Arizona Daily Star Crime Map

Each day Tucson police officers handle more than 1,000 calls for service. They catch burglars. They check on the welfare of elderly neighbors. This map shows reported crimes associated with those calls, updated about 8:00 every morning with the previous day's crime. We want you to see it now so you can be informed and avoid becoming a victim.

Date Range

Crime Types

Assault
Homicide
Rape
Robbery
Arson
Burglary
Theft/Larceny
Vandalism
Vehicle Break-In/Theft
Disorderly Conduct
Drugs/Alcohol
DUI
Fraud
Sex Crimes
Suspicious Activity
Weapons

Last Updated: Fri May 25 07:54:30 -0700 2012

To report a crime in Tucson, call 911.

To report information that may solve a crime, call 88-CRIME or submit a tip online at 88crime.org. You may remain anonymous.

We've categorized crimes in three broad areas: violent crime, property crime and other crime. Click on the colored icons that mark the crime site to bring up details on each crime. To see how police define some of the more serious crimes, see this list. http://tpdinternet.tucsonaz.gov/Stats/ucr_class_list.pdf

This map only shows crimes inside the city of Tucson. It doesn't include crimes handled by the Pima County Sheriff's Department or by the South Tucson, University of Arizona, Oro Valley or Marana police departments. In Pima County only Tucson Police Department has made this public information so accessible for daily updates. TPD did so at the urging of neighborhood leaders, including former TPD crime analyst Don Ijams.

We've excluded such calls as fender benders, suicides or police transports of the mentally ill to hospitals so that the map focuses on crime. Police actually respond to many more calls than shown here.

Where more than one crime occurred in the same incident, this map reflects the most serious crime. Because the info is so fresh it may change as police verify what happened or classify incidents in new categories.

Crime locations are approximate. This database does not display specific addresses. A location that is listed as a street intersection, for example, means the crime may have occurred at the intersection or near it. A specific street address is shown as the hundred block.

Source: Tucson Police Department calls-for-service data. Recent data have not been verified.