Geoff Forester / Concord Monitor
A state commission on police reform last year unveiled widespread inconsistency in what data New Hampshire police collect, on whom and in what circumstances.
Members of the Commission on Law Enforcement Accountability, Community and Transparency emphasized the need for more standardized, transparent record keeping of police interactions at all levels including race and gender data for arrests, stops and citations.
But a little-known site maintained by the New Hampshire Department of Safety already makes demographic data for arrests and other crime statistics available to the public.
The state Department of Safety collects and publishes information from law enforcement agencies each year as part of a national crime data reporting program run by FBI. The site, maintained by the Justice Information Bureau’s Uniform Crime Reporting unit, allows users to sort through the data, perform basic number-crunching and analysis, and create tables and cha
State crime data shows New Hampshire police disproportionately arrest people of color
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