Optimizing Security Spend:

The Balance Between Prosecution and Deterrence

If you could improve performance by 1%, where is the bigger payoff: catching more criminals, or deterring them from committing crimes?

Physical security tactics generally fall into one of two buckets: Prosecution (including identifying and catching criminals) and Deterrence (preventing the crime from happening in the first place).

While it’s good that organizations typically utilize both tactics1, budget allocation between the two often isn’t data-driven. Instead, these investments tend to be a reaction to noise — funnelling resources where the most visible activity is happening.

This calculator is designed to help you cut through that noise. It calculates the marginal utility of each tactic for your organization, specifically the financial benefit of a 1% Improvement in Prosecution versus a 1% Improvement in Deterrence.

Inputs

These metrics can vary widely based on the industry, region, and type of crime. There can also be significant outliers that affect the average. Edit the inputs to best reflect your current situation.

Default values are illustrative only and may not reflect your organization's experience.

Can be calculated by dividing all incident costs (direct and indirect) by the number of incidents in that year.

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$

Provide an estimate based on the types of criminals your organization would investigate (e.g. many organizations would not investigate a first time offense).

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The percentage of the value of stolen or damaged goods that are recovered when the offender is caught, if any. The recovery rate for stolen property (excluding vehicles) averages 10–15% per FBI Uniform Crime Reporting data.

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%

Prosecution Funnel

The stages required to successfully catch and prosecute criminals.

Default values are illustrative only and may not reflect your organization's experience.

The percentage of incidents where the property owner can identify the individual responsible. Impacted by camera placement, lighting conditions, visibility of identifiable characteristics, existence of suspect in the system, and other factors. 15% assumption based on practitioner interviews and experience.

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%

The percentage of positive IDs that result in a formal case opened by law enforcement. Impacted by loss value, availability of police resources, and prior record of the suspect. 15% assumption based on practitioner interviews and experience.

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%

The percentage of cases that lead to an arrest. Impacted by the quality of evidence for a warrant, ability to locate a suspect, jurisdiction, offense type, and local arrest policies (e.g., non-priority offense categories, cite-and-release). Warrant-closure-via-arrest rates range widely (7% to 89%).

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%

The percentage of the value of stolen or damaged goods that are recovered when the offender is caught, if any. The recovery rate for stolen property (excluding vehicles) averages 10–15% per FBI Uniform Crime Reporting data.

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%

Illustrative Result

This is based on the inputs you provided.

Based on the inputs entered, this model suggests that a 1% improvement to deterrence could yield an estimated

212.8%

better return than an equivalent improvement in prosecution.

Actual results will vary based on your specific circumstances.

Calculated Benefits

These figures are based on the inputs you provided.

1% Improvement
to Deterrence

Deterrence theory suggests that criminal behavior is less likely when the perceived cost of acting exceeds the perceived benefits. This is influenced by the type of crime (premeditated vs. opportunistic), time of day, historical police response, target hardness, environmental cues, prior offender experience, and more. Individual deployments (visible infrastructure, two-way voice-down, rapid response, etc.) have reported reductions ranging from 40%  up to 100%2 in specific circumstances; results vary significantly by environment and implementation.

These figures are illustrative estimates based on the assumptions you entered and do not represent guaranteed savings or returns.

Additional Crimes Deterred

1,000

Estimated 1-Year Benefit

$1,000,000

1% Improvement
to Prosecution

Prosecution is successful when an organization gets a positive ID on a suspect, their case is accepted by law enforcement, law enforcement arrests the culprit, and the culprit is convicted. In practice, organizations typically only pursue costly repeat offenders.

These figures are illustrative estimates based on the assumptions you entered and do not represent guaranteed savings or returns.

Additional Criminals Convicted

2.7

Additional Crimes Prevented

318.6

Additional Recovered Value

$1,125

Estimated 1-Year Benefit

$1,125