CREATORS
April 14, 2026
The Washington Post kept track of all police officer-involved shootings that resulted in death. The Post began collecting the data in 2015 because no one else was keeping track. According to a 2014 Wall Street Journal article, made part of the U.S. Senate official record, criminal justice experts lamented that there was no reliable national data on how many people are shot and killed by police officers each year.
Although
national research groups were keeping data and statistics on topics ranging
from how many people were victims of unprovoked shark attacks to the number of
hogs and pigs living on farms in the United States, no one was keeping track of
officer-involved shootings.
Then, of
course, as The Post began massive newsroom layoffs, the police shootings data
collection ended. Researchers can still utilize the data from 2015 to 2024. The
data reveals that police in this country shoot and kill about 1,000 people a
year. However, the data is limited to police involved shooting deaths, not all
deaths at the hands of police.
Although
officer-involved shootings are relatively rare in comparison with the millions
of interactions between the police and the public, several high-profile fatal
encounters with police —beginning with the 2014 killing of Michael Brown, in
Ferguson, Mo., Beanna Tayler's 2020 killing in Louisville, Ky. and Goerge
Floyds death by police in Minneapolis, Minn., in 2022, — piqued the interest of
researchers and protesters alike.
Campaign
Zero, a non-profit research institute, released an analysis of deaths caused by
police in 2025, revealing the first decline in police killings in six years.
Campaign Zero tracks all deaths by police, not just shooting deaths. Therefore,
there is an inconsistency in the numbers. For instance, in 2024, Campaign Zero
listed 1,365 killings and The Post listed 1,175. Campaign Zero recorded 1,329
killings in 2023 and The Post listed 1,169.
According
to Campaign Zero, there were only six days in 2025 when law enforcement did not
kill someone. On average, police killed 3.6 people per day — one person every
6.67 hours.
The data
from Campaign Zero has some room for optimism. In 2025, police killed 1,314
people in the United States — a 5% decrease from 2024.
The
stability in the annual number of homicides by police can be attributed to a
statistical tool known as the probability theory. According to The Post's
database, the probability theory holds that the quantity of rare events in huge
populations tends to remain stable absent major societal changes, such as a
fundamental shift in police culture or extreme restrictions on gun ownership.
The data
also reveals an alarming trend. People with untreated mental illness are 16
times more likely to be killed during a police encounter than other people
approached or stopped by law enforcement, according to a study released by the
Treatment Advocacy Center.
Does that
mean it is hopeless and no matter what we do, 1,000 people a year or more are
going to die after an encounter with police? Not necessarily.
There are
examples of changes in training or "use of force protocols" that have
saved lives. In New York City in 1971, there were 314 officer-involved
shootings, 93 of which were fatal. Chuck Wexler, executive director of the
Police Executive Research Forum, told The Washington Post, "The following
year the city passed a law prohibiting officers from shooting into
vehicles."
Within two
years, the city reduced police shootings to 121, with 41 fatal. By 2015, after
a period when crime dropped precipitously, the number had fallen to 23 people
shot by police with eight killed.
Officer-involved
shootings can be reduced, and lives saved, with training and a change in the
warrior culture of policing.
Matthew T.
Mangino is of counsel with Luxenberg, Garbett, Kelly & George P.C. His
book, "The Executioner's Toll," 2010, was released by McFarland
Publishing. You can reach him at www.mattmangino.com and follow him on Twitter
@MatthewTMangino
To read more CLICK HERE
