243 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
243 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
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May 1991
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LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICERS KILLED: 1980 1989
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By
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Victoria L. Major
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Supervisor, Uniform Crime Reporting Section
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Federal Bureau of Investigation
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Washington, D.C.
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The Federal Bureau of Investigation began to maintain and
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to publish statistics on law enforcement officers killed in
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1961. The data collected over the years are a sad legacy of the
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dedicated men and women of this Nation's police forces who lost
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their lives protecting others. Yet, at the same time, the
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information provides an insightful look into this heinous crime.
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This article gives an overview of law enforcement officers
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killed during the years 1980-1989.
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THE 1980s
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During the decade of the 1980s, 801 law enforcement
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officers were feloniously killed in the line of duty. Officer
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deaths were recorded in 46 States; the District of Columbia; the
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U.S. territories of American Samoa, Guam, the Mariana Islands,
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Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands; and Mexico. Of the slain
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officers, 442 were employed by city police departments, 208 by
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county police and sheriff's offices, and 84 by State agencies.
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Twenty-three Federal agents and 44 territorial officers were
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also slain.
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The 1980s total was 30 percent lower than that of the
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1970s, when 1,143 officers were slain. The highest annual total
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during the past decade was in the first year, 1980, when 104
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officers were killed. The lowest totals were in 1986 and 1989,
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when each year registered 66 officers killed. This figure
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represents the lowest annual total since records have been kept.
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VICTIMS
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Of the 801 officers killed from 1980 through 1989, 783 were
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male and 18 were female. Seventy-seven officers were under 25
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years of age; 515 were aged 25 to 40; and 209 were over 40 years
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old. By race, 703 of the slain officers were white; 96 were
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black; and 2 were of other races.
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The law enforcement officers killed during the past decade
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averaged 9 years' law enforcement experience. Veterans of more
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than 10 years accounted for 34 percent of the victim officers.
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Thirty-three percent had from 5 to 10 years of service; 29
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percent, from 1 to 4 years of service; and 5 percent, less than
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1 year of experience.
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The average height of officers killed during the 10-year
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period was 5 feet 11 inches. Seven of every 10 were in uniform
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when slain.
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CIRCUMSTANCES
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Arrest situations resulted in the deaths of law enforcement
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officers more frequently than any other activity during the
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1980s. Two of every 5, or 327, of the officers slain were
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attempting an arrest when killed.
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Among the remaining victims, 132 were killed upon
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responding to disturbance calls (man with gun, bar fights,
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family quarrels); 117 were investigating suspicious persons or
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circumstances; 107 were conducting traffic pursuits or stops; 71
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were ambushed; 34 were handling, transporting, or maintaining
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custody of prisoners; and 12 were handling mentally deranged
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individuals. One officer was slain during a civil disorder.
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TYPES OF ASSIGNMENT
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Patrol officers accounted for nearly two of every three
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officers slain throughout the decade. Detectives or officers on
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special assignment accounted for 23 percent of the victims, and
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12 percent were off duty but acting in an official capacity when
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slain.
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Of those killed while on patrol, 78 percent were assigned
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to one-officer vehicles, 20 percent to two-officer vehicles, and
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2 percent to foot patrol. Fifty-three percent of the patrol
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officers were alone and unassisted at the time of their deaths,
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while 30 percent of the victim officers on other types of
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assignment were alone and unassisted.
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WEAPONS
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Firearms claimed the lives of 92 percent or 735 of the 801
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officers killed in the line of duty from 1980 through 1989.
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Seventy percent of the murders were committed by the use of
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handguns, 13 percent by rifles, and 9 percent by shotguns.
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The most common types of handguns used against officers
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were the .38 caliber and .357 magnum. These two weapons jointly
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accounted for nearly two of every three handgun deaths.
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More than one-half of the officers killed by gunshots
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during this same timeframe were within 5 feet of their
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assailants at the time of the attack. Fifty-four percent of the
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firearm fatalities were caused by wounds to the upper torso,
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while 42 percent resulted from wounds to the head.
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Of the 735 officers killed with firearms, 120 or 16 percent
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were killed with their own weapons. Handguns accounted for 118
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of the service weapons used against the officers; shotguns for
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2. Among the service handguns, 9 of 10 were those using .357-
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or .38-special cartridge types.
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Weapons other than firearms claimed the lives of 66
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officers during the 10-year period. Thirty-three officers were
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intentionally struck with vehicles, 17 were knifed, 7 were
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beaten with blunt objects, 5 were beaten with personal weapons
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(hands, fists, feet), 2 were burned, 1 was drowned, and 1 was
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asphyxiated.
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BODY ARMOR
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Of the 735 officers slain with firearms during the 1980s,
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157 were wearing protective body armor. Wounds to the head
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resulted in the deaths of 94 officers wearing protective armor.
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Thirty-two officers were killed when bullets entered between the
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panels of the vests or through the arm openings. Thirteen were
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killed by wounds to the upper torso outside the area of the
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vests, and 12 by gunshot wounds below the vest area. Six
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officers were slain when bullets penetrated their protective
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vests.
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In addition to the 157 officers shot and killed while
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wearing vests, 12 victims wearing vests were killed by weapons
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other than firearms. Eight officers wearing vests were
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intentionally struck by vehicles, three were stabbed, and one
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was pushed to his death.
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PLACES
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The most populous region, the Southern States, recorded 46
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percent of the officer fatalities in the 1980s. The Western
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States recorded 18 percent of the deaths; the Midwestern States,
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17 percent; the Northeastern States, 13 percent; and U.S.
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territories, 5 percent.
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A comparison of regional totals for the two periods,
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1980-1984 and 1985-1989, showed that the number of officers
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killed during the latter 5-year span declined in all regions.
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Among the 50 States, Texas lost more officers to
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line-of-duty deaths than any other during the decade. Four
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States recorded no felonious killings during the 10-year
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period--Delaware, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont.
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Law enforcement agencies in the Nations largest cities,
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those with more than 250,000 inhabitants, lost more officers to
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line-of-duty deaths than departments in municipalities of any
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other size. These cities collectively recorded 24 percent of
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all felonious killings in the decade. Following were suburban
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county law enforcement agencies, registering 16 percent of the
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slayings.
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TIMES
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In the past decade, 62 percent of the incidents resulting
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in officers deaths occurred from 6:01 p.m. to 6:00 a.m. The
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figures show the 6:01 a.m. to 8:00 a.m. period to be the hours
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when the fewest officers were slain, while the hours from 8:01
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p.m. to 10:00 p.m. were those during which the highest totals
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were recorded.
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Daily figures for the decade show more officers were slain
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on Thursdays than on any other day of the week. The fewest
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fatalities were recorded on Sundays. January was the month
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during the 10-year span that registered the highest total, 91;
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August showed the lowest total, 53.
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ASSAILANTS
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Ninety-eight percent of the 801 slayings of law enforcement
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officers during the 1980s have been cleared. Of the 1,077
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suspects identified in connection with the murders, 1,034 were
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male and 43 were female. Fifty-six percent of those identified
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were white, 42 percent were black, and 2 percent were of other
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races. Sixty-two percent of the assailants were younger than 30
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years old.
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Seven of every 10 suspects identified had previous arrests,
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and 5 of 10 had a prior conviction. The records also show that
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3 of every 10 had a prior arrest for a violent crime.
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Twenty-four percent of those identified were on parole or
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probation at the time of the killings.
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Of the 1,077 persons identified, 879 have been arrested by
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law enforcement agencies. One hundred forty-three were
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justifiably killed, 48 committed suicide, 6 are still at large,
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and 1 was murdered in an unrelated incident.
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DISPOSITION
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Based on available disposition information, 70 percent of
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those arrested and charged in connection with the killings of
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law enforcement officers during the 1980s were found guilty of
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murder. Eight percent were found guilty of a lesser offense
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related to murder, and 4 percent were found guilty of some crime
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other than murder. Two percent of those charged were committed
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to psychiatric institutions, and 1 percent died in custody
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before final disposition. Ten percent of the suspects were
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acquitted or had the charges against them dismissed.
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Disposition is pending for 6 percent of the arrestees, the
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majority of whom were arrested in 1988 and 1989.
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ACCIDENTAL DEATHS
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In addition to those feloniously killed during the decade,
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713 law enforcement officers lost their lives accidently while
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performing their official duties. The lowest annual total of
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the decade was in 1980 with 61 deaths recorded. The last year
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of the decade, 1989, registered the highest count, 79.
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Automobile accidents were the leading cause of accidental
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deaths, accounting for 312 fatalities during the decade.
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Following were accidents where officers were struck by vehicles
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at traffic stops, road blocks, while directing traffic or
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assisting motorists, etc. (160); aircraft accidents (89);
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accidental shootings (60); motorcycle accidents (49); and other
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types of accidents, such as falls, drownings, etc. (43).
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Geographically, the Southern States recorded 312 accidental
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deaths; the Western States, 168; the Midwestern States, 116; the
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Northeastern States, 101; Puerto Rico, 10; and Guam, 2. An
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additional four officers were accidentally killed in the line of
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duty while in foreign countries.
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CONCLUSION
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Many officers paid the ultimate price in the performance of
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their duties. They accepted the challenges of their profession
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freely and faced each challenge unselfishly. Hopefully, the
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statistics compiled on officer deaths can be used to protect
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those who continue to enforce the laws of this country and
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protect its freedom.
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