I live in the SF Bay area and I was working in San Francisco doing some electrical work and I was a trader Joe's. I parked behind some tourist and was gathering some of my tools and I heard some glass break. Somebody broke the window of the car in front of me and grabbed and ran. A few seconds later a couple come running out of the trader Joe's looking stunned. I gathered my things called my boss and told him we have to reschedule and left for my next job.
I was doing an installation near the train station (I took the train as parking is $$$ if you can even find it). One of my tool bags took a walk, while I was on the phone with project support.
I spent one night in Memphis at a Hilton property and had my driver's side window smashed and whatever luggage in the car stolen. The staff didn't seemed surprised. They hit 11 cars in the so-called secure parking lot.
Colorado springs has a ton of property crime. I had my catalytic converter stolen while eating at McDonald's at 7am. It was broad daylight with lots of people around.
Those cities are losing residents these days. Also, their law enforcement is more trained and experienced, so criminals seek greener pastures in less protected areas.
@@XenIsWhenOr, those city’s leadership knows that high crime statistics are bad for business, so they simply refuse to document all the crime their experiencing.
@@JustBob-sw4rfI live in NYC and property crime isn't that big here you rarely here about it. Now it's mostly transit crime, slashings and petty theft
Thank you Briggs, for another informative video. I was in Bakersfield about 3 years ago. We were driving back out to the Ocean on vacation, and had stopped to find somewhere to sleep. This place was sketchy at best. The front desk clerk would not meet us at the desk, we had to call her to meet us somewhere. While I was on the phone to her, there were some "long time residents" of the property, checking out our car. I said, "Hell no, we are outta here." I am glad I live in a boring part of the Florida Panhandle, where not much ever happens.
Riverside is a very large city geographically and has many nice parts with low crime. I live nearby in Redlands on the border of mentone and it is virtually crime-free. Very beautiful and quaint area!!
The whole Inland Empire sucks. Everything West of the Morongo Casino to Coast is a hellhole. I got almost got mugged going to UCR back in 2002. Luckly I played rugby and was bigger then the crackhead.
It’s heartbreaking to see San Francisco deteriorate into an overpriced slum. We honeymooned there in the late 1970’s staying in Union Square. It was beautiful. 30 years later we saw it was going downhill - fast. Now, they’re not on our vacation radar.
Got my car broken into 4 times in New York City 4 different neighborhoods cops do nothing about got robbed 3 times 1 at knife point I’m glad I left New York
We live in a nice, quiet, pretty safe city in Ventura County CA. I’ve been pushing my husband about wanting to move to San Francisco. Your videos make me feel I’m making a mistake lol.
As long as you have money, San Francisco is a great place to live. The trick to the City is not to look like you're rich. As long as you keep your wits about you, you'll be fine. Have you thought about living there for a month first to try it out? This summer would be a good time. That way you can try out the fog and drizzle before you commit to it. The West Portal neighborhood is a nice place that isn't very well known. Just remember, San Francisco is built like a big city and the fleas go with the dog. Good luck!
@@LuckyBaldwin777 We’ve talked about renting first to see how we like it before we sell our current home and fully commit. We visit up north often but it’s different when you actually live somewhere right? I grew up in LA so that’s part of the reason I want to go, I miss that big city crazy life. We live in a very quiet suburb right now and we have for the last 20 years so I’m hoping the adjustment to big city life won’t be too bad. I love his videos though, they make me think of stuff I haven’t thought of. Very informative.
Surprised you’re wanting to move out of Ventura County. That area has about the best median weather in the country. If you avoid Oxnard (and maybe parts of Port Hueneme) the crime rate is very low. I lived in Camarillo and miss it but when I retired I had to move to Texas because all six grandkids (and their parents) had to move out of California due to the horrendous cost of living.
@donalddowning4108 some people just get tired of suburbia. Where the houses are too close together to be rural yet too far away from stuff to do to be urban.
Stealing is stealing. No excuse is valid. Plenty of people are poor and barely get by that don't steal from others. All about the morals and ethics they were not taught.
how did austin and san antonio make this list but not houston? i wonder if vehicles dont count as property in the metrics used for this video, seems like tires and catalytic converters get stolen left and right in houston
What's sad is this list is hardly accurate as a lot of property crime goes unreported. Also with police staffing shortages police cant even show up to take a report in a lot of cities. I bet these numbers are much higher.
I went to work at a pharmacy and the regulars came to steal and fight us and I wasn’t ready yesterday. Got hurt. 6 cop cars zero results Oakland Berkeley
Catalytic converter crime got pretty bad here in the Tulsa Oklahoma area a couple years ago. Hopefully it’s gotten better but I know that was a big problem for a while. We had a work vehicle and found out that someone had stolen that from underneath the vehicle
That’s Waco in the opening scene with The Alico building in the background. Heading up Austin ave towards the Brazos. That’s prob why the clip got tagged as “Austin”.
Pretty bad when your State makes up half the list on something like this. Those running California have ruined that State. I grew up north of San Francisco and in San Antonio. I know both deserve to be on this list.
I disagree. What ruined it was the same thing that ruined the rust belt. Sending American jobs, especially high paying union jobs, overseas. The only difference is the tech boom money hid the damage in California. When the boom ended the true damage to California was more apparent. Killing off the middle class benefits the upper class at the expense of the rest of the country. Different political parties can't fix that. Only restoring the middle class will fix that.
If we did cities with high poverty Florida would make up half the list. Every state has something. For all its problems California is still paying the bills of most states.
@@WorldAccordingToBriggs the main issue I have with California is the fact that those committing the crimes when identified are not held accountable for said crimes.
California is the most populous state in the nation. That means that we have more of everything including crime. The rest of California makes up for it.
SF is incredibly beautiful definitely. Absolutely AMAZING in the early 2000s and 2010s. It’s been a bit rough the past couple years (which is expected post-pandemic) but it’s already starting to improve. In a couple years it should be back to FULL beauty. I love SF (my favorite city in the world).
It is a beautiful city, there arent many in the USA like it. It just has a bunch of problems that havent been taken care of correctly for a few years now, theres been sone cleanup fianlly but its going take some time. Wouldnt live there though , way too expensive
@@diodelvino3048 It reminds me SO MUCH of Paris or a town in Portugal/Spain. The hills are amazing, the ocean, the smell of the ocean, the mist/fog that's there in the morning. The culture (skaters, hippies, tech, urban). I would LOVE to own property in SF (apartment building would be dope). That's a dream of mine. I think the positive traits it does have are unusually rare and amazing that there is no way it wont rebound. It has innate traits not found almost anywhere on the planet.
@@RandomRabbit007 i dont doubt it, SF does alot of things that people WISH they had in thier city. People just latched on the hate because its popular to talk about, plus political bs. California FINALLY lost some population after decades and people road that train, funny enough, after losing population for about 3-4 years in a row, San Francisco is gaining population again, people can talk about homeless and the cities problems etc, but the biggest deciding factor is the cost of living for most people.
Property crime is not, by definition, "dangerous." Otherwise, these stats are a little more hazy than for violent crime as they require reporting. I'm guessing most people who have an Amazon package stolen don't report it.
How many people that try to report an Amazon package stolen actually have the report filed? When the people that file the reports have an interest in making crime numbers low, how often do they work against their goal? I'm not blaming the cops. How many people get punished when they get caught stealing?
@@jerrym3261 Not sure about where you live, but here -- and I assume most places -- you are given a filing number and can check whether it was filed. It depends where you live, but in cities, the vast majority of such cases are never lead to charges, why people don't report them in the first place.
@@delroywilson9588 Here most police are very nice and they will explain the reality to you. Unless you need a police report to file an insurance claim, the only person that gets punished by having a report written, is the person that writes the report. The police are overburdened, the courts are overburdened and the jail is overcrowded. Even if they find your stuff, they don't have the manpower to track down owners of most things. By far, most criminals that are caught are not punished beyond going to court with their public defender provided with our tax dollars. Reality bites.
Come on Briggs. I've been to 40 countries and 40 states, and Jacksonville FL takes the cake. Here now working in Jacksonville off Normandy Drive and on Thr dump trailer gets stolen. On Tue Our 7-3 gets stolen right in front of the front door of the hotel... " Butler Ave" Stay tuned for update...
A brief story about stealing food. When I was a kid, a neighbor family came home after being gone all day to find that someone broke into their home, made themselves some eggs and toast and left. To the best of my recollection, they stole nothing beyond that. Just wanted a good breakfast.
Hey Briggs, now you live in the Northwest you should know that it is Skid Road, not Skid Row. The original skid road was in Seattle the road they dragged the logs down to the mills on the waterfront.
I live in Gulfport, MS and my home was burglarized by juvenile delinquents in 2006. My original Game Boy, Game Boy Color, and Game Boy Advance were stolen, along with some of my parents' jewelry. But the most valuable thing we lost was our sense of peace, and our trust in our neighborhood.
I’m glad you have humer Briggs! You’re the best! Lately though I’ve been feeling pretty down, especially with what happened to me yesterday in Berkeley
When I lived in San Francisco our apartment was broken into & we lost a bicycle, some silver flutes & jewelry. Worse, though, was that the burgler took our garbage, made a pile of it on the living room carpet, and put the (useless) deadbolt on top of it all. What a statement! Then my neighbors told me they heard the sound of cracking (the thief had taken a crowbar & had demolished the door jam) but didn't know what it was -- but nobody investigated. Some even saw the guy riding off on my bike & said they thought that was strange. Yeah, sure, and a bit later I discovered that our rent increase was illegal so I got mine rolled back but gee, I forgot to tell the other tenants about it. Then I moved on & left those feckless a-holes behind.
Sir, have you done a video about "most atheist states?" If so, i haven't found it. Just curious, since you did most Christian and most Muslim states. Thank you for your work! ❤🙏
A lot of us in Washington and Oregon stopped reporting break ins because they don’t do anything about it. Im so sick of the government here kissing the criminals asses.
My In-laws live north of Nashville and warned us not to go there at night. We heeded their warnings, but I was looking to go to the restaurants Nashville has.
You should do a video on Georgia drivers. There’s a lot of comedic material there. I moved from Vancouver, WA to the Atlanta area and wow. Wow. Wow. I’ve seen more car fires here in 3 1/2 years than in my entire life prior to moving here. There are bumpers left lying by the roadside everywhere. They’ll just stop and park in the left turn or right turn lane, sometime even in the roadway. Passing in the two way left turn lane, going uphill on a double yellow. I once saw a car crash into a parked car in the freeway that was right in front of the cop car with its flashing lights (freeway sign also warned there was a crash). Stand alone Cross walk lights are routinely mowed down as well as road signs. I’ve seen car sized holes in the freeway sound barrier that were about 12 feet above ground. Saw somebody leave a car sized dumpster in the right turn lane. About 20 minutes later there was a car smashed into to it. That was sad. They’re incredibly agreesive without any driving skills…or cirrical thinking skills.
I'm surprised that were not cities from Missouri, Alabama. Only rich cities from California the majority of them, but makes sense. Honorable mentions Oakland, Emerville, South Tucson 😊😮
In San Francisco, theft from stores like CVS is so common that, unless the value of the stolen property is lowere than a certain amount, the police aren't even notified.
I hope someone commissions a study on why these places are like this. Maybe there are some correlations we can draw to explain this behavior, wouldn't you agree?
Here in Kentucky folks seem to think that Louisville is high crime and Lexington is on the way to being high crime. I hope that is a false impression. Them NOT being on This list gives me hope. Although Covington KY don't have the best reputation, again it NOT being on this list gives me hope that they it might not be to bad.
Can't have high numbers of crime if you don't patrol, if the police won't take a report, or if people get exasperated and not report. Why would they do that? Because the penalty for criminals is lowered or they are simply not prosecuted. Thanks, Los Angeles DA.
Yea, at least it’s not snowing. Cold in other areas, more likely to have worse results if fights happen, like getting hurt in snow and left to die. I want to leave San Francisco but I’m afraid of people and snow
No, Briggs is always happy to report objective facts! On the contrary, you're the one who's upset because you know Socialist Sanctuary California SUCKS!
San Francisco is my hometown; these stats are really saddening. I don't live far from it now but I haven't visited there in at least ten years, and only then because I had to. Well, I have my memories. sigh Surprised about Texas and Tennessee, though. What's going on there?
Cali has always been slightly dangerous. Just dont be dumb and you’ll be fine. We love it here, wouldnt mind AT ALL if less people move here (the population is already going up post-pandemic). Keep hating, we’ll keep winning and having a blast at the same time lol
@@RandomRabbit007I’m also a Californian Trust me we’re not winning at anything 😆 when will you understand when people make fun of us it’s not towards our weather or people but rather towards are worthless government
@@Rommie26 Yeah that's fine, Government is worthless and bloated EVERYWHERE. Think of the type of person that grows-up WANTING to be in politics lol. ALL GOVERNMENT in every state has good ideas and some bad ideas, they VERY often just follow whatever they believe their voters want (or whatever will fund their campaign).
@@Rommie26 Also, as a NATIVE life-long Californian, how often do you even interact with your local Government? LOL .... I know I just keep living my life, doing whatever I want to do whether it's legal or not. My Government RARELY even effects me in any way. Overall, I'd rather live here in beautiful, fun, amazing California than anywhere else.
Austin, Columbus Ohio, Nashville, San Jose, Sacramento, San Antonio, Riverside, Los Angeles, Memphis, San Francisco
I live in the SF Bay area and I was working in San Francisco doing some electrical work and I was a trader Joe's. I parked behind some tourist and was gathering some of my tools and I heard some glass break. Somebody broke the window of the car in front of me and grabbed and ran. A few seconds later a couple come running out of the trader Joe's looking stunned. I gathered my things called my boss and told him we have to reschedule and left for my next job.
I was doing an installation near the train station (I took the train as parking is $$$ if you can even find it). One of my tool bags took a walk, while I was on the phone with project support.
Crapfornia
SF has been know for breaking car windows and taking what they can. Even if it's just for some pocket change. Been like that for decades.
I spent one night in Memphis at a Hilton property and had my driver's side window smashed and whatever luggage in the car stolen. The staff didn't seemed surprised. They hit 11 cars in the so-called secure parking lot.
Living in Muskegon Michigan, a break in is a dream come true here. We fully have the castle law here. Invaders get made into fertilizer.
Oakland didn't make the list because people stopped reporting crime due to long wait times and crime being decriminalized.
It's bad when starting pay was 75k and they still had police quit mid shift.
Colorado springs has a ton of property crime. I had my catalytic converter stolen while eating at McDonald's at 7am. It was broad daylight with lots of people around.
And no saw a thing Not without cameras everywhere
Wow!
depends on where you are but the springs is generally very safe.
daaaamn this was happening in OKC quite a bit too
Strange, you normally don't see conservative cities like Colorado Springs on lists like this. And...I don't see it on this list.
I'm quite surprised that big cities such as New York, Chicago, Miami etc, didn't make the list. California as expected had lots of contestants
Briggs only made this video based on his stats. But every city has all kinds of crimes.
Those cities are losing residents these days. Also, their law enforcement is more trained and experienced, so criminals seek greener pastures in less protected areas.
@@XenIsWhenOr, those city’s leadership knows that high crime statistics are bad for business, so they simply refuse to document all the crime their experiencing.
@@JustBob-sw4rf True. Happens a lot in other countries, too.
@@JustBob-sw4rfI live in NYC and property crime isn't that big here you rarely here about it. Now it's mostly transit crime, slashings and petty theft
Thank you Briggs, for another informative video.
I was in Bakersfield about 3 years ago. We were driving back out to the Ocean on vacation, and had stopped to find somewhere to sleep. This place was sketchy at best. The front desk clerk would not meet us at the desk, we had to call her to meet us somewhere. While I was on the phone to her, there were some "long time residents" of the property, checking out our car. I said, "Hell no, we are outta here."
I am glad I live in a boring part of the Florida Panhandle, where not much ever happens.
Riverside is a very large city geographically and has many nice parts with low crime. I live nearby in Redlands on the border of mentone and it is virtually crime-free. Very beautiful and quaint area!!
The whole Inland Empire sucks. Everything West of the Morongo Casino to Coast is a hellhole. I got almost got mugged going to UCR back in 2002. Luckly I played rugby and was bigger then the crackhead.
@@DT-sb9sv There are some decent spots in Riverside, but most of it should be turned back into desert.
Ahh the inland empire bubble,I grew up there,everyone who lives there can't comprehend that there are freeways that you can drive away from it on
I'm surprised Oakland, CA didn't make the list.
More violent crime vs property crime.
Pushing them into the water also makes it assault.
More like battery but if they can't swim and drown, that's murder.
Whoa hard landing!@@Marci82
Nice drive thru Waco for the beginning of Austin
It’s heartbreaking to see San Francisco deteriorate into an overpriced slum. We honeymooned there in the late 1970’s staying in Union Square. It was beautiful. 30 years later we saw it was going downhill - fast. Now, they’re not on our vacation radar.
Got my car broken into 4 times in New York City 4 different neighborhoods cops do nothing about got robbed 3 times 1 at knife point I’m glad I left New York
😂😂😂
@@Moneyline_Mitch that’s funny to u clownboy
That is a lot of crime incidents to happen to one person. 😮
@@sylviaj270 welcome to Zoo York the real New York not that Times Square Broadway Long Island life
That is amazing that Riverside topped San Bernardino.
There's nothing to steal in San Bernardino.
Remarkable statistics! Thank you for the video.
Our pleasure!
I am surprised Honolulu didn't show up on this list with all the tourists and homeless.
I'm a little surprised Austin got on this list while Houston didn't
Having lived in both, Austin is very safe aside from areas of Cameron, Rundberg, and North Lamar. Houston is bad in pockets all over.
I live in Austin and had 2 bikes stolen in less than a week that were locked up.
Love this channel!
I am legitimately shocked that New Orleans isn't on this list.
Cause they’re not stealing like that
We live in a nice, quiet, pretty safe city in Ventura County CA. I’ve been pushing my husband about wanting to move to San Francisco. Your videos make me feel I’m making a mistake lol.
As long as you have money, San Francisco is a great place to live. The trick to the City is not to look like you're rich. As long as you keep your wits about you, you'll be fine. Have you thought about living there for a month first to try it out? This summer would be a good time. That way you can try out the fog and drizzle before you commit to it. The West Portal neighborhood is a nice place that isn't very well known. Just remember, San Francisco is built like a big city and the fleas go with the dog. Good luck!
@@LuckyBaldwin777 We’ve talked about renting first to see how we like it before we sell our current home and fully commit. We visit up north often but it’s different when you actually live somewhere right? I grew up in LA so that’s part of the reason I want to go, I miss that big city crazy life. We live in a very quiet suburb right now and we have for the last 20 years so I’m hoping the adjustment to big city life won’t be too bad. I love his videos though, they make me think of stuff I haven’t thought of. Very informative.
If you're rich, San Francisco is great! If you're not, it's a terrible to live. I'm not rich, but I was born here. I'm moving out next year.
Surprised you’re wanting to move out of Ventura County. That area has about the best median weather in the country. If you avoid Oxnard (and maybe parts of Port Hueneme) the crime rate is very low. I lived in Camarillo and miss it but when I retired I had to move to Texas because all six grandkids (and their parents) had to move out of California due to the horrendous cost of living.
@donalddowning4108 some people just get tired of suburbia. Where the houses are too close together to be rural yet too far away from stuff to do to be urban.
Your additional Commentary makes this Video super Hilarious 😂😂
Thanks 😅
Stealing is stealing. No excuse is valid. Plenty of people are poor and barely get by that don't steal from others. All about the morals and ethics they were not taught.
how did austin and san antonio make this list but not houston? i wonder if vehicles dont count as property in the metrics used for this video, seems like tires and catalytic converters get stolen left and right in houston
My house and car got break-in in Houston too. Briggs only made this video based on his statistic.
Tacoma,Wa isn't on the list? They are 2nd highest in the country for porch piracy!
I was born in Camden, NJ. Raised in South Jersey. I reside in northern Alabama and I love it here.
Paying for your own health insurance? 😆
San Jose to San Francisco in 45 minutes?! I think not, more like an 1 hour and 15 minutes. There is always traffic on Highway 101.
No traffic I'm sure I could make it 15 minutes....going really really fast down 101.
@@seanmcdirmid
45 miles in 15 minutes? If you drive at 180 mph.
It's 45-minutes on the train.
Oakland cali
Kind of surprised I didn't see Oakland on this list
Also Emeryville
And Richmond
Anywhere there's Blaxx.
What's sad is this list is hardly accurate as a lot of property crime goes unreported. Also with police staffing shortages police cant even show up to take a report in a lot of cities. I bet these numbers are much higher.
Roberry is famous in these places
I love roberry. Tastes a little like snozberry.
Seen a lot of Riverside on Cops
Only Riverside County, never the City of Riverside.
I went to work at a pharmacy and the regulars came to steal and fight us and I wasn’t ready yesterday. Got hurt. 6 cop cars zero results Oakland Berkeley
Catalytic converter crime got pretty bad here in the Tulsa Oklahoma area a couple years ago. Hopefully it’s gotten better but I know that was a big problem for a while. We had a work vehicle and found out that someone had stolen that from underneath the vehicle
Tulsa. I may return to it
That’s Waco in the opening scene with The Alico building in the background. Heading up Austin ave towards the Brazos. That’s prob why the clip got tagged as “Austin”.
San Jose, Sunnyvale, Cupertino,Saratoga,Mountain View, Palo Alto, Millipitas, Fremont is the real Silicon Valley. San Franciso really isn't
Nick and Briggs are Awesome ❤❤❤😮😮😮😊😊😊
Thanks Wanda.
The super rich love them as much as they love you!
i walked the tenderloin for my youtube channel. i know places in Sarasota or bradenton where I live that are scarier
Pretty bad when your State makes up half the list on something like this. Those running California have ruined that State. I grew up north of San Francisco and in San Antonio. I know both deserve to be on this list.
I disagree. What ruined it was the same thing that ruined the rust belt. Sending American jobs, especially high paying union jobs, overseas. The only difference is the tech boom money hid the damage in California. When the boom ended the true damage to California was more apparent. Killing off the middle class benefits the upper class at the expense of the rest of the country. Different political parties can't fix that. Only restoring the middle class will fix that.
If we did cities with high poverty Florida would make up half the list. Every state has something. For all its problems California is still paying the bills of most states.
@@WorldAccordingToBriggs the main issue I have with California is the fact that those committing the crimes when identified are not held accountable for said crimes.
@@StormFanatic210 American incarcerates more people than any other Industrialized country,
The School to prison pipeline is real.
California is the most populous state in the nation. That means that we have more of everything including crime. The rest of California makes up for it.
Not an American, my image of SF is of a city of outstanding beauty. I am sorry the city is suffering. Thank you for the video.
SF is incredibly beautiful definitely. Absolutely AMAZING in the early 2000s and 2010s. It’s been a bit rough the past couple years (which is expected post-pandemic) but it’s already starting to improve. In a couple years it should be back to FULL beauty. I love SF (my favorite city in the world).
It is a beautiful city, there arent many in the USA like it. It just has a bunch of problems that havent been taken care of correctly for a few years now, theres been sone cleanup fianlly but its going take some time. Wouldnt live there though , way too expensive
@@diodelvino3048 It reminds me SO MUCH of Paris or a town in Portugal/Spain. The hills are amazing, the ocean, the smell of the ocean, the mist/fog that's there in the morning. The culture (skaters, hippies, tech, urban). I would LOVE to own property in SF (apartment building would be dope). That's a dream of mine. I think the positive traits it does have are unusually rare and amazing that there is no way it wont rebound. It has innate traits not found almost anywhere on the planet.
@@RandomRabbit007 i dont doubt it, SF does alot of things that people WISH they had in thier city. People just latched on the hate because its popular to talk about, plus political bs. California FINALLY lost some population after decades and people road that train, funny enough, after losing population for about 3-4 years in a row, San Francisco is gaining population again, people can talk about homeless and the cities problems etc, but the biggest deciding factor is the cost of living for most people.
Oh, man Briggs....that drone footage while you're raggin' on Riverside was freakin hilarious!
I know that it is taboo but I would like to hear what ethnicity is committing the crimes.
What would you do with that information? Even from a policing perspective, what would this change?
@@coldjay6421 program the surveillance cameras betta.
@@coldjay6421Why does the FBI track it then? Also why are Latinos and Arabs crime added to White demographics crime by the FBI? 🤔
i have had a few AI channels steal my videos as well. people send me the links like hey jose, this seams like they ripped your content
I get a few of those emails a week. I sucks
Property crime is not, by definition, "dangerous." Otherwise, these stats are a little more hazy than for violent crime as they require reporting. I'm guessing most people who have an Amazon package stolen don't report it.
How many people that try to report an Amazon package stolen actually have the report filed? When the people that file the reports have an interest in making crime numbers low, how often do they work against their goal? I'm not blaming the cops. How many people get punished when they get caught stealing?
@@jerrym3261 Not sure about where you live, but here -- and I assume most places -- you are given a filing number and can check whether it was filed. It depends where you live, but in cities, the vast majority of such cases are never lead to charges, why people don't report them in the first place.
@@delroywilson9588 Here most police are very nice and they will explain the reality to you. Unless you need a police report to file an insurance claim, the only person that gets punished by having a report written, is the person that writes the report. The police are overburdened, the courts are overburdened and the jail is overcrowded. Even if they find your stuff, they don't have the manpower to track down owners of most things. By far, most criminals that are caught are not punished beyond going to court with their public defender provided with our tax dollars. Reality bites.
Good video, Briggs. Minor correction: San Jose is in the heart of Silicon Valley, all or most of which is in northern Santa Clara County.
Come on Briggs. I've been to 40 countries and 40 states, and Jacksonville FL takes the cake. Here now working in Jacksonville off Normandy Drive and on Thr dump trailer gets stolen. On Tue Our 7-3 gets stolen right in front of the front door of the hotel... " Butler Ave" Stay tuned for update...
I can't believe New Orleans isn't on the list.
A brief story about stealing food. When I was a kid, a neighbor family came home after being gone all day to find that someone broke into their home, made themselves some eggs and toast and left. To the best of my recollection, they stole nothing beyond that. Just wanted a good breakfast.
Wow, Detroit didn’t make a suck list😂
Drove through San Antonio and looked like a place that I would like. Would love to see the River walk.
I can see why there would be no homeless seen in Venice. You would be in danger of getting flooded if you slept at street level.
I had an opportunity to live in San Jose California boy am I glad I did not go😮
Good decision. San Jose is the evil end of the bay.
I thought Oakland would be on this list. San Francisco is almost the same thing though.
What's the racial crime stats per capita
Hey Briggs, now you live in the Northwest you should know that it is Skid Road, not Skid Row. The original skid road was in Seattle the road they dragged the logs down to the mills on the waterfront.
You are amazing!
You are!
I’m from SC but live in Beaverton and appreciate your inside view on all things west coast. 👍🏼
I'm absolutely shocked Milwaukee was not Top 5.
Is it bad in that area?
It’s 6:00am somewhere!
I live in Gulfport, MS and my home was burglarized by juvenile delinquents in 2006. My original Game Boy, Game Boy Color, and Game Boy Advance were stolen, along with some of my parents' jewelry. But the most valuable thing we lost was our sense of peace, and our trust in our neighborhood.
Omg...I love your humor in this 😂
I’m glad you have humer Briggs! You’re the best! Lately though I’ve been feeling pretty down, especially with what happened to me yesterday in Berkeley
When I lived in San Francisco our apartment was broken into & we lost a bicycle, some silver flutes & jewelry. Worse, though, was that the burgler took our garbage, made a pile of it on the living room carpet, and put the (useless) deadbolt on top of it all. What a statement! Then my neighbors told me they heard the sound of cracking (the thief had taken a crowbar & had demolished the door jam) but didn't know what it was -- but nobody investigated. Some even saw the guy riding off on my bike & said they thought that was strange. Yeah, sure, and a bit later I discovered that our rent increase was illegal so I got mine rolled back but gee, I forgot to tell the other tenants about it. Then I moved on & left those feckless a-holes behind.
Well done
I've never seen skid row but I have a couple of their albums.
Can you do the worst states for property crime next please? Like can you do it tomorrow? Im not saying you have to
"But when she bent over,
Rover took over,"
Go see George Carlin for the rest of the nursery rhyme.
Come on, Chicago, New York are not in this list. Take San Antonio and Austin out and place Chicago and New York as two and one. Love your channel.
New York is one of the safest large cities in America.
Leave New York out of this...
Sir, have you done a video about "most atheist states?" If so, i haven't found it. Just curious, since you did most Christian and most Muslim states. Thank you for your work! ❤🙏
@15:25 Mark Rober channel actually discovered a major buying stolen goods location in San Francisco
A lot of us in Washington and Oregon stopped reporting break ins because they don’t do anything about it. Im so sick of the government here kissing the criminals asses.
Invade my home , make my day.
Ikr! Insert maniacal laugh 😂😂😂
Exactly😂
My In-laws live north of Nashville and warned us not to go there at night. We heeded their warnings, but I was looking to go to the restaurants Nashville has.
You should do a video on Georgia drivers. There’s a lot of comedic material there. I moved from Vancouver, WA to the Atlanta area and wow. Wow. Wow. I’ve seen more car fires here in 3 1/2 years than in my entire life prior to moving here. There are bumpers left lying by the roadside everywhere. They’ll just stop and park in the left turn or right turn lane, sometime even in the roadway. Passing in the two way left turn lane, going uphill on a double yellow. I once saw a car crash into a parked car in the freeway that was right in front of the cop car with its flashing lights (freeway sign also warned there was a crash). Stand alone Cross walk lights are routinely mowed down as well as road signs. I’ve seen car sized holes in the freeway sound barrier that were about 12 feet above ground. Saw somebody leave a car sized dumpster in the right turn lane. About 20 minutes later there was a car smashed into to it. That was sad. They’re incredibly agreesive without any driving skills…or cirrical thinking skills.
Atlanta is like that. It's a major city with a lot of transplants. Hardly, anyone there is a native unless they live miles outside the city
I'm surprised that were not cities from Missouri, Alabama. Only rich cities from California the majority of them, but makes sense. Honorable mentions Oakland, Emerville, South Tucson 😊😮
In San Francisco, theft from stores like CVS is so common that, unless the value of the stolen property is lowere than a certain amount, the police aren't even notified.
San Jose: hell, yeah!
I hope someone commissions a study on why these places are like this.
Maybe there are some correlations we can draw to explain this behavior, wouldn't you agree?
Surprised Louisiana wasn't on this list for once 😂
I cant believe new york shitty didnt come in the top 3 !
Here in Kentucky folks seem to think that Louisville is high crime and Lexington is on the way to being high crime. I hope that is a false impression. Them NOT being on This list gives me hope. Although Covington KY don't have the best reputation, again it NOT being on this list gives me hope that they it might not be to bad.
Im in Nashville and im NOT feeling what Your saying. Maybe im lucky, but thats decades of luck!
Do you hang out downtown, and knbthe tourist areas?
The Santa Ana river flows mostly below ground.
Way to represent Ca!!!! Just imagine having that governor running the country.
Newsome is a crook.
They say he will be the replacement for Biden.
@12:55 Memphis glass breaking nearly missed the entire state of Tennessee
San Jose, California is “The Capital of Silicon Valley.”
Lots of black people is a much more practical gauge than the unemployment level
Can't have high numbers of crime if you don't patrol, if the police won't take a report, or if people get exasperated and not report.
Why would they do that? Because the penalty for criminals is lowered or they are simply not prosecuted.
Thanks, Los Angeles DA.
Memphis, big shock😂😂😂😂😂
i live in columbus, it doesn’t surprise me. couch burning is a big thing here
And so it begins. Austin shows up on a negative list. Goodby friends, it's been a good ride. 😆
Sacramento: Ugh, yes. Lived there too long, too many years, and had my car stolen once.
Yea, at least it’s not snowing. Cold in other areas, more likely to have worse results if fights happen, like
getting hurt in snow and left to die. I want to leave San Francisco but I’m afraid of people and snow
Now do the top ten most dangerous cities for property thieves
Briggs must be upset... No Mississippi on this list!
No, Briggs is always happy to report objective facts! On the contrary, you're the one who's upset because you know Socialist Sanctuary California SUCKS!
MO'BS in Austin for sure.............
San Francisco is my hometown; these stats are really saddening. I don't live far from it now but I haven't visited there in at least ten years, and only then because I had to. Well, I have my memories. sigh
Surprised about Texas and Tennessee, though. What's going on there?
Columbus is surprising, cause its not a very violent city. But maybe i shouldnt be surprised with all the meth and tranq bs going on in Ohio.
California must be so proud 👍 you deserve what you voted for 🗳️
Cali has always been slightly dangerous. Just dont be dumb and you’ll be fine. We love it here, wouldnt mind AT ALL if less people move here (the population is already going up post-pandemic). Keep hating, we’ll keep winning and having a blast at the same time lol
@@RandomRabbit007I’m also a Californian
Trust me we’re not winning at anything 😆 when will you understand when people make fun of us it’s not towards our weather or people but rather towards are worthless government
Red states have more violence
You got what you voted for😅😅😅😅
@@Rommie26 Yeah that's fine, Government is worthless and bloated EVERYWHERE. Think of the type of person that grows-up WANTING to be in politics lol. ALL GOVERNMENT in every state has good ideas and some bad ideas, they VERY often just follow whatever they believe their voters want (or whatever will fund their campaign).
@@Rommie26 Also, as a NATIVE life-long Californian, how often do you even interact with your local Government? LOL .... I know I just keep living my life, doing whatever I want to do whether it's legal or not. My Government RARELY even effects me in any way. Overall, I'd rather live here in beautiful, fun, amazing California than anywhere else.
How is Atlanta, GA not on this list…?
Manchester UK
I'm surprised Seattle didn't make the list. Or did they not meet a population threshold?