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The Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) program compiles official data on crime in the United States, published by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). UCR is "a nationwide, cooperative statistical effort of nearly 18,000 city, university and college, county, state, tribal, and federal law enforcement agencies voluntarily reporting data on crimes brought to their attention".
As of October 31, 2020, 8,742 law enforcement agencies representing 48.9 percent of the population were reporting NIBRS data to the UCR program. At that time, 43 states were NIBRS-certified as having records management systems that meet the FBI's requirement for collecting crime data according to established technical specifications.
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youtube-dl is a free and open source software tool for downloading video and audio from YouTube [3] and over 1,000 other video hosting websites. [4] It is released under the Unlicense software license. [5] As of September 2021, youtube-dl is one of the most starred projects on GitHub, with over 100,000 stars. [6]
This category is for specific tangible items that are, or were at one time, considered to be lost. Pages in this category should be moved to subcategories where applicable. This category may require frequent maintenance to avoid becoming too large.
UCR may refer to: Unclassified county road, an obsolete term for a green lane (road) in England and Wales; Under color removal in printing; Unified Cornish Revised, a variety of the Cornish language; Uniform Crime Reports; Union centriste et républicaine (Centrist and Republican Union), group of the French senate
In criminal and property law, theft by finding occurs when someone chances upon an object which seems abandoned and takes possession of the object, but fails to take steps to establish whether the object is genuinely abandoned and not merely lost or unattended before taking it for themselves. [1]
History's Lost and Found is a television show from the History Channel that debuted as a three part series in December 1998. [1] It first aired as a weekly series on August 7, 1999. Each episode is divided into different segments concerning a different "lost" item or artifact from history. Most of the time, the segments do not relate.