The shooting deaths of three officers in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, this month pushed the number of law enforcement fatalities past a tragic benchmark.
As of July 20, 32 law enforcement officers were shot to death in the United States, according to the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund, which keeps data on officers killed on the job.
That’s up 78% from this time last year, when gun-related deaths accounted for 18 of 62 law enforcement fatalities through July 17, 2015. And, it means gun-related deaths account for nearly half of the 60 law enforcement fatalities this year.
The shooting in Baton Rouge and the July 7 sniper attack on Dallas law enforcement officers come at a time of heightened tensions between law enforcement and the communities they serve after civilian cameras captured the shooting deaths of Alton Sterling in Baton Rouge and Philando Castile in Minnesota at the hands of police.
Just as activists across the country have said the men’s deaths are part of a bigger problem, National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund spokesman Steve Groeninger said the officers’ deaths point to a rapidly escalating trend. Annual rates of shooting deaths of law enforcement officers have fluctuated over the past decade, but they had begun to decline steadily in 2014.
“It’s very concerning to see that firearms are responsible for more law enforcement fatalities today than this time last year,” Groeninger said.
Groeninger said that events like shooting deaths of officers in Louisiana and Dallas “show that there are those who are apparently targeting law enforcement because of the uniform they wear or the role they play, and it’s very troubling.”
In total, firearms were responsible for 41 of 123 officer fatalities in 2015, according to the officers memorial fund, but it was not the No. 1 cause of death.
Traffic-related incidents, such as automobile and motorcycle crashes, caused 48 deaths. Things such as drownings, electrocutions, falls and fire-related incidents led to 34 deaths.
So far in 2016, however, gun-related deaths are the leading cause of fatalities, according to the data, followed by 24 traffic-related fatalities and 8 in the “other” category.