What can we learn from 2007? While it's too early to fully analyze these deaths, there are some eye-opening stats to consider. Preliminary figures say that 69 officers died of gunshot, a 33 percent increase over 2006. Another 83 officers died in traffic incidents, a 14 percent increase over 2006. And 36 died in "other" events, an 80 percent increase over 2006.
In due time, the 2007 deadly incidents will be categorized and analyzed for their causes, along with recommendations for reducing these startlingly high numbers. I say startlingly high, because unlike the deadlier 1970s, when 200 plus police died yearly, today we wear body armor, have better training, and are often saved by sophisticated medical treatment.
So, what's going on here? The answer is something all of law enforcement knows all too well. The streets are growing more dangerous and violent every year. Suspects are becoming increasingly more violent, and they are better armed and more willing to take on police. The most vicious violence, once centered in the large cities, has now spread throughout America, including the once "quiet" suburbs and rural areas.
The tragic multiple shooting that occurred this past Christmas near Mansfield, Ohio, illustrates the magnitude of the violence now directed at law enforcement officers. Around 1 a.m. the morning after Christmas, four family members were shot by a relative with a rifle. Two were wounded and survived, but two—a neighbor and an off-duty Mansfield police officer—were killed. The suspect then fired multiple rifle rounds at responding police, who immediately called for SWAT.
Compounding the tragedy is the fact that the slain officer was a respected 15-year MPD veteran and a member of the SWAT team that responded and eventually apprehended the suspect. Tragically, the reported shooter was an off-duty corrections officer and the brother of the slain officer.