The line graph shows the age of people and the number of crimes, while the pie chart illustrates the percentages of four different types of crimes in the UK in the last years.
Overall, it is clear that in the line graph, the highest number of crimes was concentrated during the young age group, while in the pie chart, the biggest proportion of crimes was violent, and the lowest was public order.
The line graph demonstrates that for the first years until age 8, the number of crimes was consistently at 0. From ages 8 to 12, there was a slight rise in crime to approximately 50,000. Additionally, the number of young criminals at age 12 significantly increased to 70,000 and steadily rose to 80,000 by age 20.
A dramatic decrease in the number of crimes occurred between ages 22-28, dropping to 20,000, and the crime rate continued to decline from around 50,000 at age 60.
The pie chart represents the largest percentage of crimes as violent crimes at 46%, while the smallest was public order crimes at 9%. Similarly, crimes against property accounted for 23% and drug offenses for 22%, with a 1% difference.
