Justice Department Says It Will Finally Collect Police Use of Force Data
But will the DOJ actually penalize police departments that don't share data by withholding federal grant money?


The Department of Justice (DOJ) announced yesterday that at long last, it will finally begin tracking police use of force data in a single national database, with a pilot program expected to be launched under the next presidential administration sometime in 2017.
As we've noted here for years at Reason, the lack of a national database to track use of force is a glaring abdication of governmental responsibility, and a particularly absurd one at that, given how much federal money goes to study everything from "the gambling habits of monkeys" to the effect of Swedish massages on rabbits. Even FBI Director James Comey admitted last year that it was "embarrassing" that the government couldn't keep track of the number of deaths caused by its armed agents.
In the absence of a government-run database, The Guardian, The Washington Post, and smaller websites such as Fatal Encounters have stepped up to create their own databases detailing both the raw numbers and specific details regarding incidents where citizens have been killed by police.
The New York Times reported how the new pilot program is intended to work:
Under the Justice Department plan, the F.B.I. is to begin a pilot program early next year to assemble data on the use of force by about 178,000 agents at major federal law enforcement agencies including the Drug Enforcement Administration, the Marshals Service, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, and the F.B.I. itself.
In addition, the Justice Department plans to begin collecting data from local and state law enforcement departments on "in custody" deaths — not just in shootings, but in cases of suicide and natural death as well.
A measure passed by Congress in 2014 called the Death in Custody Reporting Act required local departments to report only fatal encounters. Justice Department officials said they would rely on local police officials to voluntarily report nonlethal encounters as well.
Under a third part of the plan, the Justice Department said it was authorizing $750,000 for a "police data initiative" designed to help local departments collect and publicly release information on a wider range of actions, including stops of citizens, searches, the use of force, shootings and other encounters.
It's undoubtedly a good start to have data from all the federal law enforcement agencies included in the pilot program. The problem is that by continuing to rely on "voluntary" reporting from local law enforcement agencies—where the vast majority of the police in this country work—a comprehensive database will still remain next to impossible to achieve.
When announcing the pilot program, Attorney General Loretta E. Lynch did not explain how the Justice Department intends to entice local agencies into complying with the Death in Custody Reporting Act. As we noted last month, the DOJ's Arrest Related Death (ARD) program already requires local departments to report such relevant data, but more than a dozen states don't report at all, while many others report incomplete data. Non-compliant states are supposed to be disciplined by having funds from federal grants devoted to law enforcement revoked, but as Justin Glawe wrote in The Daily Beast, "There is no indication that this punishment mechanism has ever been implemented."
A national database on use of force is a necessary and appropriate use of government resources, but it remains to be seen how seriously the federal government takes this project, especially if it is not currently making use of the leverage it has over non-compliant states and local agencies.
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Maybe we need a national database of local gun owners.
I'm sure the DoJ has some means to enforce compliance, er I mean gain voluntary and enthusiastic consent.
I'd also like to mention Cato, who took over the police misconduct reporting project a few years ago.
I follow Cato and didn't know about this. Thanks for the link!
You missed the shitstorm when the misconduct reporting site operator (just some guy doing it in his spare time as a labor of love) realized it was too big a project and started talking about giving the site up to somebody who had the resources to operate it. There were, iirc, three different groups or people that offered to take over the project but the guy saw Cato as the only really serious choice and man, the foaming at the mouth that took place over the thought of them shit-eating motherfucking libertarian Koch-suckers over at Cato getting their dirty paws on the site. Epic.
Cato's sellout on gun rights is disturbing. You can't address police misconduct without recognizing the right of free people to defend themselves. If the cops are disarming the citizenry, then even with an otherwise perfect set of incentives, they're not going to be able to defend everyone or address every crime.
In 1994, Congress passed the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act. Among its provisions was the order that "the Attorney General shall, through appropriate means, acquire data about the use of excessive force by law enforcement officers." The Justice Department was also required to publish an annual report on the data collected.
And?that's pretty much the last anyone heard of that.
But I'm sure it'll work this time.
Ooooh, missed this quote, which sjhould have been the pullquote:
Anthony Fisher points out the effed-upness of the situation over at Reason:
Considering the sheer volume of highly personal information the government collects and analyzes (often without consent), it is simply outrageous that the public has to struggle to find even the raw data tallying something as vital as government agents shooting citizens.
The government doesn't collect anything, it just asks companies for customer data very very very nicely.
In addition, the Justice Department plans to begin collecting data from local and state law enforcement departments on "in custody" deaths ? not just in shootings, but in cases of suicide and natural death as well.
They're all natural deaths when in custody. It's unnatural to get out of it alive.
Clearly, the libertarian point of view. Ask Big Daddy Fed to come in and fix the problem.
Hmm, the DOJ is worried about enforcing compliance....
"Hi there Mr police chief and local Union Representatives, we here at the DOJ are tasked with putting together a database and monitoring all police involved violence so here is the things we are going to need from you starting a year from today....
(list of things)
Now understand, we cannot force you to comply with this, however should you not we will be opening an office in your town and letting people know we are here to monitor the police and should any of them feel the need to report any police violence to us we will have no choice but to open a civil rights investigation into that incident, one which is informed by your reluctance to cooperate with our request and anything less than full cooperation into those investigations will result in obstruction of justice charges.
Yeah I know but a man can dream right
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