Mapping LA Neighborhoods
    MAPPING L.A. > Central L.A.

    Elysian Valley

    Latest complete week May 16–May 22

    0 violent
    crimes
    0 property
    crimes
    0.0 crimes
    per 10,000 people
    • In the seven days between May 16 and May 22, violent crime reports were about average and property crime reports dipped.
    • Over the last three months, Elysian Valley averaged 0.2 violent crimes and 1.8 property crimes per week.
    • The neighborhood has gone nine consecutive days without a violent crime report.
    • This week's rate of 0.0 crimes per 10,000 people is lower than in nearby Lincoln Heights, Glassell Park, Echo Park, Elysian Park, Atwater Village, Silver Lake and Cypress Park.
    • A 2008 population estimate of 7,781 from the L.A. Department of City Planning is used to calculate per-capita totals.
    • No crimes have been reported for the last week.

    Six-month summary

    11 violent
    crimes
    44 property
    crimes
    70.7 crimes
    per 10,000 people

    Neighborhood Rank Crimes Per 10,000 people

    Violent crimes: 98/209
    Elysian Valley
    Click to see the complete ranking
    Property crimes: 183/209
    Elysian Valley
    Click to see the complete ranking

    Crime types

    Violent crimes (11)
    Property crimes (44)

    Monthly totals Adjusted to 30 days

    • All crimes Violent crimes Property crimes
    — 500 — 0

    Weekly totals

    • All crimes Violent crimes Property crimes

    Police agency

    • Elysian Valley is covered by one police jurisdiction.
    Jurisdiction Department Address Phone
    Northeast L.A.P.D. 3353 San Fernando Rd. 213-485-2563

    Elysian Valley

    is a neighborhood in the city of Los Angeles in the Central L.A. region of Los Angeles County.
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    About This Project
    Elysian Valley is one of the 272 neighborhoods in Mapping L.A., The Times’ resource for crime, neighborhoods, demographics and schools.
    Developers can republish the data on other sites using the Mapping L.A. API.
    About The Data Desk

    This page was created by the Data Desk, a team of reporters and Web developers in downtown L.A.