Firearms-related fatalities claimed the lives of 49 officers in 2019, a 6% decrease compared to the 52 officers killed in firearms-related incidents in 2018. Of the 49 officer deaths, 8 officers were killed responding to domestic disturbance or public disturbance calls. Seven deaths occurred while officers were attempting to place an individual under arrest. Seven officers were killed while conducting investigative activity. Six officers were ambushed in 2019. Six officers were shot and killed while responding to a robbery. Four officers were killed while serving felony warrants and engaging in tactical activity.
Handguns were the leading type of firearm used against law enforcement in 2019. Of the 49 officer fatalities, 27 officers were shot and killed with handguns; seven were shot and killed with rifles and one officer was killed with a shotgun.
Traffic-related fatalities decreased 12% with 43 deaths in 2019 compared to 49 deaths in 2018. Of those, 13 officers were killed in crashes involving another vehicle or fixed object. Twelve officers were killed in single-vehicle crash, a 14% decrease over the previous year when 14 officers died in single-vehicle crashes. Seventeen officers were struck while outside of their vehicle, and one officer was killed in a motorcycle crash.
The number of officer deaths from other causes decreased 36% over the number of deaths from other causes in 2018. Thirty-six officers died of causes other than firearms- or traffic-related incidents, compared to the 56 officers who died in 2018. Job-related illnesses such as heart attacks or strokes were the cause of 19 officer deaths, a decrease of 37% over the 30 who died in 2018. Of those 36 deaths, 12 officers died due to cancers related to search and recovery efforts after the 9/11 attack on the World Trade Centers. One officer was strangled, one died in a fire-related incident, one officer drowned, and two were fatally beaten.
Texas had the highest number of fatalities with 17 officers who died in the line of duty. New York had 11 deaths, followed by California with 9 and Alabama with 7. Georgia, Illinois, and Tennessee each had six officer deaths. Florida and New Jersey each had five, followed by Louisiana, Mississippi, and Washington each with four officer deaths. Ohio and Colorado each had three officer deaths. Eighteen states and the District of Columbia recorded no line of duty deaths in 2019.