The last statistics I remember from this year is that the cops have had under 30 die from being shot and over 850 civilians have died at the hands of the police.
FBI to collect better data on police shootings, use of force
WASHINGTON (AP) — The FBI will begin collecting and providing to the public more information about police shootings of civilians, FBI Director James Comey said Monday as the agency released annual data on crime nationwide.
Federal law enforcement officials have acknowledged in the last year a lack of reliable data about how often police officers use force in the line of duty. Former Attorney General Eric Holder urged better record-keeping in a speech this year, calling it a matter of "common sense," and Comey has publicly expressed frustration with the absence of nationwide data following the Ferguson, Missouri shooting in August 2014.
As part of its Uniform Crime Reporting program, the FBI tracks the number of police officers who are slain, as well as the number of justifiable homicides by police that are reported by law enforcement agencies. But that data are known to be incomplete since it is voluntary for police departments to feed data into the FBI's system, and little more than a third of local agencies do it, Comey said.
Comey on Monday encouraged every agency to submit the data to give the public a more complete picture of crime. He said the FBI also intends to collect more details about both fatal and nonfatal shootings by police of civilians, including the facts and circumstances of each incident and who was involved.
Once the information is collected, the FBI will produce a special publication chronicling police use of force.
1 comment:
Yeah, buddy.
Let's keep that scoreboard illuminated.
Love you!
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