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Map of per capita police killings in the United States in 2018. [1]Below are lists of people killed by law enforcement in the United States, both on duty and off duty. . Although Congress instructed the Attorney General in 1994 to compile and publish annual statistics on police use of excessive force, this was never carried out, and the Federal Bureau of Investigation does not collect the
These include Fatal Encounters [28] and U.S. Police Shootings Data at Deadspin. [29] Another project, the Facebook page "Killed by Police" (or web-page www.KilledbyPolice.net) tracks killings starting May 1, 2013. [30] In 2015, CopCrisis used the KilledByPolice.net data to generate info-graphics about police killings. [31]
"Other" lists killings while in judicial custody. Official numbers are considerably lower. Official 2018 statistics show only 46 deaths in police custody and 24 deaths of people in police/judicial remand and an additional 21 civilian killed during police operations for a total of 91 nationally.
Police responding to shots fired shot a man, who later died at hospital. [36] 2024-01-23 John Garcia (46) Unknown San Antonio, Texas: Police responded to a call and found a deceased woman, 48-year-old Lisa Ortiz. Garcia allegedly returned the scene of the crime and rammed police cars before firing a shotgun at officers.
The U.S. Marshals have for the first time released data on how many people were shot by their officers or other police working with them. It's a step toward transparency for federal law ...
Police shot and killed Favors during a burglary call after he allegedly fired at them. [75] 2024-03-16 Tyler Stansberry (24) Latino Fort Dodge, Iowa: Police responded to a distress call at Stansberry's home and shot him after he allegedly ran at offices holding two knives. [76] [77] 2024-03-16 Paul Smith (40) White Hudson, Florida [78] 2024-03-15
The following are brief descriptions of the fatal police shootings from 2023, as well as a Statesman database of fatal shootings dating back to 2000. Jan. 23: Eli Nash , 32, Boise Police Department.
A new study of over 30 years worth of medical data reveals the number of deaths at the hands of police officers in the U.S. is more than double the amount that’s been widely reported.