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Toward a Typology of Police Shootings (From Contemporary Issues in Law Enforcement, P 136-151, 1981, James J Fyfe, ed. - See NCJ-86875)

NCJ Number
86881
Author(s)
J J Fyfe
Date Published
1981
Length
16 pages
Annotation
Statistics showing geographic variations in police shootings and minority disproportion among victims fail to explain their underlying causes. Justification for police use of deadly force can be measured on a continuum of real and immediate police hazard in specific incidents.
Abstract
Two studies involved this hazard-based typology. First, an analysis of firearms discharges by the New York City Police for the 1971-75 period found that much minority shooting-opponent disproportion was associated with the relatively greater frequency with which blacks and Hispanics confronted police in gun or officer assaults events. This typology also suggested that the disproportionate involvement of minority officers in shooting might be caused by the greater frequency with which they became involved in these same gun events. These variations were associated with deployment practices rather than racial discrimination. The author developed a less complex typology to determine the degree to which aggregate shooting rate variations in two cities were attributable to shootings precipitated by varying degrees of police hazard as well as identify factors responsible for racial disproportion. Tables, 2 footnotes, and 17 references are provided. For related material, see NCJ-86875.

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