Police fail to report many deadly shootings


California’s system for tracking deadly police shootings is plagued by confusion and inadequate oversight, further clouding public knowledge of an officer’s greatest power.
At least one in every five fatal shootings across Southern California isn’t counted in official statewide and national homicide reports, a Register investigation has found. Police shoot and kill more often than the numbers reflect.
The newspaper identified widespread reporting flaws by comparing state data and district attorney records from hundreds of shootings between 2007 and 2011, the latest year available. At least 66 fatal shootings weren’t disclosed as required by state law.
The unreported shootings involved 30 law enforcement agencies, most of which were unaware the cases hadn’t been counted in official reports until contacted by the Register. Most acknowledged error and promised an internal review of reporting practices.
One agency, the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, has already adopted new policies aimed at preventing mistakes in response to the newspaper’s findings. Others have provided additional training to records staff and homicide detectives.
“Thank you for really bringing this to our attention,” said Jodi Miller, a spokeswoman for the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department, which didn’t report at least 14 fatal shootings during the five-year period. "The training issues have been corrected.”
The 66 shootings involved agencies large and small, urban and rural, in Los Angeles, Orange, San Bernardino and San Diego counties. The Register was unable to similarly review Riverside County, because its district attorney doesn’t maintain records of police shooting investigations after one year.
After Ontario police were informed about one unreported case, they found three others had been overlooked, too. Irvine police said they were disappointed that one 2008 case was accidentally missed. A man carrying an assault rifle was fatally shot after a nearly two-hour standoff with SWAT officers.
“I remember it quite vividly. I spent quite a lot of time with his wife,” Irvine Cmdr. Julia Engen said. “Of course we don’t do a lot of these but that’s not an excuse. ... We just did it wrong.”
By failing to report so many shootings, agencies have impaired the public’s ability to monitor broad trends in deadly force. A comprehensive account of shootings could be used to pinpoint patterns in the industry or at individual agencies.
A Register analysis of the official statistics reported between 2007 and 2011 found:
Despite violent crime falling by nearly 25 percent over the period, the four counties’ agencies reported fatally shooting roughly the same number of people each year. In 2011, the number of fatal shootings per violent crime reached a five-year high.
• The death toll included a disproportionate number of African Americans. Though roughly 6 percent of Southern Californians are black, African Americans accounted for about 22 percent of those fatally shot by police.
• Authorities reported more fatal shootings per capita in San Bernardino and Inglewood than any other large city in the region. The cities had eight and seven deaths per 100,000 residents, respectively. By comparison, the Southern California agencies collectively reported about two deaths per 100,000 residents