USA TODAY US Edition

WHAT’S THE MATTER WITH COPS?

Ferguson shooting a year ago was just the first in a disturbing string of deaths

- James Fox James Alan Fox, the Family Lipman Professor of Criminolog­y, Law and Public Policy at Northeaste­rn University, is a member of USA TODAY’s Board of Contributo­rs.

On Sunday, it has been a year since Michael Brown, an 18-year-old black man, was fatally shot by a white police officer in Ferguson, Mo. The incident set off a firestorm of protests and civil unrest, including violent confrontat­ions between the police and black demonstrat­ors in a once obscure suburb of St. Louis.

Of course, the Ferguson shooting was just the first in a disturbing string of widely publicized deaths of black citizens while being stopped by the police or in custody, giving rise to the rallying cry, “Black Lives Matter.” Meanwhile, politician­s, the news media and the general public wanted to know: What’s the matter with cops today?

Has law enforcemen­t behavior really changed regarding the use of lethal force, as many citizens contend? Are cops more inclined to shoot first and investigat­e later, especially during encounters with blacks, as some activists claim?

Based on available FBI data, the number of suspected felons killed by law enforcemen­t officers during the commission of a crime or while attempting to flee has increased by about 50% since 2000. But violent crime and the number of cops killed in the line of duty have declined, failing to explain the upturn in deadly force.

WHITES KILLED BY POLICE The surprising and important truth about the trend in use of deadly force is that the increase involving whites killed by the police has outpaced that of black victims, according to FBI data. From 2000 to 2013, the number of whites killed by the cops increased 57%, while the number of blacks killed by the police increased 42%.

Could it be that public indignatio­n when white cops kill blacks is greater than when they kill whites? Are we more critical of certain white-on-black police encounters by presuming racism as a contributi­ng factor rather than seeing the matter as a few police officers doing their job recklessly?

These questions are not meant to serve as a blanket apology for rogue cops. There is nothing, for example, that would justify the actions of the white police officer charged in North Charleston, S.C., with murder for allegedly firing off eight rounds and killing an unarmed 50-year-old black father of four, as he ran from the officer.

That the North Charleston shooting and several other questionab­le police encounters were captured on video has certainly magnified the sense of outrage. Seeing is believing, and sometimes indicting.

Now is not the first time that fatal shootings by the police have risen. From the mid-1980s to the early-1990s, the number of suspected felons gunned down by the police rose sharply, including a twofold increase in the number of blacks killed.

CHANGE IN CRIME RATES However, that was an era when violent crime rates were also spiraling out of control. Americans closed their eyes to the sometimes dubious actions of the police, being far more concerned about eradicatin­g the growing scourge of lawlessnes­s.

During the crime surge, the police had a broad mandate: Resolve the crisis in virtually whatever way possible. The ends justified the means. But now that crime rates are low — as low as they have been for decades, the public is questionin­g the means.

Actually, the police were not the greatest threat to black citizens and the tranquilit­y of their neighborho­ods during the late-’80s crime wave. At that time, blacks were only 12% of the U.S. population yet constitute­d nearly half of the nation’s homicide victims. Moreover, well more than 90% of these black homicide victims were slain by members of their own race. Black lives do indeed matter, but not just when they are taken by officers in blue.

In the year since the Ferguson shooting, lawmakers around the country have filed legislatio­n out of mounting concern about cops who are too quick on the trigger, including mandates for better training of recruits, expanded use of dashboard and body cameras, and reductions in the deployment of military-style equipment.

Whatever comes of these initiative­s, let them be guided by sound judgment and not fiery race-based slogans.

 ?? MICHAEL B. THOMAS, AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Memorial service for Michael Brown on Sunday in Ferguson, Mo., a year after he was fatally shot by a police officer.
MICHAEL B. THOMAS, AFP/GETTY IMAGES Memorial service for Michael Brown on Sunday in Ferguson, Mo., a year after he was fatally shot by a police officer.

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