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Executives Can Take Action To Reduce the Number of Officers Murdered in the Line of Duty (From Human Resources in Criminal Justice, P 73-82, 1994, Diane L. Zahm, Cindy Stiff, et al, ed. - See NCJ-153059)

NCJ Number
153066
Author(s)
R F Cipriano
Date Published
1994
Length
10 pages
Annotation
Based on an analysis of police deaths, this paper makes recommendations for actions by police executives to reduce the number of police officers killed in the line of duty.
Abstract
Between 1962 and 1992, a total of 2,578 police officers were killed in the line of duty. The typical victim is a white male with 9 years of law enforcement experience who is killed by a firearm, most commonly a handgun. To reduce these murders, policy, contract, or State legislation should require that at least all uniformed officers wear protective body armor, and that body armor meet State specifications and pass an annual quality control inspection; and provide for exceptions based on medical, environmental, or situational events. Other actions should include reduced workers compensation for failure to wear protective body armor that could have prevented death or injury, mandatory training and retraining in topics such as weapon retention and survival tactics, and permission for police officers to carry semiautomatic handguns with the safety on. Tables and 4 references (Author abstract modified)