County crime profile · 2024
Aurora County, SD
FBI UCR crime statistics for Aurora County in South Dakota, drawn from county-level agency submissions.
- 5
- Violent offenses
- 6
- Property offenses
- 11
- Total · 2024
How safe is Aurora County, SD? FBI UCR data snapshot
Aurora County, SD reported 5 violent crimes and 6 property crimes in 2024, according to the FBI Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) Program. Total offenses across both Part I crime categories reached 11 for the reporting year, drawing on agency-level submissions from county law enforcement jurisdictions. Within the violent crime total, aggravated assault accounted for 5 incidents, robbery 0, murder 0, and rape 0, the four Part I violent offense categories tracked by the FBI.
Property crime in Aurora County breaks down across burglary (3 incidents), larceny-theft (2), and motor vehicle theft (1) for 2024; the FBI UCR Program tracks arson (0) as a separate offense category, so it is not included in the property crime total above. Larceny-theft represents roughly 33% of combined burglary, larceny, and motor vehicle theft reports, a pattern consistent with national property-crime distributions. County-level UCR figures reflect offenses reported by agencies operating within Aurora County's geographic boundaries and do not include population-denominated per-capita rates, since FBI Table 10 aggregates county totals without resident counts.
Readers comparing Aurora County with other South Dakota jurisdictions should review the state-level crime page, which presents city and county figures side-by-side along with statewide rates benchmarked per 100,000 residents. Property offenses dominate the county crime mix here, consistent with national patterns where property crime runs several times higher than violent crime. All figures above are drawn directly from FBI UCR 2024 submissions; reporting completeness varies by agency and may change in later FBI revisions.
County figures aggregate the FBI Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) submissions of every law enforcement agency operating within the county, municipal police departments, the sheriff's office, and any campus or transit forces that report separately. Because participation in UCR is voluntary, coverage varies from one county to the next: a county where nearly every agency reports looks more complete than one where several do not, even when actual crime levels are similar. Rates are normalized per 100,000 residents so that densely and sparsely populated counties can be compared on the same footing. Keep one thing in mind, a county total blends very different communities. A quiet suburb and a struggling small city can fall inside the same county line, so a county-wide rate rarely describes any single neighborhood within it.
Based on 5 reported violent incidents in a population of 2,747. At this volume, one additional or one fewer report can shift the per-100K rate noticeably; small-county crime counts are inherently more volatile year to year than large-county counts, so treat any rate or rank derived from it as a data point, not a precise measurement.
Crime Breakdown (2024)
| Category | Count |
|---|---|
| Violent Crime | 5 |
| Murder | 0 |
| Rape | 0 |
| Robbery | 0 |
| Aggravated Assault | 5 |
| Property Crime | 6 |
| Burglary | 3 |
| Larceny-Theft | 2 |
| Motor Vehicle Theft | 1 |
| Arson | 0 |
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Source: FBI Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) Program, Crime in the United States (CIUS) Table 10.
County data reflects offenses reported by county law enforcement agencies. Population data is not available for county-level reports; where referenced, population estimates derive from the U.S. Census Bureau. Statewide comparisons draw on the state UCR program. Verify with FBI.gov UCR and Census.gov QuickFacts.
Read our methodology , how this data is sourced, computed, and verified.
Every figure on PlainCrime is rendered directly from FBI Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) source data, no number is typed in by an editor. This page draws directly on FBI Uniform Crime Reporting source data, no figure is typed in by an editor. See our editorial standards & corrections policy, the methodology behind these numbers, or report a data error.