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Law Enforcement Deaths Rose Sharply During the First Six Months
of 2007
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For
first time since 1978, more than 100 officers killed during first half
of year; fatal shootings, traffic-related deaths both increase
The number of law enforcement officers killed in the United States
soared by 44 percent during the first six months of 2007, and for the
first time in three decades, more than 100 officer deaths were recorded
by the halfway point of the year, according to preliminary statistics
from the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund (NLEOMF) and
Concerns of Police Survivors (COPS).
The groups' preliminary data indicate 101 local, state and federal law
enforcement officers were killed between January 1 and June 30, 2007, an
increase from the 70 officers who lost their lives during the same
period of 2006. The last time the mid-year total was that high was 1978,
when there were 105 officer deaths.
Of the 101 officers killed during the first half of 2007, 45 died in
traffic-related incidents. That's an increase of 36 percent from the 33
traffic-related fatalities during the first six months of 2006.
In addition, 39 officers were shot to death during the first six months
of this year, compared with 27 during the same period of 2006, a jump of
more than 44 percent. Also this year, seven officers succumbed to
job-related illnesses, three drowned, two were killed in terrorist
attacks, two died in aircraft accidents, and one officer each died from
a bomb blast, a boating accident and being struck by a falling object.
"Though still preliminary, these latest numbers are cause for alarm for
two reasons," said Craig W. Floyd, Chairman and CEO of the NLEOMF.
"First, the recent trend of more officers being killed on our roadways,
in vehicle crashes and while outside their vehicles, appears to continue
unabated. Second, we are now seeing a spike in fatal shootings of
officers as well - cases which have generally been declining in recent
years." |
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