Tuesday, January 9, 2018

ODMP Report: 2017 Line of Duty Deaths Total Lowest Since 1958

Although the official numbers won't be confirmed until later in the year, the total number of line of duty deaths (LODDs) in 2017 preliminarily stands at 125, making it the least deadly year for American law enforcement in nearly 60 years.



The last time line of duty deaths in a single year were lower was in 1958, when 115 officers died in the line of duty.

Line of duty deaths across the two major causes are down overall: auto-related deaths in 2017 (which includes auto crashes, vehicle pursuits, officers struck by vehicle, vehicular assaults, and motorcycle crashes) stood at 44, down nearly 20% from 54 in 2016 and gunfire deaths in 2017, at 45, were 30% lower than 2016’s total of 63. 

Chris Cosgriff, Executive Director of the Officer Down Memorial Page, says, “I am glad to see a decrease in the total number of line of duty deaths across 2017, especially after the increase in violent and premeditated attacks on law enforcement officers throughout the country we saw in 2016.  We must not, however, let our guard down and assume that officers are operating in a less hostile environment; every call, every incident, still holds the threat of danger.”

The average number of annual line of duty deaths has decreased significantly over the past 50 years. In the past decade (2008-2017) an average of 150 officers were killed each year, down from an average of 176 LODDs per year in the previous decade (1998-2007), 175 LODDs per year between 1988 and 1997, 198 LODDs per year between 1978 and 1987, and 233 LODDs per year between 1968 and 1977.  



“I am relieved by this long-term downward trend in line of duty deaths, but we must also be aware that annual LODD totals have dropped over the last decades due to better training, advancements in personal and automotive safety equipment, and quicker and better medical care given to injured officers, not necessarily because officers are working in less dangerous times,” states Cosgriff.

The Officer Down Memorial Page maintains a database of line of duty deaths and their causes, locations, and other incident details going back to 1791.  More information about individual officers, incidents, and trends can be found on the website (www.ODMP.org).

Thursday, December 7, 2017

End of Watch Report November 2017


In November 2017, eight law enforcement officers died in the line of duty, bringing the year to date total to 118.  Of those eight deaths, three were the result of felonious gunfire, three were auto-related, one was the result of a heart attack, and one cause of death has not yet been determined.

Auto-related deaths are down 24% this year and gunfire deaths are down 28% in comparison to this time last year.  Line of duty deaths overall are down 19%.

The Officer Down Memorial Page offers our sincere condolences to the family, friends, and agencies who lost a loved one to a line of duty death in November 2017. We ask that you take a moment to read each of the memorials for these heroes and Remember the Fallen.

Deputy Sheriff James Martin Wallace
Richmond County Sheriff's Office (GA)








Senior Trooper Thomas Patrick Nipper
Texas Highway Patrol (TX)








Police Officer Jaimie Cox
Rockford Police Department (IL)



 




Detective Sean Matthew Suiter
Baltimore City Police Department (MD)








Police Officer Brian David Shaw
New Kensington Police Department (PA)







Border Patrol Agent Rogelio Martinez
United States Border Patrol (U.S. Gov't)








Deputy Sheriff Eric Overall
Oakland County Sheriff's Office (MI)








Trooper Damon Allen
Texas Highway Patrol (TX)











Friday, November 10, 2017

URGENT REQUEST for No Parole Letters


A cop killer in the state of New York will have a third parole hearing this month after a judge determined that letters requesting that parole be denied sent in by law enforcement officers in the previous two hearings were inappropriate to consider in the case.

More details are available here.

Trooper Emerson Dillon, Jr. of the New York State Police was murdered by John Ruzas in 1974.  Ruzas was on parole at the time and, along with an accomplice, had just committed an armed robbery when Trooper Dillon pulled over the car he was driving in.  Trooper Dillon was 38 years old at the time of his murder and left behind a wife and six children.  Additional incident details are available on ODMP.

ODMP believes that the voice of the law enforcement community should be considered in the case of this parole hearing.

Please send in letters using our No Parole system asking that this cop killer be kept behind bars; personalize your letter if you see fit and send as soon as possible to the address listed:
https://www.odmp.org/noparole/prepare/4103

Letters can also be submitted online here; due to time constraints this may be the best option:
http://www.doccs.ny.gov/DOCCSWebLettersToBoardofParoleForm.aspx