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OFC_LOST.P02
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1991-05-31
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May 1991
LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICERS KILLED: 1980 1989
By
Victoria L. Major
Supervisor, Uniform Crime Reporting Section
Federal Bureau of Investigation
Washington, D.C.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation began to maintain and
to publish statistics on law enforcement officers killed in
1961. The data collected over the years are a sad legacy of the
dedicated men and women of this Nation's police forces who lost
their lives protecting others. Yet, at the same time, the
information provides an insightful look into this heinous crime.
This article gives an overview of law enforcement officers
killed during the years 1980-1989.
THE 1980s
During the decade of the 1980s, 801 law enforcement
officers were feloniously killed in the line of duty. Officer
deaths were recorded in 46 States; the District of Columbia; the
U.S. territories of American Samoa, Guam, the Mariana Islands,
Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands; and Mexico. Of the slain
officers, 442 were employed by city police departments, 208 by
county police and sheriff's offices, and 84 by State agencies.
Twenty-three Federal agents and 44 territorial officers were
also slain.
The 1980s total was 30 percent lower than that of the
1970s, when 1,143 officers were slain. The highest annual total
during the past decade was in the first year, 1980, when 104
officers were killed. The lowest totals were in 1986 and 1989,
when each year registered 66 officers killed. This figure
represents the lowest annual total since records have been kept.
VICTIMS
Of the 801 officers killed from 1980 through 1989, 783 were
male and 18 were female. Seventy-seven officers were under 25
years of age; 515 were aged 25 to 40; and 209 were over 40 years
old. By race, 703 of the slain officers were white; 96 were
black; and 2 were of other races.
The law enforcement officers killed during the past decade
averaged 9 years' law enforcement experience. Veterans of more
than 10 years accounted for 34 percent of the victim officers.
Thirty-three percent had from 5 to 10 years of service; 29
percent, from 1 to 4 years of service; and 5 percent, less than
1 year of experience.
The average height of officers killed during the 10-year
period was 5 feet 11 inches. Seven of every 10 were in uniform
when slain.
CIRCUMSTANCES
Arrest situations resulted in the deaths of law enforcement
officers more frequently than any other activity during the
1980s. Two of every 5, or 327, of the officers slain were
attempting an arrest when killed.
Among the remaining victims, 132 were killed upon
responding to disturbance calls (man with gun, bar fights,
family quarrels); 117 were investigating suspicious persons or
circumstances; 107 were conducting traffic pursuits or stops; 71
were ambushed; 34 were handling, transporting, or maintaining
custody of prisoners; and 12 were handling mentally deranged
individuals. One officer was slain during a civil disorder.
TYPES OF ASSIGNMENT
Patrol officers accounted for nearly two of every three
officers slain throughout the decade. Detectives or officers on
special assignment accounted for 23 percent of the victims, and
12 percent were off duty but acting in an official capacity when
slain.
Of those killed while on patrol, 78 percent were assigned
to one-officer vehicles, 20 percent to two-officer vehicles, and
2 percent to foot patrol. Fifty-three percent of the patrol
officers were alone and unassisted at the time of their deaths,
while 30 percent of the victim officers on other types of
assignment were alone and unassisted.
WEAPONS
Firearms claimed the lives of 92 percent or 735 of the 801
officers killed in the line of duty from 1980 through 1989.
Seventy percent of the murders were committed by the use of
handguns, 13 percent by rifles, and 9 percent by shotguns.
The most common types of handguns used against officers
were the .38 caliber and .357 magnum. These two weapons jointly
accounted for nearly two of every three handgun deaths.
More than one-half of the officers killed by gunshots
during this same timeframe were within 5 feet of their
assailants at the time of the attack. Fifty-four percent of the
firearm fatalities were caused by wounds to the upper torso,
while 42 percent resulted from wounds to the head.
Of the 735 officers killed with firearms, 120 or 16 percent
were killed with their own weapons. Handguns accounted for 118
of the service weapons used against the officers; shotguns for
2. Among the service handguns, 9 of 10 were those using .357-
or .38-special cartridge types.
Weapons other than firearms claimed the lives of 66
officers during the 10-year period. Thirty-three officers were
intentionally struck with vehicles, 17 were knifed, 7 were
beaten with blunt objects, 5 were beaten with personal weapons
(hands, fists, feet), 2 were burned, 1 was drowned, and 1 was
asphyxiated.
BODY ARMOR
Of the 735 officers slain with firearms during the 1980s,
157 were wearing protective body armor. Wounds to the head
resulted in the deaths of 94 officers wearing protective armor.
Thirty-two officers were killed when bullets entered between the
panels of the vests or through the arm openings. Thirteen were
killed by wounds to the upper torso outside the area of the
vests, and 12 by gunshot wounds below the vest area. Six
officers were slain when bullets penetrated their protective
vests.
In addition to the 157 officers shot and killed while
wearing vests, 12 victims wearing vests were killed by weapons
other than firearms. Eight officers wearing vests were
intentionally struck by vehicles, three were stabbed, and one
was pushed to his death.
PLACES
The most populous region, the Southern States, recorded 46
percent of the officer fatalities in the 1980s. The Western
States recorded 18 percent of the deaths; the Midwestern States,
17 percent; the Northeastern States, 13 percent; and U.S.
territories, 5 percent.
A comparison of regional totals for the two periods,
1980-1984 and 1985-1989, showed that the number of officers
killed during the latter 5-year span declined in all regions.
Among the 50 States, Texas lost more officers to
line-of-duty deaths than any other during the decade. Four
States recorded no felonious killings during the 10-year
period--Delaware, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont.
Law enforcement agencies in the Nations largest cities,
those with more than 250,000 inhabitants, lost more officers to
line-of-duty deaths than departments in municipalities of any
other size. These cities collectively recorded 24 percent of
all felonious killings in the decade. Following were suburban
county law enforcement agencies, registering 16 percent of the
slayings.
TIMES
In the past decade, 62 percent of the incidents resulting
in officers deaths occurred from 6:01 p.m. to 6:00 a.m. The
figures show the 6:01 a.m. to 8:00 a.m. period to be the hours
when the fewest officers were slain, while the hours from 8:01
p.m. to 10:00 p.m. were those during which the highest totals
were recorded.
Daily figures for the decade show more officers were slain
on Thursdays than on any other day of the week. The fewest
fatalities were recorded on Sundays. January was the month
during the 10-year span that registered the highest total, 91;
August showed the lowest total, 53.
ASSAILANTS
Ninety-eight percent of the 801 slayings of law enforcement
officers during the 1980s have been cleared. Of the 1,077
suspects i