Cop Killers
Police shooting data
The recent increase in media attention and public outrage over citizens killed by police has brought an additional problem to light: The United States does not reliably track how frequently such deaths occur. As a result, it's difficult to analyze or report on trends related to deadly uses of force.
The FBI does attempt to track whenever a police officer kills somebody, but participation in the program is voluntary and very spotty. Entire states are left out of the count, such that the FBI's database likely catches at most half of killings by cops: about 400 a year.
Two media outlets, The Washington Post and The Guardian, decided in 2015 to independently track the number of people in America killed by police. The former newspaper reported 983 people fatally shot by police last year. The latter, tracking all killings and not just shooting deaths, counted 1,136. The massive discrepancy between their figures and the FBI's has now prompted reform.
In December the bureau announced that it will revamp the program, replacing it entirely by 2017. The new system will not only count fatal police shootings; it will track any incident that results in serious injury or death to a citizen at the hands of a cop. The bureau also plans to share the information as incidents happen, instead of just in periodic or annual reports. But the FBI still doesn't have the authority to force local law enforcement agencies to participate in the program.
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "Cop Killers."
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