Every December the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Foundation sends out a press release that reports the number of officers killed in the line of duty for that year. The total of officers killed by gunfire in 2017 was 44. That's a 33% decrease when compared to 2016 when 66 officers were shot and killed.
The mainstream media picked up that story. And some reported it as just a straight numbers story, good news that fewer officers were being feloniously killed. But some in the press made the specious comparison of the 44 officers killed to the 987 people the Washington Post says were shot and killed by police officers last year and essentially implied that the dangers faced by law enforcement professionals are exaggerated.
They brought their biases to the numbers and didn't dig deeper. Here's what they would have found if they had looked at the numbers objectively. The National Fraternal Order of Police reports that 271 officers were shot in 2017, including the 44 who were shot and killed. Many of those officers were saved from fatal wounds by body armor. When you substitute 271 for 44 in the ratio of how many people were killed by officers, you get a fairer comparison.
And if you want to be even more accurate, then we need a number that isn't available: how many officers were targeted by gunfire. No one keeps that number. But it's a lot higher than 271. A young officer who works a particularly dangerous part of a major city recently told me he had taken rifle fire 20 times in his career.
Thankfully, that young officer hasn't been hit. Which means you won't find his experience recorded in the statistics. And until we have such numbers accurately represented in the assaults on officers statistics and until researchers take into consideration the role civilians play in officer use-of-force incidents, any analysis of the numbers used to condemn police for the way they carry about their duties is at best incomplete and at worst a damned lie.