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Lafiel said:
Aura7541 said:

It's hard for someone who doesn't understand German.

What about Point 7? It appears to be referencing Table 62 from BKA.

Looks like you didn't pay too much attention to the other thread I remember the image posted in then (you were active in that one aswell). I already clarified there that this is not from the BKA and that using crime/100k for populations far below 100k is gravely misleading.

The referenced "table 62" can't be found on the BKA website, but there are hundreds of crime reports on there for 2014 (by different ages/citizenship/income/etc etc tec) - I don't have the time to look through all of that.

Found it for you.

Also, you don't have to look through all of it because I have a legit source here (or here if you prefer your native language). On Page 70, the study shows a table showing the percentage of non-German suspects over the course of time. From 2001 to 2013, that percentage hovered in the mid to low 20s for "Recorded Cases". However, in 2014, that percentage went up to 28.7% and significantly increased to 38.5% in 2015. While much of that has to do with immigration violations, the percentage still went up when excluding violations of migration laws. Before, the percentage appeared to normalize around 20%. However, it increased to 27.6% in 2015. Also, on Page 67, we see that the number of total offenses from Germans have decreased since 2007 and there's a spike from non-Germans from 2014 to 2015.

I do apologize that I didn't catch your clarification, though.