7 datasets found
  1. People shot to death by U.S. police 2017-2024, by race

    • statista.com
    Updated May 27, 2025
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    Statista (2025). People shot to death by U.S. police 2017-2024, by race [Dataset]. https://www.statista.com/statistics/585152/people-shot-to-death-by-us-police-by-race/
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    Dataset updated
    May 27, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Statistahttp://statista.com/
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    Sadly, the trend of fatal police shootings in the United States seems to only be increasing, with a total 1,173 civilians having been shot, 248 of whom were Black, as of December 2024. In 2023, there were 1,164 fatal police shootings. Additionally, the rate of fatal police shootings among Black Americans was much higher than that for any other ethnicity, standing at 6.1 fatal shootings per million of the population per year between 2015 and 2024. Police brutality in the U.S. In recent years, particularly since the fatal shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri in 2014, police brutality has become a hot button issue in the United States. The number of homicides committed by police in the United States is often compared to those in countries such as England, where the number is significantly lower. Black Lives Matter The Black Lives Matter Movement, formed in 2013, has been a vocal part of the movement against police brutality in the U.S. by organizing “die-ins”, marches, and demonstrations in response to the killings of black men and women by police. While Black Lives Matter has become a controversial movement within the U.S., it has brought more attention to the number and frequency of police shootings of civilians.

  2. A

    ‘Police Killings US’ analyzed by Analyst-2

    • analyst-2.ai
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    Analyst-2 (analyst-2.ai) / Inspirient GmbH (inspirient.com), ‘Police Killings US’ analyzed by Analyst-2 [Dataset]. https://analyst-2.ai/analysis/kaggle-police-killings-us-57e7/latest
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    Dataset authored and provided by
    Analyst-2 (analyst-2.ai) / Inspirient GmbH (inspirient.com)
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Analysis of ‘Police Killings US’ provided by Analyst-2 (analyst-2.ai), based on source dataset retrieved from https://www.kaggle.com/azizozmen/police-killings-us on 13 February 2022.

    --- Dataset description provided by original source is as follows ---

    "In 2015, The Washington Post began to log every fatal shooting by an on-duty police officer in the United States. In that time there have been more than 5,000 such shootings recorded by The Post. After Michael Brown, an unarmed Black man, was killed in 2014 by police in Ferguson, Mo., a Post investigation found that the FBI undercounted fatal police shootings by more than half. This is because reporting by police departments is voluntary and many departments fail to do so. The Washington Post’s data relies primarily on news accounts, social media postings, and police reports. Analysis of more than five years of data reveals that the number and circumstances of fatal shootings and the overall demographics of the victims have remained relatively constant..." SOURCE ==> Washington Post Article

    For more information about this story

    This dataset has been prepared by The Washington Post (they keep updating it on runtime) with every fatal shooting in the United States by a police officer in the line of duty since Jan. 1, 2015.

    2016 PoliceKillingUS DATASET
    2017 PoliceKillingUS DATASET
    2018 PoliceKillingUS DATASET
    2019 PoliceKillingUS DATASET
    2020 PoliceKillingUS DATASET

    Features at the Dataset:

    The file fatal-police-shootings-data.csv contains data about each fatal shooting in CSV format. The file can be downloaded at this URL. Each row has the following variables:

    • id: a unique identifier for each victim
    • name: the name of the victim
    • date: the date of the fatal shooting in YYYY-MM-DD format
    • manner_of_death: shot, shot and Tasered
    • armed: indicates that the victim was armed with some sort of implement that a police officer believed could inflict harm
      • undetermined: it is not known whether or not the victim had a weapon
      • unknown: the victim was armed, but it is not known what the object was
      • unarmed: the victim was not armed
    • age: the age of the victim
    • gender: the gender of the victim. The Post identifies victims by the gender they identify with if reports indicate that it differs from their biological sex.
      • M: Male
      • F: Female
      • None: unknown
    • race:
      • W: White, non-Hispanic
      • B: Black, non-Hispanic
      • A: Asian
      • N: Native American
      • H: Hispanic
      • O: Other
      • None: unknown
    • city: the municipality where the fatal shooting took place. Note that in some cases this field may contain a county name if a more specific municipality is unavailable or unknown.
    • state: two-letter postal code abbreviation
    • signs of mental illness: News reports have indicated the victim had a history of mental health issues, expressed suicidal intentions or was experiencing mental distress at the time of the shooting.
    • threat_level: The threat_level column was used to flag incidents for the story by Amy Brittain in October 2015. http://www.washingtonpost.com/sf/investigative/2015/10/24/on-duty-under-fire/ As described in the story, the general criteria for the attack label was that there was the most direct and immediate threat to life. That would include incidents where officers or others were shot at, threatened with a gun, attacked with other weapons or physical force, etc. The attack category is meant to flag the highest level of threat. The other and undetermined categories represent all remaining cases. Other includes many incidents where officers or others faced significant threats.
    • flee: News reports have indicated the victim was moving away from officers
      • Foot
      • Car
      • Not fleeing

    The threat column and the fleeing column are not necessarily related. For example, there is an incident in which the suspect is fleeing and at the same time turns to fire at gun at the officer. Also, attacks represent a status immediately before fatal shots by police while fleeing could begin slightly earlier and involve a chase. - body_camera: News reports have indicated an officer was wearing a body camera and it may have recorded some portion of the incident.

    SOURCE

    --- Original source retains full ownership of the source dataset ---

  3. Data from: Felonious Homicides of American Police Officers, 1977-1992

    • catalog.data.gov
    • s.cnmilf.com
    • +2more
    Updated Mar 12, 2025
    + more versions
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    National Institute of Justice (2025). Felonious Homicides of American Police Officers, 1977-1992 [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/felonious-homicides-of-american-police-officers-1977-1992-25657
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 12, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    National Institute of Justicehttp://nij.ojp.gov/
    Description

    The study was a comprehensive analysis of felonious killings of officers. The purposes of the study were (1) to analyze the nature and circumstances of incidents of felonious police killings and (2) to analyze trends in the numbers and rates of killings across different types of agencies and to explain these differences. For Part 1, Incident-Level Data, an incident-level database was created to capture all incidents involving the death of a police officer from 1983 through 1992. Data on officers and incidents were collected from the Law Enforcement Officers Killed and Assaulted (LEOKA) data collection as coded by the Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) program. In addition to the UCR data, the Police Foundation also coded information from the LEOKA narratives that are not part of the computerized LEOKA database from the FBI. For Part 2, Agency-Level Data, the researchers created an agency-level database to research systematic differences among rates at which law enforcement officers had been feloniously killed from 1977 through 1992. The investigators focused on the 56 largest law enforcement agencies because of the availability of data for explanatory variables. Variables in Part 1 include year of killing, involvement of other officers, if the officer was killed with his/her own weapon, circumstances of the killing, location of fatal wounds, distance between officer and offender, if the victim was wearing body armor, if different officers were killed in the same incident, if the officer was in uniform, actions of the killer and of the officer at entry and final stage, if the killer was visible at first, if the officer thought the killer was a felon suspect, if the officer was shot at entry, and circumstances at anticipation, entry, and final stages. Demographic variables for Part 1 include victim's sex, age, race, type of assignment, rank, years of experience, agency, population group, and if the officer was working a security job. Part 2 contains variables describing the general municipal environment, such as whether the agency is located in the South, level of poverty according to a poverty index, population density, percent of population that was Hispanic or Black, and population aged 15-34 years old. Variables capturing the crime environment include the violent crime rate, property crime rate, and a gun-related crime index. Lastly, variables on the environment of the police agencies include violent and property crime arrests per 1,000 sworn officers, percentage of officers injured in assaults, and number of sworn officers.

  4. Fatal Police Shootings in the US (2015-2020)

    • kaggle.com
    Updated Jun 1, 2020
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    Larxel (2020). Fatal Police Shootings in the US (2015-2020) [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/andrewmvd/police-deadly-force-usage-us/code
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    CroissantCroissant is a format for machine-learning datasets. Learn more about this at mlcommons.org/croissant.
    Dataset updated
    Jun 1, 2020
    Dataset provided by
    Kagglehttp://kaggle.com/
    Authors
    Larxel
    License

    Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    About this dataset

    The Washington Post compiled a dataset of every fatal shooting in the United States by a police officer in the line of duty since Jan. 1, 2015.

    In 2015, The Post began tracking more than a dozen details about each killing by culling local news reports, law enforcement websites and social media and by monitoring independent databases such as Killed by Police and Fatal Encounters. The available features are: - Race of the deceased; - Circumstances of the shooting; - Whether the person was armed; - Whether the victim was experiencing a mental-health crisis; - Among others.

    In 2016, The Post is gathering additional information about each fatal shooting that occurs this year and is filing open-records requests with departments. More than a dozen additional details are being collected about officers in each shooting.

    The Post is documenting only those shootings in which a police officer, in the line of duty, shot and killed a civilian — the circumstances that most closely parallel the 2014 killing of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., which began the protest movement culminating in Black Lives Matter and an increased focus on police accountability nationwide. The Post is not tracking deaths of people in police custody, fatal shootings by off-duty officers or non-shooting deaths.

    The FBI and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention log fatal shootings by police, but officials acknowledge that their data is incomplete. In 2015, The Post documented more than two times more fatal shootings by police than had been recorded by the FBI. Last year, the FBI announced plans to overhaul how it tracks fatal police encounters.

    How to use this dataset

    Acknowledgements

    If you use this dataset in your research, please credit the authors.

    BibTeX

    @misc{wapo-police-shootings-bot , author = {The Washington Post}, title = {data-police-shootings}, month = jan, year = 2015, publisher = {Github}, url = {https://github.com/washingtonpost/data-police-shootings} }

    License

    CC BY NC SA 4.0

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    Image by pixabay avaiable on pexels.

  5. f

    Predictors of an increased county-level risk of being {black, unarmed, and...

    • figshare.com
    xls
    Updated Jun 2, 2023
    + more versions
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    Cody T. Ross (2023). Predictors of an increased county-level risk of being {black, unarmed, and shot by police} relative to being {white, armed, and shot by police}. [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0141854.t002
    Explore at:
    xlsAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 2, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    PLOS ONE
    Authors
    Cody T. Ross
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Values are: posterior mean (posterior standard deviation) of the regression coefficients. The symbol log referes to the natural logarithm. Pop refers to absolute population size. Pct. B. refers to the percentage of the county population that is black. Md. In. refers to median income. Gini refers to the Gini index of inequality. GRP refers to the Google search racism proxy. W. Ast and B. Ast refer to the white- and black-specific arrest rates for assualt, respectively. W. Wps and B. Wps refer to the white- and black-specific arrest rates for weapons violations, respectively. Posterior probabilty that a postive regression coeffcient is less than zero (or a negative one greater than zero) is coded as: * indicates a probability between 0.10 and 0.05, ** indicates a probability between 0.05 and 0.01, and *** indicates a probability of 0.01 or less.

  6. Number, percentage and rate of homicide victims, by racialized identity...

    • www150.statcan.gc.ca
    • data.urbandatacentre.ca
    • +3more
    Updated Jul 25, 2024
    + more versions
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    Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2024). Number, percentage and rate of homicide victims, by racialized identity group, gender and region [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.25318/3510020601-eng
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    Dataset updated
    Jul 25, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    Statistics Canadahttps://statcan.gc.ca/en
    Area covered
    Canada
    Description

    Number, percentage and rate (per 100,000 population) of homicide victims, by racialized identity group (total, by racialized identity group; racialized identity group; South Asian; Chinese; Black; Filipino; Arab; Latin American; Southeast Asian; West Asian; Korean; Japanese; other racialized identity group; multiple racialized identity; racialized identity, but racialized identity group is unknown; rest of the population; unknown racialized identity group), gender (all genders; male; female; gender unknown) and region (Canada; Atlantic region; Quebec; Ontario; Prairies region; British Columbia; territories), 2019 to 2023.

  7. Traffic stops in Rhode Island(Policing activities)

    • kaggle.com
    Updated Aug 15, 2022
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    Mustafa Adel Ibrahim (2022). Traffic stops in Rhode Island(Policing activities) [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/mustafaadelibrahim/traffic-stops-in-rhode-islandpolicing-activities
    Explore at:
    CroissantCroissant is a format for machine-learning datasets. Learn more about this at mlcommons.org/croissant.
    Dataset updated
    Aug 15, 2022
    Dataset provided by
    Kaggle
    Authors
    Mustafa Adel Ibrahim
    Area covered
    Rhode Island
    Description

    50,000 americans are pulled over by police everyday. There’re many different interactions with police that have ended tragically, such as the arrest of Sandra bland in Texas in 2015 that ended up with her dying in jail, and the Minnesota stop with falando Castillo where he was shot and killed, those were really egregious incidents.

    Our dataset of traffic stops by police officers that was collected by the Stanford Open Policing Project. They've collected data from 31 US states. Currently, a comprehensive, national repository detailing interactions between police and the public doesn’t exist. That’s why the Stanford Open Policing Project is collecting and standardizing data on vehicle and pedestrian stops from law enforcement departments across the country and we’re making that information freely available. The Stanford Open Policing Project, are an interdisciplinary team of researchers and journalists at Stanford University. They are committed to combining the academic rigor of statistical analysis with the explanatory power of data journalism. They’ve already gathered over 200 million records from dozens of state and local police departments across the country.

    We'll be focusing on data from the state of Rhode Island. For size reasons, some of the columns and rows have been removed, but you can download the full dataset for any of the 31 states from the project's website

    Conclusions.

    Black and Hispanic drivers are ticketed searched and arrested at ‎higher rates than white drivers even after controlling for location age gender in here the pattern is widespread occurring throughout the country The black drivers were more likely to be charged with the drug related offenses ‎prior to legalization the policy changed mitigated racial disparity. what's interesting is that the number of searches also dramatically decline in ‎both states in part this is because legalizing recreational marijuana removed a common reason for conducting searches. These differences highlighted asperity in police practices in and of themselves ‎the statistics do indicate racial discrimination. for example that officers searched white drivers of there's a 10% chance or ‎greater that they can contraband but there's black drivers there's a 5% chance or greater this is going to be emitted at discrimination

    Challenges.

    We have tried to answer some questions and find out some interesting points, such as... Do the genders or race commit different violations? Does gender or race affect who gets a ticket for speeding? Does gender or race affect whose vehicle is searched? Calculating the search rate and Comparing search rates by gender. Comparing speeding outcomes by gender and race. Does gender and race affect who is frisked during a search? Does gender and race affect who is frisked during a search? Examining the search types. Calculating the inventory rate Counting protective frisks. During a vehicle search, the police officer may pat down the driver to check if they have a weapon. This is known as a "protective frisk. Comparing frisk rates by gender. Does time of day affect arrest rate? Calculating the hourly arrest rate. Are drug-related stops on the rise? Comparing drug and search rates. What violations are caught in each district? Tallying violations by district How long might you be stopped for a violation?

    Inspiration.

    I have used this dataset to develop my skills in data analysis and practice to draw larger conclusions.

  8. Not seeing a result you expected?
    Learn how you can add new datasets to our index.

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Statista (2025). People shot to death by U.S. police 2017-2024, by race [Dataset]. https://www.statista.com/statistics/585152/people-shot-to-death-by-us-police-by-race/
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People shot to death by U.S. police 2017-2024, by race

Explore at:
122 scholarly articles cite this dataset (View in Google Scholar)
Dataset updated
May 27, 2025
Dataset authored and provided by
Statistahttp://statista.com/
Area covered
United States
Description

Sadly, the trend of fatal police shootings in the United States seems to only be increasing, with a total 1,173 civilians having been shot, 248 of whom were Black, as of December 2024. In 2023, there were 1,164 fatal police shootings. Additionally, the rate of fatal police shootings among Black Americans was much higher than that for any other ethnicity, standing at 6.1 fatal shootings per million of the population per year between 2015 and 2024. Police brutality in the U.S. In recent years, particularly since the fatal shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri in 2014, police brutality has become a hot button issue in the United States. The number of homicides committed by police in the United States is often compared to those in countries such as England, where the number is significantly lower. Black Lives Matter The Black Lives Matter Movement, formed in 2013, has been a vocal part of the movement against police brutality in the U.S. by organizing “die-ins”, marches, and demonstrations in response to the killings of black men and women by police. While Black Lives Matter has become a controversial movement within the U.S., it has brought more attention to the number and frequency of police shootings of civilians.

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