{"id":70037,"date":"2021-04-27T03:30:00","date_gmt":"2021-04-27T11:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/report-recommends-public-database-for-police-use-of-force\/"},"modified":"2021-04-27T03:30:00","modified_gmt":"2021-04-27T11:30:00","slug":"report-recommends-public-database-for-police-use-of-force","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/report-recommends-public-database-for-police-use-of-force\/","title":{"rendered":"Report recommends public database for police use of force"},"content":{"rendered":"
A research center at the University of Alaska Anchorage released a comprehensive report on lethal use of force by police in Alaska<\/a> over 10 years, the first study of its kind to be produced.<\/p>\n Researchers at the UAA Alaska Justice Information Center partnered with the Alaska Department of Law to compile the report that examined 92 incidents in which deadly force was used from 2010 to October 2020.<\/p>\n The goal of the report, according to one of the report’s authors Troy Payne, was to help create a more comprehensive picture of police use of force in the state to create better public policy around the issue.<\/p>\n Payne, a criminal justice professor at UAA, said one of the first things to jump out at researchers was that more than two-thirds of the instances in which police used lethal force involved people with mental health issues. Equally worrisome, according to Payne, was that roughly a third of incidents involved someone who had told at least one other person they wanted to be killed by police.<\/p>\n The report was not meant to scrutinize the policies and tactics used by Alaska law enforcement, Payne said in an interview with the Empire, but meant to create a clearer picture of what was happening in lethal use of force incidents. The report states the authors take no position on any of the examined incidents.<\/p>\n Source of stats<\/p>\n UAA researchers partnered with the Department of Law Office of Special Prosecution to examine lethal use of force incidents, Payne said. Those reports contained only some of the information researchers sought.<\/p>\n In many cases, Payne said, researchers contacted the officers or suspects and their families involved in the incidents to get a clearer picture of what happened.<\/p>\n Payne noted high instances of people seeking out a deadly confrontation with police. Researchers only determined that to be the case in an incident if a person had specifically said that was their intent to at least one other person.<\/p>\n OSP is the agency that reviews lethal use of force by officers and determines if police acted lawfully, the report says, but the information contained in those reports isn’t necessarily uniform, nor was it designed to gather the kind of information researchers were after such as the race of the officer and type of weapon used.<\/p>\n According to the report, researchers analyzed all OSP case files involving officer uses of lethal force from 2010-2020, covering 92 incidents, 100 citizens and 295 officers. Just over half of citizens died as a result of the incident in which deadly force was used, the report says, with another quarter sustaining serious injuries.<\/p>\n [Assembly asks for use of force policy specifics<\/a>]<\/ins><\/p>\n According to the report, there were only three incidents of lethal use of force by police in Juneau during the period in question, accounting for 3.3% of all incidents.<\/p>\n