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As the U.S. entered a second week of protests after the death of George Floyd, conservative radio host Larry Elder argued that cops rarely kill anybody, let alone an unarmed black person. Last year, there were nine unarmed black people killed. Nineteen unarmed white people, Elder said June 2 on Fox News host Sean Hannity’s TV show. A reader asked us about Elder’s numbers, which he repeated on Twitter , so we decided to put them to the Truth-O-Meter. How many unarmed blacks were killed by cops last year? 9. How many unarmed whites were killed by cops last year? 19. More officers are killed every year than are unarmed blacks. When do the #BlueLivesMatter protests begin? #GeorgeFloyd — Larry Elder (@larryelder) June 3, 2020 We found that Elder was speaking broadly about police killings but pulling his numbers from the Washington Post’s more narrow tally of fatal shootings by police officers in the line of duty. The Washington Post’s tally doesn’t account for off-duty police or the use by on-duty officers of other force that can be lethal, such as tasers or physical restraint. That means the number of unarmed people killed in encounters with law enforcement in 2019 is higher for both races than Elder claimed. How much higher is not clear. What is clear, experts told us, is that despite what Elder’s absolute numbers may suggest, black people in the U.S. have died from fatal encounters with police at a disproportionate rate. RELATED: TikTok video misleads on police shooting data The numbers The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and FBI keep tabs on deaths resulting from interactions with police, but both sources provide incomplete data that takes years to record. More reliable data comes from the Washington Post and projects such as Mapping Police Violence and Fatal Encounters . In emails to PolitiFact, Elder cited a tweet and a Wall Street Journal op-ed that pulled numbers from the Washington Post’s database. According to the Washington Post data through June 3 , police in the line of duty fatally shot 10 unarmed black people and 20 unarmed white people in 2019. (The data is updated as new facts emerge, and by June 5 the numbers jumped to 15 unarmed blacks and 25 unarmed whites.) But Elder incorrectly claimed that his statistics represented the numbers of all black and white Americans who were killed by police, not the number of shootings in which a police officer, in the line of duty, shoots and kills a civilian, as the Washington Post describes its data. The Washington Post doesn’t account for deaths like Floyd’s, for example. Floyd died in police custody May 25 after an officer in Minneapolis kneeled on his neck. When we asked about this incongruity, Elder told us that the majority of police killings involve firearms, so the number is not likely much bigger. It’s hard to say how much bigger it is. As of June 3, Mapping Police Violence had counted 28 unarmed blacks and 51 unarmed whites who died at the hands of police in 2019. Those numbers are higher than the Washington Post’s in part because Mapping Police Violence tracks police killings more broadly and includes officers who are off duty. In 2019, among those who were unarmed when they encountered police, there were five black people and 12 white people who died from tasers, beatings or other uses of force by police, according to Mapping Police Violence’s data. Off-duty officers killed four unarmed blacks and five unarmed whites. Those deaths won’t show up in the Washington Post data. What’s considered armed? Another reason Mapping Police Violence counted more unarmed people killed by police is that it considered victims in possession of toy guns, BB guns, airsoft guns or rocks to be unarmed. The Washington Post’s database doesn’t include those people in its unarmed tallies. In 2019, at least eight black people and 16 white people were killed by police while in possession of a toy weapon or something similar, according to Mapping Police Violence. There are also numerous 2019 cases, in both data sets, where the victim’s armed status remains unknown or the victim was considered armed with a vehicle. Overall, the data on whether police-killing victims were armed or unarmed is messy, said Frank Edwards, an assistant professor at Rutgers University’s School of Criminal Justice who co-authored a study on police killings. Because groups that track the data often cite news reports that rely only on the word of police to establish whether a person was armed or unarmed, the data likely over-report the armed status of victims and the danger faced by police, Edwards said. Police have been known to misrepresent the danger presented by suspects, he said. The data we have is also limited to deaths, said Lorie Fridell, professor of criminology at the University of South Florida. Ideally, she said, we would be able track police use of force more broadly, including force that could be deadly but doesn’t turn out to be fatal. Missing context Elder’s claim also ignores the fact that the same Washington Post data shows black people are disproportionately shot and killed by police, experts said. There may be more unarmed whites than unarmed blacks killed each year, but the rate of shooting unarmed blacks is much larger, Fridell said, citing a report from the Washington Post that summarized years of findings from its database. Black Americans represent 13% of the U.S. population, the report said, but they accounted for about a quarter of police shooting victims over four and a half years of data collection. They're over-represented in the data, said Brian Burghart, the founder of Fatal Encounters. Our ruling Elder said: Last year, there were nine unarmed black people killed (by law enforcement). Nineteen unarmed white people. Those numbers matched the Washington Post’s tally of fatal shootings by police in the line of duty, although the Washington Post’s figures have increased since Elder made his claim. But not all police killings happen when officers are on duty, and not all involve a gunshot. The Washington Post’s data doesn’t include deaths like Floyd’s, for example. Elder’s claim also omitted important context: that black people in the U.S. are disproportionately killed by police relative to their share of the population. Overall, Elder’s statement contained elements of truth, but it left out important context that would give a different impression. We rate it Mostly False.
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