Hundreds Of Police Killings Are Uncounted In Federal Stats

Police killings highest in two decades
Police killings high­est in two decades

National sta­tis­tics show that hun­dreds of homi­cides com­mit­ted by law-enforce­ment offi­cers between 2007 and 2012 were not record­ed in the FBI’s Uniform Crime Report, the Wall Street Journal reports.

More than 550 homi­cides com­mit­ted by police dur­ing that peri­od were miss­ing, the paper reports. The lack of com­plete data makes it impos­si­ble to accu­rate­ly deter­mine how many peo­ple police kill each year.

Demands for more trans­paren­cy on such killings have been shoved into the spot­light after the August shoot­ing death of 18-year-old Michael Brown by offi­cer Darren Wilson in Ferguson. The Ferguson police depart­ment has only record­ed one jus­ti­fi­able homi­cide between 1976 and 2012, accord­ing to statistics.

Local police depart­ments are not required to par­tic­i­pate in the FBI’s uni­form crime report­ing program.

Some agen­cies tend to not report the killings, Bureau of Justice sta­tis­ti­cian Alexia Cooper told the jour­nal. Nearly 800 agen­cies report­ed about 2,400 killings by police, while more than 18,000 oth­er depart­ments did not report any.

Some enti­ties in the reports said they did not view jus­ti­fi­able homi­cides by law-enforce­ment offi­cers as some­thing that should be report­ed. Some agen­cies did not con­sid­er the events to be actu­al offenses.

In cer­tain cas­es, if an offi­cer killed some­one in a city or town out of its juris­dic­tion believed that par­tic­u­lar town would han­dle the report, by they had not done so.

In recent years, police have tried to rely on the data to devel­op bet­ter tac­tics in policing.

A par­tic­u­lar alarm­ing report came as recent­ly in Washington D.C.

Police in Washington did not report any details about any homi­cides to the FBI for an entire decade start­ing in 1998; the same year the Washington Post revealed the city had one of the high­est offi­cer-involved killings in the country.

The city report­ed five killings by police in 2011, but zero in the fol­low­ing year after 24-year-old Albert Payton was killed by police while wield­ing a knife.

Significant increas­es in offi­cer-involved killings can spark ques­tions about man­age­ment with­in the police depart­ment, Mike, a crim­i­nol­o­gist at Arizona State told the jour­nal. “Sometimes that can be tied to poor lead­er­ship and prob­lems with accountability.”

For more vis­it the wall street jour​nal​.com