Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

PolitiFact: Police more likely to kill than be killed.

- Madeline Heim

Widespread condemnati­on of police brutality has picked up once again after Kenosha police shot Jacob Blake, a 29year-old Black man, seven times at close range as he attempted to get into his SUV late in the afternoon of Aug. 23.

As Blake remained at a Milwaukee hospital, where his family’s attorneys say he is paralyzed from the waist down, protests developed in Kenosha and across the state.

Politician­s from both sides of the aisle have weighed in, including state Sen. Chris Larson, D-Milwaukee, who wrote this in an Aug. 24 Facebook post:

“In 2019, 89 officers died in the line of duty. While every death is tragic, almost half (41) were accidental. That same year, officers shot and killed 999 people. Police are 20.8 times more likely to kill than be killed by a criminal. We must drasticall­y reduce the use of deadly force in this country.”

Is he correct that in 2019, police were “20.8 times more likely to kill than be killed by a criminal?”

This post was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and

To back up his claim, Larson’s office cited statistics from the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion on the number of law enforcemen­t officers who died in the line of duty during 2019.

According to those statistics, 89 officers were killed in such incidents last year. Forty-one of those officers were killed accidental­ly, the FBI says, most often in car accidents.

That leaves 48 of what the FBI calls “felonious” deaths, which are deaths caused by criminal acts.

Turning to the number of people killed by police last year, Larson’s office pointed to the Washington Post’s “Fatal Force” database, which since 2015 has been logging fatal shootings by on-duty police officers throughout the U.S. The Post tracks such cases by following local news, law enforcemen­t websites and social media, submitting open records requests and verifying incidents with the police department in question.

In 2019, 999 people were shot and killed by police, according to the database.

In his Facebook post, Larson does the math: If criminal acts led to 48 officer deaths in 2019, and officers killed 999 people in the same year, that would make police approximat­ely 20.8 times more likely to kill someone than be killed in a criminal act.

The Post database breaks down another important data point: Black Americans are more likely to be shot and killed by police than white Americans. Black people account for less than 13% of the U.S. population but are killed by police at more than double the rate of white people.

Black people are killed by police at a rate of 32 deaths per million people, Hispanic people at a rate of 24 per million, and white people at a rate of 13 per million, according to the database.

Our rating

Larson said police are “20.8 times more likely to kill than be killed by a criminal.”

FBI statistics and a national database show that checks out: In 2019, police killed 999 people, and 48 officers were killed by a criminal act in the line of duty.

We rate Larson’s claim True.

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