Aggravated assault is defined as an unlawful attack by one person upon
another wherein the offender uses a
weapon or displays it in a threatening
manner, or the victim suffers obvious
severe or aggravated bodily injury
involving apparent broken bones, loss of
teeth, possible internal injury, severe
laceration, or loss of consciousness.
This also includes assault with disease. Utah's aggravated assault rate in 2005 was 143 per 100,000, a 0.1% increase over 2004. Since its peak in 1996, Utah's aggravated assault rate had been generally been decreasing. The rate in 2001 was the lowest since 1976, although the 2005 rate was marginally higher than the 2001 rate.
Over the past 40 years, Utah's aggravated assault rate has paralleled the national rate. Utah's decreasing rate was outpacing national decreases. This broadened the gap between these rates. |