FATAL FALSEHOODS: Setting the Record Straight on Police Shootings
By The Law Enforcement Legal Defense Fund
Surveys suggest that the American public increasingly agrees with the persistent media narrative that fatal police shootings and use of excessive force are common, racist, and getting worse.
Activists and political leaders frequently refer to these fatal incidents and police use of force broadly as “police violence.” In 2021, then-Speaker of the US House of Representatives called “police brutality” an “epidemic.”
But the facts don’t support those claims. In reality, fatal police shootings and all uses of force are exceedingly rare, very limited, and overwhelmingly justified. The myths around police force and fatal shootings are both false and pernicious, yet pervasive.
This report seeks to set the record straight.
THE FACTS:
Police rarely use force.
When police use force, it is usually limited and proportional.
Fatal police shootings are extremely uncommon.
Unarmed fatal police shootings are both exceedingly rare and largely justified.
Public perceptions around fatal police shootings and race are distorted.
Alexandria, VA: The Law Enforcement Legal Defense Fund 2024. 11p.