https://news.yahoo.com/more-racial-diversity-u-police-002616208.html
The media skew reporting of these shootings because it gets attention, and helps divide people, making it harder for us to work together against the power elite who fund the news media.
By Alex Dobuzinskis
,Reuters•July 22, 2019
White police officers in the United States are no more likely to shoot dead minorities than black or Hispanic officers, undercutting the idea that increasing racial diversity in police departments would reduce those shootings, a study released on Monday said.
The report from researchers at Michigan State University and the University of Maryland at College Park was published on Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
It follows a number of police shootings of unarmed black men over the last few years that have triggered protests and stirred concerns about police use of force against minorities.
"Those kinds of cases, they get a lot of attention and it's right that they get a lot of attention because they're really tragic cases," said Joseph Cesario, associate professor of psychology at Michigan State University and the senior author of the report.
"But they aren't representative of what most police shootings are like," Cesario said.
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In the vast majority of cases, the person killed was armed and posed a threat or had opened fire on officers, Cesario said.
"We find no evidence of anti-Black or anti-Hispanic disparities across shootings, and White officers are not more likely to shoot minority civilians than non-White officers," the authors wrote.
Instead, the authors found variances between local crime rates played a key role in predicting who was most likely to be killed by police.
In areas with high rates of violent crime by blacks, police were more than three times more likely to shoot dead a black person than a white person, the study found.
But the reverse was also true, with white people more likely to be shot by police in places where whites committed many crimes, the study found.
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