• In 2023, police in the U.S. Killed over 1,300 people, marking a steady increase in police killings, as reported by Mapping Police Violence.
  • There were only 14 days without a police killing, and on average, a person was killed by law enforcement every 6.6 hours.
  • While the number of people killed by gunfire and officers killed in the line of duty declined, this data highlights the need for significant changes in policing in the country.
  • agitatedpotato@lemmy.world
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    10 个月前

    Annually they kill more people than mass shooters and steal more than burglars though ‘asset forfeiture’, they also have no duty to protect you if bodily harm could possibly come to them. Weakest most scared people in America by a country mile. Getting rid of police would end more crime than the cops end.

    • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️@lemmy.world
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      10 个月前

      That, and all the gun control restrictions constantly being floated are meaningless when the police have an exception carved out for themselves every. single. fucking. time.

      If 10+ round magazines, full autos, SBR’s, AR-15’s, switchblades, etc., etc., etc. are supposed to be this big problem, I have never once had anyone be able to answer be constructively on why the police need these things when regular people don’t.

      • andyburke@fedia.io
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        10 个月前

        Because they don’t and it has become a gang.

        I was one of those people that thought maybe it was good people in a bad system, but now I’m convinced too few actual good people want to go into policing to keep the corruption out.

        I’m not sure how we fix it. Probably needs to be set up more like the military with civilian leadership and oversight.

        • chiliedogg@lemmy.world
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          10 个月前

          First thing they need is rules of engagement.

          Soldiers sent into combat zones interacting with armed enemy militaries don’t get to shoot people just because they feel nervous.

        • RunawayFixer@lemmy.world
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          10 个月前

          Good people do want to go into policing, but the bad people don’t want them in their gang, because decent people are a threat to their way of operating and might land them in prison.

          If a group of people is too rotten, then it just perpetuates itself. People that are too smart or have too many principles, won’t even get a chance of joining. People who have started on the job will soon be presented with a moral dilemma, if they make the wrong choice, then the rotten group will start bullying them to force them out.

          If it gets to the point that acab is true, then a clean start is the only fast way. Hire outside mercenaries to temporarily take over police tasks and start a new police force from scratch, with better rules, regulations and indepedent oversight. And without allowing the old cops to rejoin, unless it’s in specialized technical roles.

        • tired_n_bored@lemmy.world
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          10 个月前

          Other countries need a police diploma equivalent to a bachelor’s degree, or higher. Background check, psychological check, more oversight by people and by federals would also help.

  • Aniki 🌱🌿@lemm.ee
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    10 个月前

    officers killed in the line of duty declined

    In other words – violence continues to drop while the pigs get more and more violent.

      • Aniki 🌱🌿@lemm.ee
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        10 个月前
        1. Logging workers
        2. Aircraft pilots and flight engineers
        3. Derrick operators in oil, gas, and mining
        4. Roofers
        5. Garbage collectors
        6. Ironworkers
        7. Delivery drivers
        8. Farmers
        9. Firefighting supervisors
        10. Power linemen
        11. Agricultural workers
        12. Crossing guards
        13. Crane operators
        14. Construction helpers
        15. Landscaping supervisors
        16. Highway maintenance workers
        17. Cement masons
        18. Small engine mechanics
        19. Supervisors of mechanics
        20. Heavy vehicle mechanics
        21. Grounds maintenance workers
        22. Police officers
        23. Maintenance workers
        24. Construction workers
        25. Mining machine operators
        • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️@lemmy.world
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          10 个月前

          Delivery drivers

          Confirm. Before the advent of the current doordash-uber-postmates fiasco, I worked delivery for four different restaurants. I went to neighborhoods where cops eating at our restaurant(s) flat out told me they won’t go. With a pocket full of cash, no backup, in my regular old not bulletproof personal vehicle.

          I was strapped as fuck, of course, but still.

          Cops are pussies.

        • rivermonster@lemmy.worldOP
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          10 个月前

          And police are tied with grounds maintenance, and maintenance workers. But only one of the three gets military hardware. ><

        • Sagifurius@lemm.ee
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          10 个月前

          I’ve read often that if you account for automotive accidents, they drop out of the top 500, and out of the top 100 if you start including dangerous niche jobs.

          • Fester@lemm.ee
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            10 个月前

            Imagine you’re working on a small engine, and then out of nowhere a black woman exists, asleep in her bed, and you didn’t have a gun to shoot her with. Bam, you’re dead.

          • jak@sopuli.xyz
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            10 个月前

            They make trips to service boat engines, and transportation accidents and falls are the most common killer here. My brain supplied an additional theory when it mentioned lawnmower repair, but hopefully there’s a foolproof way to temporarily disable the blades, no matter how old or damaged the lawnmower

          • _NoName_@lemmy.ml
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            10 个月前

            There’s probably not as many small engine mechanics out there so that’ll accentuate a smaller number of injuries and deaths.

            but also, as a small engine mechanic you’re working with an explosive device. It’s controlled explosion, but it’s been designed to be compact and lightweight while still providing a decent power output. I imagine that if anything goes wrong, that thing turns into an IED pretty quick.

            Not to mention that some small engines use fancy fuel that can fuck you up pretty quick, and all engines are prone to catching fire.

  • ExLisper@linux.community
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    10 个月前

    It’s not just the killings, the entire system is completely fucked up. Bail system, warrants, jails, plea deals, public defenders, judges, expert witnesses… absolutely everything is just wrong.

  • tacosanonymous@lemm.ee
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    10 个月前

    Overall, crime is down. It feels like should lead to less extrajudicial killings.

    When can we get some fucking police reform?

    • Masterblaster@kbin.social
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      10 个月前

      here’s the spoiler: meaningful legislation for literally anything will never come until the tug of war between right and left is settled.

      • rivermonster@lemmy.worldOP
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        10 个月前

        Correction, until we have a tug from the right. There’s just the current tug between center-right dems and fascist, racist GOP. Both capitalist parties, thereby both requiring a fascist force.

  • thefartographer@lemm.ee
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    10 个月前

    Lemme make sure I get the facts straight:

    • Police are killing people in increasing numbers
    • Police are killing police in fewer numbers
    • Police receive indoctrinating training which teaches them that they are a supreme individual entity while civilians are dangerous and the “other”
    • Police are easily identified by their shield (badge) and their weapons, all of which are required as part of their duty within the police
    • Police officers’ strongest weapon is their union
    • Police frequently and harshly punish civilians for their “resistance”

    Regarding the first two points: the most efficient way, in our federation, to avoid being killed or brutalized by the police is to join them?

    TIL Police are the Borg.

  • breadsmasher@lemmy.world
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    10 个月前

    Heres some data for the UK to compare.

    https://www.statista.com/statistics/319287/deaths-during-or-following-police-contact-causes-england-and-wales/

    America has some serious problems

    
    | Characteristic | Road traffic fatalities | Fatal shootings | Deaths in or following police custody | Apparent suicides following custody | Other deaths during or following police contact\* |
    | -------------- | ----------------------- | --------------- | ------------------------------------- | ----------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------- |
    | 2010/11        | 26                      | 2               | 21                                    | 46                                  | 57                                                |
    | 2011/12        | 19                      | 2               | 15                                    | 39                                  | 47                                                |
    | 2012/13        | 31                      | 0               | 15                                    | 65                                  | 22                                                |
    | 2013/14        | 12                      | 0               | 11                                    | 70                                  | 44                                                |
    | 2014/15        | 14                      | 1               | 18                                    | 71                                  | 43                                                |
    | 2015/16        | 21                      | 3               | 14                                    | 61                                  | 106                                               |
    | 2016/17        | 32                      | 6               | 14                                    | 56                                  | 131                                               |
    | 2017/18        | 29                      | 4               | 23                                    | 57                                  | 177                                               |
    | 2018/19        | 42                      | 3               | 17                                    | 63                                  | 156                                               |
    | 2019/20        | 24                      | 3               | 18                                    | 54                                  | 107                                               |
    | 2020/21        | 25                      | 1               | 19                                    | 54                                  | 92                                                |
    | 2021/22        | 40                      | 2               | 11                                    | 57                                  | 111                                               |
    | 2022/23        | 28                      | 3               | 23                                    | 52                                  | 90                                                |
    
    • Omega@lemmy.world
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      10 个月前

      So, if I’m reading this right, the US had 6.6 times more fatalities by police (1,300 vs 196), with only 5 times more population (332 million vs 67 million).

      Population equalized, 1,300 US vs 980 UK. Unless I’m reading this wrong.

      • Magikjak@lemmy.world
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        10 个月前

        This source is including many more causes of death not included in the US number. The average annual direct killings by the US police is 1096 (33.1 per 10 million), while the UK is 3 (0.5 per 10 million), about 66 times worse per capita.

        • Omega@lemmy.world
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          10 个月前

          It seems like that’s just shootings. I’m really curious what the “other” category is for the UK. That seems like that might be direct killings that aren’t shootings. That would inflate the number to 93.

          But even if all of the others are murders (since unattributed deaths in custody is its own category), that would still make the US police 3 times as likely to murder you.

      • breadsmasher@lemmy.world
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        10 个月前

        I don’t have the info to clarify this either way, but the data Ive shared isn’t only “directly killed by police action” but includes suicide and other deaths related to police contact but not necessarily directly caused by police

        e. interpreting the US statistics as “directly killed by police, with their hands” then I would count only “fatal shootings” and possibly “deaths in and following police custody”.

        Here’s another slice of UK people killed by shootings https://www.statista.com/statistics/319246/police-fatal-shootings-england-wales/

        2023 there were 3 police shootings resulting in death

        In USA there were 1153 fatal shootings by police

        https://www.statista.com/statistics/585152/people-shot-to-death-by-us-police-by-race/

        • Omega@lemmy.world
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          10 个月前

          There’s an “other” category for the UK link. Since “in police custody” seems to be for unattributed deaths, I’m assuming “other” is for attributed murder that isn’t shootings.

  • SeaJ@lemm.ee
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    10 个月前

    2023 had the lowest violent crime rate in like 50 years.

  • BlanketsWithSmallpox@lemmy.world
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    10 个月前

    The Mapping Police Violence project, which has been tracking police killings in the country since 2013, reported that officers killed 1,329 people last year, representing nearly a 19-percent increase over the 11-year span.

    The Gun Violence Archive, which tracks shootings throughout the U.S., reported that 2023 saw a decrease in shooting deaths overall. More than 800 suspects were injured in officer involved shootings last year, according to the organization.

    So shooting deaths across the board both police and civilian have increased since COVID ‘ended’. Blame the full moon. 🌝

  • dangblingus@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    10 个月前

    The police are agents of the state. They exist to protect capital owner’s interests. They will kill you if they think you threaten the ruling class’ bag in any way. They are not obligated to protect you or your family and will shoot through you and your baby to get someone behind you that is holding a toy car.

  • wildcardology@lemmy.world
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    10 个月前

    I’m assuming most of the victims are unarmed. US police don’t like to shoot people that shoot back.

    • licherally@lemmy.world
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      10 个月前

      Probably not, but it’s kind of irrelevant either way. The real issue is the lack of functional de-escalation training and the incredibly low standards that need to be passed to be a cop (6 months or less of fuck all training, mostly only in offensive techniques.)

      • Fedizen@lemmy.world
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        10 个月前

        its also just the sheer number of problems police are expected to solve but all the training is how to shoot and handcuff people. The actual roles of police need to be split between several groups- you don’t need guns to write parking tickets, answer mental health calls and direct traffic. You don’t need patrol cars to have neighborhood peace keeping. Like the US needs to narrow what policing is and systematically reform the way policing is done.

    • ExLisper@linux.community
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      10 个月前

      I took a closer look at a long list of police shootings some time ago and it looked like 50/50 between cops just shooting someone in the back and shooting back at someone trying to kill them.