Record Number Of Police Murders-Half Did Not Engage Their Assailants

Police Officer Deaths
Police Officer Deaths

Highlights

A police officer is murdered every five days. Nearly half did not engage with their assailants before being attacked-highest in 30 years.

The highest number of officers feloniously killed in the line of duty since the 9/11 attacks.

The 458 officer deaths (most due to COVID) surpassed the 1930 record of 312 fatalities and reflect a 55% jump in line-of-duty deaths.

Author

Leonard Adam Sipes, Jr.

Retired federal senior spokesperson. Thirty-five years of directing award-winning public relations for national and state criminal justice agencies. Interviewed multiple times by every national news outlet. Former Senior Specialist for Crime Prevention for the Department of Justice’s clearinghouse. Former Director of Information Services, National Crime Prevention Council. Former Adjunct Associate Professor of criminology and public affairs-University of Maryland, University College. Former advisor to presidential and gubernatorial campaigns. Former advisor to the “McGruff-Take a Bite Out of Crime” national media campaign. Certificate of Advanced Study-Johns Hopkins University. Former police officer. Aspiring drummer.

Author of ”Success With The Media: Everything You Need To Survive Reporters and Your Organization” available at Amazon and additional booksellers.

Note

I appreciate the assistance from the FBI’s public affairs team in creating this article.

Article

I was reading about crime data (65,000 more people victimized by violent crime than the year before) when I came across the FBI’s police mortality data.

I read no fewer than thirty commercial and justice-related news sources every week; few mentioned the fact that we are at record highs for police officer deaths.  It was ignored by most via a Google news search.

What is really shocking was the fact that nearly half of murdered police officers did not engage their attackers designated as “unprovoked.” Unprovoked is defined by the FBI as “An attack on an officer not prompted by official contact at the time of the incident between the officer and the offender.”

Comments From The FBI Director (rearranged quotes)

FBI data shows 73 officers were feloniously killed in the line of duty in 2021 — nearly half of whom did not engage with their assailants before being attacked, FBI Director Christopher Wray said in January.

“These four murders brought the total number of officers feloniously killed in the line of duty in 2021 to 73, the highest annual number since the 9/11 attacks,” Wray wrote. “That’s the equivalent of one officer murdered every five days. In a year when homicides and violent crime reached distressing levels, this 20-year high hasn’t received the attention it deserves.”

Nearly half of the 73 officers killed did not engage with their assailants before being attacked, Wray said.

Additionally, three of the FBI’s own agents were killed in 2021, including Special Agents Laura Schwartzenberger and Daniel Alfin, who were murdered while investigating crimes against children, and FBI Task Force Officer Greg Ferency, who was killed in an ambush outside an FBI office.

Last year marked the deadliest for line-of-duty police and law enforcement officers since 1930, with 458 officers dying in 2021. COVID-19 was the leading cause of death and firearms-related deaths were the second-leading cause.

COVID-19 accounted for 301 deaths, or 66%, of the 458 fatalities reported last year, according to preliminary statistics released by the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund (NLEOMF). The NLEOMF recorded 62 firearms-related officer deaths – 16 less than the FBI’s count.

The 458 officer deaths surpassed the 1930 record of 312 fatalities and reflects a 55% jump in line-of-duty deaths compared to the 295 officer deaths in 2020.

The figure accounts for all line-of-duty deaths through Dec. 31, 2021, and represents law enforcement officers at the federal, state, county and municipal levels.

Graph

The graph on police officer deaths from the FBI (below) is hard to read. It was scaled down to fit this page. See the FBI-Crime Data Explorer and download.

The summation states:

The 73 law enforcement officers feloniously killed in 2021 represent a 58.7 percent increase compared to the 46 officers killed in 2020 and the highest total since 2011.

Of the 73 felonious deaths in 2021, 61 involved firearms, 6 involved vehicles used as weapons, and 4 involved personal weapons.

Of the 46 total felonious deaths in 2020, 41 were firearm-related, 4 were vehicle-related, and 1 involved personal weapons.

In 2021, unprovoked attacks (24), investigative/enforcement activities (9), ambushes (8), and pursuits (8) were the cause for 67.1 percent of the felonious deaths (49 out of 73); in 2020, those 4 circumstances combined represented 39.1 percent of the deaths (18 out of 46).

The preliminary reporting of 24 unprovoked attacks resulting in officer deaths remains a concern, because this circumstance significantly outpaced all other felonious officer deaths in 2021 and reached the highest total in over 30 years of reporting.

Accidental law enforcement deaths increased 21.7 percent when comparing calendar year 2021 (56) to 2020 accidental deaths (46). The deaths were the result of motor vehicle crashes (31), pedestrian officers struck by vehicles (21), and drowning (4).

The southern region had the most law enforcement deaths with 69 deaths total (44 felonious, 25 accidental).

In 2021—although not represented in the below graphic—279 officers died from the following medical conditions: 257 law enforcement officers died in the line of duty from illnesses related to COVID-19, 17 officers died due to heart attacks, 3 officers succumbed to cancer, 1 officer died due to other natural causes, and 1 officer died from conditions associated with responding to the terrorist attacks of 9/11.

Police Officer Deaths
Police Officer Deaths

Conclusions

The data above was mentioned when 60 Minutes interviewed FBI Director Christopher Wray and that prompted a small number of regional articles. It was also offered by Law Enforcement Today; I added additional details with the help of the FBI.

The FBI’s police mortality data wasn’t totally ignored but the lack of mainstream media coverage is distressing. As the FBI’s director stated, officer deaths haven’t “received the attention it deserves.”

We have skyrocketing violence and fear of crime yet police proactivity, overall employment, arrests, and correctional numbers are down considerably.

But downplaying the record number of police officer deaths and not acknowledging that close to half feloniously are unprovoked should lead the country into some serious soul searching. We are losing a lot of officers. We have over 65,000 additional violent crimes.

See More

See more articles on crime and justice at Crime in America.

Most Dangerous Cities/States/Countries at Most Dangerous Cities.

US Crime Rates at Nationwide Crime Rates.

National Offender Recidivism Rates at Offender Recidivism.

An Overview Of Data On Mental Health at Mental Health And Crime.

The Crime in America.Net RSS feed (https://crimeinamerica.net/?feed=rss2) provides subscribers with a means to stay informed about the latest news, publications, and other announcements from the site.