Los Angeles police officers used some type of force nearly 2,000 times last year, according to a new internal report. Officers shot 38 people — killing 21 of them — and more than a third of those shot had an indication of mental illness, the LAPD says.
In the five-year period from 2011 through 2015, LAPD officers shot 52 black suspects, according to the report — meaning that in a city where 9 percent of the population is black, nearly 30 percent of those shot by police were black.
The LAPD report includes a racial breakdown of those killed by police last year:
- 12 were Hispanic (57 percent)
- 4 were black (19 percent)
- 4 were white (19 percent)
- 1 was Asian/Pacific Islander (5 percent)
Officer-involved shootings rose 60 percent from 2014, the department says, with a total of 48 incidents. (In 10 cases, the suspect wasn't hit by gunfire.)
That total narrowly trails the Chicago Police Department and is more than the shootings reported by police in New York, Houston, Philadelphia and by the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department.