The Time to Rob: Variations in Time of Number of Commercial Robberies

This article reports a study on daily, weekly, and seasonal variations of the number of commercial robberies perpetrated in the Netherlands during the period 1988 to 1994. Results show that daily and weekly peaks depend on the kind of premises targeted. These peaks are explained by robbers' expectations of the amount of money available at the robbery target. The number of robberies in winter is distinctly higher than in summer, explained by the increased number of dark hours during the day. The explanation of changes in the number of robberies during the day, the week, and the year is straightforward: availability of suitable targets and adequate guardianship. The study shows that there is no reason to seek more complicated and less elegant explanations for daily, weekly, and seasonal variations, like cash flow in commercial targets, the cost of living during the winter, bad weather, or changes in the unemployment rate.

[1]  Gerhard J. Falk,et al.  The Influence of the Seasons on the Crime Rate , 1952 .

[2]  P. Bell,et al.  Aggression and heat: mediating effects of prior provocation and exposure to an aggressive model. , 1975, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[3]  P. Bell,et al.  Aggression and heat: the influence of ambient temperature, negative affect, and a cooling drink on physical aggression. , 1976, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[4]  C A Anderson,et al.  Ambient temperature and the occurrence of collective violence: a new analysis. , 1979, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[5]  Lawrence E. Cohen,et al.  Social Change and Crime Rate Trends: A Routine Activity Approach , 1979 .

[6]  H S Feldman,et al.  Factors influencing criminal behavior in Newark: a local study in forensic psychiatry. , 1979, Journal of forensic sciences.

[7]  David T. Herbert,et al.  The Geography of Urban Crime , 1982 .

[8]  J. Briere,et al.  Summer in the city: urban weather conditions and psychiatric emergency-room visits. , 1983, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[9]  C W Warren,et al.  Seasonal variation in suicide and homicide: a question of consistency , 1983, Journal of Biosocial Science.

[10]  R. Michael,et al.  Annual rhythms in human violence and sexual aggression in the United States and the role of temperature. , 1983, Social biology.

[11]  J. Defronzo Climate and Crime , 1984 .

[12]  Keith D. Harries,et al.  Seasonality and Assault: Explorations in Inter‐Neighborhood Variation, Dallas 1980 , 1984 .

[13]  Patricia L. Brantingham,et al.  Patterns in Crime , 1984 .

[14]  C. Anderson,et al.  Ambient temperature and violent crime: tests of the linear and curvilinear hypotheses. , 1984, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[15]  J. Rotton,et al.  Air pollution, weather, and violent crimes: concomitant time-series analysis of archival data. , 1985, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[16]  R. Clarke,et al.  Modeling Offenders' Decisions: A Framework for Research and Policy , 1985, Crime and Justice.

[17]  John L. Cotton,et al.  Ambient Temperature and Violent Crime1 , 1986 .

[18]  Marcus Felson,et al.  ROUTINE ACTIVITIES AND CRIME PREVENTION IN THE DEVELOPINGMETROPOLIS , 1987 .

[19]  C. Anderson,et al.  Temperature and aggression: effects on quarterly, yearly, and city rates of violent and nonviolent crime. , 1987, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[20]  D. Cheatwood IS THERE A SEASON FOR HOMICIDE , 1988 .

[21]  Steven P. Lab,et al.  Climatological conditions and crime: The forecast is…? , 1988 .

[22]  R. Rumbaut,et al.  AIDS, FRAIDS, and Quarantine: Student Responses to Pro‐Quarantine Initiatives in California , 1989 .

[23]  Heat and Violence in the Dallas Field Data: Linearity, Curvilinearity, and Heteroscedasticity1 , 1989 .

[24]  D. Herbert,et al.  The Geography of Crime , 1989 .

[25]  C. Anderson Temperature and aggression: ubiquitous effects of heat on occurrence of human violence. , 1989, Psychological bulletin.

[26]  James L. Lebeau,et al.  Changes in calls for police service with changes in routine activities and the arrival and passage of weather fronts , 1990 .

[27]  Glenn D. Walters,et al.  The Criminal Lifestyle: Patterns of Serious Criminal Conduct , 1990 .

[28]  S. Field Trends in Crime and Their Interpretation: A Study of Recorded Crime in Post War England and Wales , 1990 .

[29]  J. Katz The Motivation of the Persistent Robber , 1991, Crime and Justice.

[30]  S. Field THE EFFECT OF TEMPERATURE ON CRIME , 1992 .

[31]  Mary Zey-Ferrell,et al.  Decision making : alternatives to rational choice models , 1992 .

[32]  Ellen G. Cohn,et al.  THE PREDICTION OF POLICE CALLS FOR SERVICE: THE INFLUENCE OF WEATHER AND TEMPORAL VARIABLES ON RAPE AND DOMESTIC VIOLENCE , 1993 .

[33]  Daniel Fridman,et al.  The Seasonality of Violent Crime: The Case of Robbery and Homicide in Israel , 1993 .

[34]  Prestige, professie en wanhoop : Een onderzoek onder gedetineerde overvallers , 1993 .

[35]  Abraham N. Tennenbaum,et al.  Temporal regularities in homicide: Cycles, seasons, and autoregression , 1994 .

[36]  Aldert Vrij,et al.  Aggression of police officers as a function of temperature: An experiment with the fire arms training system , 1994 .

[37]  Graham Farrell,et al.  CRIM SEASONALITY: Domestic Disputes and Residential Burglary in Merseyside 1988–90 , 1994 .

[38]  James L. LeBeau,et al.  THE OSCILLATION OF POLICE CALLS TO DOMESTIC DISPUTES WITH TIME AND THE TEMPERATURE HUMIDITY INDEX , 1994 .

[39]  Derral Cheatwood,et al.  The effects of weather on homicide , 1995 .

[40]  Commercial robberies: the business community as a target in The Netherlands , 1995 .

[41]  Crime Takes a Holiday in Milan , 1996 .

[42]  Peter J. van Koppen,et al.  Portraying Perpetrators; The Validity of Offender Descriptions by Witnesses , 1997 .

[43]  Ellen G. Cohn,et al.  Assault as a function of time and temperature : A moderator-variable time-series analysis , 1997 .

[44]  Book Review: Armed Robbery: A study in London , 1998 .

[45]  C. Anderson Heat and Violence , 2001 .