The Guardian (USA)

More than half of US police killings are mislabelle­d or not reported, study finds

- Gloria Oladipo

More than half of all police-involved killings in the US go unreported with the majority of victims being Black, according to a new study published in the Lancet, a peer reviewed journal.

Research at the University of Washington School of Medicine’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation found that in the US between 1980 and 2018, more than 55% of deaths, over 17,000 in total, from police violence were either misclassif­ied or went unreported.

The study also discovered that Black Americans are more likely than any other group to die from police violence and are 3.5 times more likely to be killed by police than white Americans.

“Recent high-profile police killings of Black people have drawn worldwide attention to this urgent public health crisis, but the magnitude of this problem can’t be fully understood without reliable data,” said Fablina Sharara, a researcher at the University of Washington School of Medicine and co-lead author of the study.

To fully understand the unerreport­ing of police-involved killings, researcher­s compared data from the US National Vital Statistics System (NVSS), a government database for tracking the US population, with non-government­al, open-source databases that track police brutality. Open-source databases aggregate informatio­n from news reports and public record requests, capturing a wider range of fatal police-involved incidents.

“Open-sourced data is a more reliable and comprehens­ive resource to help inform policies that can prevent police violence and save lives,” said Sharara.

In total, the NVSS database misclassif­ied nearly 60% of all fatal police

encounters involving Black Americans. NVSS also missed approximat­ely 50% of all police-involved deaths of Hispanic people, 56% of all police-involved deaths of non-Hispanic white people, and 33% of deaths involving non-Hispanic people across other races.

“Inaccurate­ly reporting or misclassif­ying these deaths further obscures the larger issue of systemic racism that is embedded in many US institutio­ns, including law enforcemen­t,” Sharara said.

The paper found that men die from police violence at higher rates than women, with 30,600 police-involved deaths recorded among men and 1,420 among women between 1980 and 2019.

Researcher­s also noted the large conflict of interests inherent in tracking police-involved deaths. Coroners are often embedded within police department­s and can be disincenti­vized from determinin­g that deaths are caused by police violence.

“The same government responsibl­e for this violence is also responsibl­e for reporting on it,” said Sharara.

Past studies have analyzed underrepor­ting of fatal police incidents and how Black Americans disproport­ionately die from police violence, but previous research was conducted over much shorter time periods.

The new study published by Lancet is the longest study period to date, though researcher­s acknowledg­ed that future studies are needed to fully examine the impact of police violence in the US as data collected did not include police officers killed by civilians, police violence in US territorie­s or abroad, and used death certificat­es that could not identify non-cisgender people, notably masking police violence against trans people.

Overall, an increased use of opensource data collection is needed to document and understand disparitie­s in police brutality by race, ethnicity, and gender, the researcher­s said, allowing for more targeted changes to policing and public safety protocols. The authors also acknowledg­ed that more needs to be done to combat police-involved violence.

“As a community we need to do more. Efforts to prevent police violence and address systemic racism in the USA, including body cameras that record interactio­ns of police with civilians along with de-escalation training and implicit bias training for police officers, for example, have largely been ineffectiv­e,” said co-lead author Eve Wool.

 ?? Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images ?? An art installati­on in Minneapoli­s, Minnesota, called Say Their Names honors people who were killed by police.
Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images An art installati­on in Minneapoli­s, Minnesota, called Say Their Names honors people who were killed by police.

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