St. Petersburg Times
Special report
Video report
  • For their own good
    Fifty years ago, they were screwed-up kids sent to the Florida School for Boys to be straightened out. But now they are screwed-up men, scarred by the whippings they endured. Read the story and see a video and portrait gallery.
  • More video reports
Multimedia report
Print Email this storyEmail story Comment Letter to the editor
Fill out this form to email this article to a friend
Your name Your email
Friend's name Friend's email
Your message
 

Year took a deadly toll on law enforcement officers

A newly released report says 186 officers had died as of Dec. 26, up from 145 from last year.

Associated Press
Published December 27, 2007


ADVERTISEMENT

WASHINGTON - A record number of fatal traffic incidents and a double-digit spike in shooting deaths led to one of the deadliest years for law enforcement officers in more than a decade.

With the exception of 2001, when deaths surged because of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, 2007 was the deadliest year for law enforcement since 1989, according to preliminary data released jointly by the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund and Concerns of Police Survivors.

The report counted the deaths of 186 officers as of Dec. 26, up from 145 last year. Eighty-one died in traffic incidents, which the report said surpassed the record of 78 set in 2000. Shooting deaths increased from 52 to 69, a rise of 33 percent.

Texas led the nation with 22 fatalities, followed by Florida with 16, New York with 12 and California with 11.

"Most of us don't realize that an officer is being killed in America on average every other day," said Craig Floyd, chairman of the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund.

The report includes the deaths of 17 federal law enforcement officers, including five Air Force Office of Special Investigations agents killed in two bombings in Iraq.

Officer fatalities have generally declined since peaking at 277 in 1974, the report said. Historically, officers have been more likely to be killed in an attack than to die accidentally, and shootings outnumbered car crashes. But those trends began to reverse in the late 1990s. This year, about six of every 10 deaths were accidental.

Floyd credited technology with helping reverse the trend. Safety vests save lives and non-lethal devices such as electric stun guns prevent some fatal encounters, he said. He attributed the spike in shooting deaths to the increase in violent crime nationwide. "Law enforcement is the front line against violent criminals," he said.

Of the 81 traffic deaths this year, 60 officers died in car crashes, 15 were hit by cars and six died in motorcycle crashes.

Police departments have worked to limit high-speed chases, and only seven of the car crashes were attributed to such pursuits, Floyd said. Crashes involving a single police cruiser responding to a call were far more common, he said.

After crashes and shootings, physical causes such as heart attacks were the leading cause of death, contributing to 18.

The report counted six times in which multiple officers were shot and killed in the same incident, such as the September shooting in Odessa, Texas, that left three officers dead while responding to a domestic violence call. Domestic violence and traffic stops most commonly led to fatal police shootings this year, the report found.

The average age of officers who died in 2007 was 39, most men with an average of about 11 years in law enforcement.

[Last modified December 26, 2007, 23:19:04]


Share your thoughts on this story

[an error occurred while processing this directive]
Subscribe to the Times
Click here for daily delivery
of the St. Petersburg Times.

Email Newsletters

ADVERTISEMENT