
Cop-involved shootings steady, statistics show
By Chuck Bennett
am
NewYork Staff Writer
NEW YORK, Dec. 8, 2006--Police shootings are not on the rise this
year, despite perceptions following the fatal shooting of Sean
Bell last month and two other police-involved incidents this week.
However, the number of fatal police-involved shootings is up this
year.
The actual number of cop shootings is about the same as it was
last year, according to statistics from the NYPD obtained by amNewYork.
Police were involved in 115 shootings this year as of Thursday.
During the same period last year, there were 117 such shootings.
"The number of fatal police shootings last year reached the
lowest point, 9, compared to 54 in 1973. While it's up this year,
these are still historic lows," said NYPD Deputy Commissioner
Paul Browne. "The perception does not reflect the reality.
... [the statistics] show restraint and good training."
In the shootouts, 31 people were actually hit by the police bullets
and 11--including Bell--were killed this year.
Last year, 34 people were shot and nine killed by police.
The number of shootings is in a dramatic drop since the crack war
days of the 1980s and 1990s. There were 435 police-involved shootings
in 1995, the highest in the past 20 years.
Independent observers agreed.
"When you consider there are 35,000 armed officers its really
not statistically significant," said Maki Haberfeld, chairwoman
of John Jay College's Law, Police Science and Criminal Justice
Administration department of the latest figures. "There's
a sudden perception that cops are running around shooting citizens
but that's really not so."
By comparison, the 2,100-officer Las Vegas Police Department killed
12 people so far this year and 19 people were killed by the 6,600-officer
Philadelphia Police Department, according to data compiled by the
Associated Press.
"Despite the raw emotion and scrutiny that [the Sean Bell
shooting] has generated New York City police officers are among
the most restrained in the use of deadly physical force in the
nation. That has been true for years and remains true today and
is only supported by the fact that the five officers involved never
fired their weapons on the job before," said Pat Lynch, president
of the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association.
Police payments to citizens as a result of lawsuits, including
non-shooting related claims, is also on the decline, according
to figures from the Independent Budget Office. Police paid out
$22.4 million for claims in fiscal year 2006, which ended June
30. In fiscal year 2005 police paid $34.4 million and in 2004 it
paid $43.3 million.
There is generally a four-and-a-half year lag between the time
a case is filed and a settlement is made.

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