Michigan State Police — Statistics & Reports (by county & city/township reporting agency). You might also try looking at specific cities and jurisdictions (scroll down for links to county and city governments).
Federal Bureau of Investigation Reports & Publications. Search by topic and year. Also links to the Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) Program
FBI Crime Data Explorer. Stats from nearly 12,000 law enforcement agencies across the country and territories.
U. S. Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics
List of statistical sources on crime and prisons from the University of Michigan (some links may be available only for UM).
USA.gov search for crime statistics Michigan (you can, of course, substitute any state name). This search engine only searches government sites (federal, state, local, tribal, military) and is a great place to start for statistics.
Campus Safety and Security. From the Office of Postsecondary Education, find recent (last year and earlier) crime statistics for NMU as well as other schools in the U.S. using their Campus Safety and Security Data Analysis Cutting Tool Website. Select one of five types of data reports from the categories displayed on the main page.
NMU Public Safety Activity Log. Northern Michigan University Police Department (NMU PD) is required to maintain a public log of all crimes and fires reported to the department. The log is required to have the most recent 60 days worth of information. Each entry in the log must contain the nature, date, time, and general location of each crime and disposition of the complaint if known. Information in the log older than 60 days must be made available within two business days.
CityProtect.com. Formerly CrimeReports, this resource is an online mapping and analysis service provided by Public Engines Inc., headquartered in Salt Lake City, Utah. CityProtect.com combines the value of law enforcement data with the ease of use of Google-based mapping and an analytics module so that members of the public can view police data in a high-impact map or summary descriptive format. Members of the public may also sign up to receive free email alerts based on user-defined parameters (e.g., geography, crime types, frequency, etc.). You might notice that not all jurisdictions participate--it's up to the agency to participate in this website.
U.S. Crisis Monitor. Data on political violence, demonstrations, and strategic developments in the United States.
Be careful when you land on any internet story, really, that talks about statistics but doesn't cite the source. Fake News & Evaluating Internet Sources--check out the page you landed on. Is it acceptable to you? To your prof if you cite it in a paper?