Presents data on the nature and characteristics of contacts between residents of the U.S. and the police over a 12-month period. Findings are provided from a nationally representative survey of more than 60,000 residents age 16 or older. Detailed information is presented on face-to-face contacts with the police, including the reason for and outcome of the contact, resident opinion on police behavior during the contact, and whether police used or threatened to use force during the contact. The report provides demographic characteristics of residents involved in traffic stops and use of force incidents. The report also provides comparative analysis with prior survey findings.
- An estimated 19% of U.S. residents age 16 or older had a face-to-face contact with a police officer in 2005, a decrease from 21% of residents who had contact with police in 2002.
- Overall, about 9 out of 10 persons who had contact with police in 2005 felt police acted properly.
- Of the 43.5 million persons who had contact with police in 2005, an estimated 1.6% had force used or threatened against them during their most recent contact, a rate relatively unchanged from 2002 (1.5%).
Downloads
Similar Publications
- Transparency and the Police: External Research, Policing and Democracy (From Policing in Central and Eastern Europe: Comparing Firsthand Knowledge With Experience From the West, P 17-30, 1996, Milan Pagon, ed. -- See NCJ-170291)
- Excitation-Emission Matrix Fluorescence Spectroscopy Combined With MCR-ALS as a Tool for the Forensic Analysis of Similar and Dissimilar Sets of Textile Fiber Extracts
- Differentiation of Human Blood From Animal Blood Using Raman Spectroscopy: A Survey of Forensically Relevant Species