 2010 Pages: 387-412
Author(s)
Hyunseok Jang; Larry T. Hoover; Hee-Jong Joo
Date Published
2010
Length
26 pages
Annotation

This study examined the effectiveness of Compstat as implemented by the Fort Worth (Texas) Police Department (FWPD). 

Abstract

Compstat as a policing strategy became popular following the significant crime reduction in New York City during the 1990s. As an innovative management strategy in policing, Compstat attracted considerable attention from scholars and police practitioners. Despite its popularity, little empirical research has scientifically evaluated the effectiveness of the Compstat strategy. In addition, few studies have concentrated on Compstat strategies implemented during the 2000s outside New York City. The current study of Compstat's use of monthly time-series arrest and crime data by the FWPD over a multiyear period examined whether Compstat engendered a significant increase in "broken windows" arrests (minor nuisance offenses) and, using multivariate time-series analysis, the role of the Compstat strategy in explaining changes in violent, property, and total index crimes. Findings indicate that the implementation of Compstat significantly increased some types of "broken windows" arrests in the FWPD while others decreased. Analysis indicated significant decreases in property and total index crime rates after controlling for rival factors, but failed to show a significant change in violent crime rates. If the Fort Worth strategic approach to Compstat were to be described with a single word, it would be focusing. The Queensland study of Compstat also reported using a problem-oriented intervention modelfocusingin lieu of a "broken windows" approach (Mazerolle, Rombouts, & McBroom, 2007). Property crime was significantly reduced in both settings. Parallel findings from two differently constituted Compstat programs on two different continents provide evidence that the primary component of the Compstat model is focusing, not "broken windows" enforcement, and the primary impact is on property crime. (publisher abstract modified)