Law Enforcement Facts
(March 2008)
- There are more than 900,000 sworn
law enforcement officers now serving in the United States,
which is the highest figure ever. About 12 percent of
those are female.
- In 2005, there were an estimated 5.2
million violent crimes committed in the United States
(according to the National Crime Victimization Survey
conducted by the Bureau of Justice Statistics). The annual
number of violent crimes has declined by 58% since
1993.
- Crime fighting has taken its toll. Since
the first recorded police death in 1792, there have been
more than 18,200 law enforcement officers killed in
the line of duty. Currently, there are 18,274 names
engraved on the walls of the National Law Enforcement
Officers Memorial.
- A total of 1,671 law enforcement
officers died in the line of duty during the past 10 years,
an average of one death every 53 hours or 167
per year. There were 181 law enforcement officers
killed in 2007.
- On average, more than 56,000 law
enforcement officers are assaulted each year, resulting in
over 16,000 injuries.
- The 1970s were the deadliest decade
in law enforcement history, when a total of 2,276
officers died, or an average of 228 each year. The
deadliest year in law enforcement history was 1930,
when 279 officers were killed. That figure dropped
dramatically in the 1990s, to an average of 160 per
year.
- The deadliest day in law enforcement
history was September 11, 2001, when 72 officers were
killed while responding to the terrorist attacks on America.
- New York City has lost more officers in the
line of duty than any other department, with 692
deaths. California has lost 1,435 officers, more than
any other state. The state with the fewest deaths is
Vermont, with 19.
- There are 951 federal officers
listed on the Memorial, as well as 527 correctional
officers and 36 military law enforcement officers.
- There are 223 female officers listed
on the Memorial, nine of whom were killed prior to 1970.
- During the past ten years,
more officers were killed feloniously on Friday than
any other day of the week. The fewest number of felonious
fatalities occurred on Sunday. Over the past decade,
more officers were killed between 8:01 p.m. and and 10:00
p.m. than during any other two-hour period.

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