LEOKA – Law Street https://legacy.lawstreetmedia.com Law and Policy for Our Generation Wed, 13 Nov 2019 21:46:22 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.8 100397344 Police in America 2016: State-by-State Breakdown of Officer Assaults in the Line of Duty https://legacy.lawstreetmedia.com/blogs/crime/police-america-2016-map-officer-assaults/ https://legacy.lawstreetmedia.com/blogs/crime/police-america-2016-map-officer-assaults/#respond Mon, 13 Jun 2016 20:28:21 +0000 http://lawstreetmedia.com/?p=53078

How does violence against the police vary by state?

The post Police in America 2016: State-by-State Breakdown of Officer Assaults in the Line of Duty appeared first on Law Street.

]]>
"Police revolving light" courtesy of [reynermedia via Flickr]

As police violence has garnered much of the public’s attention, some believe that increased scrutiny of law enforcement has led to a “war on police.” The best way to understand the extent of the violence police face and how it has changed over time is to look at the FBI’s statistics on officer assaults in the line of duty.

In the map below, darker red states have a higher rate of assaults per 100 employed officers. The second chart details the number of employed officers based on the population that they cover. In total, there were 48,315 assaults in the line of duty in 2014. For the United States as a whole, there were nine assaults per 100 law enforcement officers that year.

In the second map, darker blue states mean there is a higher number of officers per 100,000 people. The FBI’s data includes statistics from 11,150 law enforcement agencies that employ more than 536,000 officers. The agencies included in the report cover more than 75 percent of the U.S. population. All data is from the 2014 calendar year.

Read More: What We Know About Officer Deaths in the Line of Duty

*Use landscape mode if viewing on mobile*


The Rockford, Illinois and Maui, Hawaii police departments are the only agencies in their states with available data. You can view both police departments’ statistics here.

Kevin Rizzo
Kevin Rizzo is the Crime in America Editor at Law Street Media. An Ohio Native, the George Washington University graduate is a founding member of the company. Contact Kevin at krizzo@LawStreetMedia.com.

The post Police in America 2016: State-by-State Breakdown of Officer Assaults in the Line of Duty appeared first on Law Street.

]]>
https://legacy.lawstreetmedia.com/blogs/crime/police-america-2016-map-officer-assaults/feed/ 0 53078
Police in America 2016: What We Know About Officer Deaths in the Line of Duty https://legacy.lawstreetmedia.com/blogs/crime/police-america-officer-deaths/ https://legacy.lawstreetmedia.com/blogs/crime/police-america-officer-deaths/#respond Mon, 13 Jun 2016 20:27:26 +0000 http://lawstreetmedia.com/?p=52886

What can the data tell us?

The post Police in America 2016: What We Know About Officer Deaths in the Line of Duty appeared first on Law Street.

]]>
Image copyright Law Street Media

The FBI recently released a snapshot of law enforcement officer deaths in 2015, indicating that such deaths decreased last year. But that is only a small subset of the available information on officer deaths. Now that policing has reached the center of the public’s attention, statistics about what happens to officers while they’re on duty are sure to be an important part of the debate.

Interactive Map: Officer Assaults and Employment by State

The FBI publishes an annual report on Law Enforcement Officers Killed and Assaulted in the Line of Duty (LEOKA), which can provide some interesting insights into the matter and inform debates about police deaths. The annual LEOKA publication is one of the most detailed data sets kept by the FBI. For obvious reasons, it’s important for the FBI and all law enforcement agencies to keep track of and understand the situations in which police officers are killed and assaulted.

Here’s what the FBI data tells us:

More Officers Die from Accidents than Felonies

The chart above details the number of officer deaths from both accidents and felonies between 2005 and 2015. The average number of felonious deaths during that 11 year period is about 50, while the average number of accidental deaths is just below 60. Last year saw particularly low numbers for both felonious and accidental deaths, with 41 and 45 respectively.

The data can also tell us a lot about the causes of these deaths. Nearly 60 percent of accidental deaths that occurred between 2005 and 2014 were the result of automobile accidents. If you broaden the category to include motorcycle and aircraft accidents they account for more than 70 percent in total.

The chart below details the trends over time:

Source: FBI LEOKA

Source: FBI, LEOKA and *Preliminary 2015 Data

There has been a slight downward trend in both felonious and accidental police officer deaths. The preliminary numbers for 2015 are also encouraging, as the number of accidental deaths tied its 10-year low with 45, and the number of felonious deaths matched the second lowest point in the same period at 41. Law enforcement deaths in the line of duty is certainly an important thing to track, but when it comes to assessing the threat that officers face every day, looking at assault statistics can be particularly informative.

 What We Know About the Offenders

The FBI keeps detailed information on both victims and offenders, allowing felonious offenders to be broken down by race, sex, and several other categories. Between 2005 and 2014, there was a total of 563 offenders involved in felonious officer deaths. When you break those numbers down by race, 309, or 55 percent of the known offenders are white and 224, or 40 percent are black. Asian/Pacific islanders, Native Americans, and offenders whose race was not reported account for less than 2 percent each.

Offenders are also overwhelmingly male–nearly 97 percent of known offenders are men. The vast majority–83 percent–have also had prior criminal arrests and just over one-quarter of all offenders were under some form of judicial supervision.

Assaults and Injuries have Been Decreasing

Assaults on police officers have generally trended downward over the past 10 years. After peaking at 61,257 in 2007, the total number of assaults has decreased to 48,315 in 2014, a decrease of more than 20 percent. The chart above also details the number of officers who sustained injuries from an assault. All injury numbers are estimates–based on percentages provided by the FBI–with the exception of 2014, which is the exact number recorded by the FBI.

The number of assaults that caused injuries also followed a downward trend, with approximately 16,866 in 2007 and 13,654 in 2014. Although the number of injuries has not dropped as quickly as the total number of assaults, this is certainly an encouraging sign for police officers.

Moving Forward

The 2015 assault and injury statistics, which will be released later this year, will be particularly interesting in light of recent discussion of the so-called “Ferguson effect,” in which some argue that the perceived threat to law enforcement officers has caused proactive policing to decline and crime rates to go up. These numbers will also help inform the debate on the alleged “war on police,” a related argument in which some claim that officers are being attacked more as protests and movements like Black Lives Matter have called more attention to issues surrounding police violence.

Based on the preliminary numbers for felonious deaths, that does not appear to be the case. But we do not yet know whether increased scrutiny is correlated with an increase in assaults. As the chart above indicates, the number of assaults has gone down steadily over the past several years, but in time, we’ll know if 2015 is an exception.

Kevin Rizzo
Kevin Rizzo is the Crime in America Editor at Law Street Media. An Ohio Native, the George Washington University graduate is a founding member of the company. Contact Kevin at krizzo@LawStreetMedia.com.

The post Police in America 2016: What We Know About Officer Deaths in the Line of Duty appeared first on Law Street.

]]>
https://legacy.lawstreetmedia.com/blogs/crime/police-america-officer-deaths/feed/ 0 52886
Police in America 2016 https://legacy.lawstreetmedia.com/blogs/crime/police-america-2016/ https://legacy.lawstreetmedia.com/blogs/crime/police-america-2016/#respond Mon, 13 Jun 2016 20:22:08 +0000 http://lawstreetmedia.com/?p=53135

Check out Law Street's Police in America coverage.

The post Police in America 2016 appeared first on Law Street.

]]>
Image Copyright LawStreetMedia

Law Street Media’s Police in America coverage takes a look at statistics on law enforcement officers in the U.S. As the conversations around police policies, use of force, and police deaths feature prominently in public discourse, Law Street strives to provide the most up-to-date facts, numbers, and coverage of Police in America.

Officer Deaths by the Numbers

What We Know About Officer Deaths in the Line of Duty

State-by-State Breakdown of Officer Assaults in the Line of Duty

Latest News:

Preliminary Data Shows Drop in Police Officer Deaths

When Does Racial Bias Affect Police Officers’ Use of Force?

 


To read more about crime rates in U.S. cities, states, and metropolitan areas, check out Law Street’s Crime in America coverage.
Kevin Rizzo
Kevin Rizzo is the Crime in America Editor at Law Street Media. An Ohio Native, the George Washington University graduate is a founding member of the company. Contact Kevin at krizzo@LawStreetMedia.com.

The post Police in America 2016 appeared first on Law Street.

]]>
https://legacy.lawstreetmedia.com/blogs/crime/police-america-2016/feed/ 0 53135
Police in America 2016: Preliminary Data Shows Drop in Police Deaths https://legacy.lawstreetmedia.com/blogs/crime/police-officer-deaths-dropped-2015/ https://legacy.lawstreetmedia.com/blogs/crime/police-officer-deaths-dropped-2015/#respond Tue, 17 May 2016 18:44:24 +0000 http://lawstreetmedia.com/?p=52534

Felonious law enforcement deaths decreased by 20 percent last year.

The post Police in America 2016: Preliminary Data Shows Drop in Police Deaths appeared first on Law Street.

]]>
"Biker Cops" courtesy of [Johnny Silvercloud via Flickr]

Preliminary statistics released by the FBI on Monday show that 41 law enforcement officers were feloniously killed in 2015, a 20 percent decrease from the previous year. Although the statistics are preliminary and are subject to revision, these numbers indicate that police officer deaths are near historic lows. This release comes during national police week, which began with a candlelit vigil on May 13.

The preliminary statistics will likely add to the debate about a so-called “war on cops” that some argue is the result of recent police protests. While law enforcement work often involves danger, there is no evidence to suggest that police officer deaths are on the rise. The number of police officer deaths decreased significantly last year and is at the second-lowest level in the past decade.

Take a look at the graphics below to understand these statistics and how they fit into historical trends.

Officer Deaths Over Time

Both felonious and accidental deaths were relatively low in 2015 compared to previous years. Felonious deaths experienced a 20 percent decrease from the previous year. With 41 felonious deaths, last year matched 2008 with the second lowest number in over a decade. The lowest number in recent history came in 2013 with 27 deaths from felonious incidents in the line of duty.

Accidental deaths did not change between 2014 and 2015, but at 45, that number is at its lowest level for over a decade. A death is considered accidental by the FBI when it was a result of something that was not willful or intentional.

Regional Breakdown

Source: FBI

Source: FBI

The chart above details the distribution of felonious police officer deaths from the FBI’s preliminary data. The South saw the most with 46 percent of the total deaths, followed by the West with 22 percent, the Midwest with 12 percent, and Northeast and Puerto Rico with just under 10 percent each.

While the statistics released on Monday do not provide details about the number of law enforcement officers and the population covered by each region, it is important to note that historical data indicates that the South has both more people and officers compared to other regions. Based on data from the 2014 report, the last year with complete data available, the South had about 40 percent of all employed police officers and the South has historically had higher numbers of police officer deaths than other regions.

Weapons Involved

image (7)

Source: FBI

The chart above details the weapons involved in the 41 felonious officer deaths based on the preliminary data for 2015. All but three deaths were due to the use of firearms, with handguns accounting for nearly three-quarters of firearm deaths. The FBI also notes that 30 of the 41 officers were wearing body armor when they were killed.

The vast majority of the 45 accidental deaths involved automobiles; 29 were due to automotive accidents, seven were struck by vehicles, and four were fatally injured in motorcycle accidents.

A Look at 2016

While the FBI does not have any information available for 2016, and likely won’t until it releases preliminary data this time next year, there are independent counts of law enforcement fatalities with more updated information. The Officer Down Memorial Page, which has tracked this data for a long period of time, has found 17 fatal shootings and one intentional death using a vehicle as a weapon so far this year. As the Guardian points out, if this rate continues for the rest of the year there would be 48 officer deaths–an increase from 2015 and the same number as 2014, based on the website’s count.

The final data, which will have expanded details and information on assaults that resulted in injury in 2015, will be released by the FBI in the fall with its annual Law Enforcement Officers Killed in Assaulted report.

For more Law Street Media Crime Coverage, Check Out Crime in America 2016
Kevin Rizzo
Kevin Rizzo is the Crime in America Editor at Law Street Media. An Ohio Native, the George Washington University graduate is a founding member of the company. Contact Kevin at krizzo@LawStreetMedia.com.

The post Police in America 2016: Preliminary Data Shows Drop in Police Deaths appeared first on Law Street.

]]>
https://legacy.lawstreetmedia.com/blogs/crime/police-officer-deaths-dropped-2015/feed/ 0 52534