Police in California Killed More Than 610 People Over 6 Years
The ACLU of Southern California has been working to understand how many people have been killed by law enforcement in Americas most populous state. What they found is alarming. Over a six-year period that ended in 2014, Californias Department of Justice recorded 610 instances of law enforcement committing homicide in the process of arrest.
That figure is far from perfect. It excludes some homicides in 2014 that are still being investigated. And it understates the actual number of people killed by police officers and sheriffs deputies in other ways. For example, after Dante Parker was mistaken for a criminal, stunned with a Taser at least 25 times, hog-tied face down, and denied medical care, California authorities classified his death as accidental.
Still, the official number is 610 homicides attributed to law enforcement in the process of arrest.
*How does California stack up against other countries?
Eugene Robinson of The Washington Post observes that there were no fatal police shootings in Great Britain last year. Not one. In Germany, there have been eight police killings over the past two years. In Canadaa country with its own frontier ethos and no great aversion to firearmspolice shootings average about a dozen a year.
It is also useful to juxtapose these numbers with The Guardians findings in its effort to track all police killings in the United States this year. After just ten months, it has documented 149 people killed by law enforcement in California during 2015, another indication that the official California figures are too low.
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2015/10/police-in-california-killed-more-than-610-people-over-6-years/407326/