Through the analysis of 14 supportive housing facilities in Denver, this study found, as a whole, no evidence that supportive housing leads to increased crime rates. For a subset of seven large facilities with 53 or more residents, rates of crime within 500 feet of the sites increased after they opened. The evidence suggests, however, that the residents of these large supportive housing facilities were the victims rather than the perpetrators of these crimes. Most residents living near these supportive housing sites also did not link crime to supportive housing, but rather to poorly managed rental housing, commercial establishments, and gang activity, among other factors.