41 Officers Feloniously Killed in 2008 WASHINGTON, October 19, 2009 - “A special agent with the FBI Pittsburgh Field Office was shot and killed at 6 a.m. on November 19 while attempting to serve an arrest warrant at a residence in Indiana Township in Pennsylvania.” The narrative describing the death last year of Special Agent Samuel Hicks is among the 41 chilling summaries of law enforcement officers feloniously killed in the line of duty in 2008. The figure, found in the 2008 Law Enforcement Officers Killed and Assaulted report, represents a significant decline from 2007, when 58 officers were feloniously killed—indeed, it’s the lowest in at least 10 years. But tempering the positive data are profiles of the circumstances that led to the deaths of 37 male and four female police officers and federal agents last year. The annual report contains an array of data and charts on how many officers were killed and assaulted, weapons used, time of day, region of the country, even profiles of the alleged known assailants, among other things. The information, while providing a snapshot to the public of the dangers and sacrifices made by law enforcement officers, helps agencies better understand the criminal threat and tailor their training to meet it. Here’s a look at some of the data on feloniously killed officers:
In Agent Hicks’ case, the Baltimore police officer-turned FBI agent was working with local police in Pennsylvania serving a warrant. A woman in the house under the influence of drugs fired a single shot, which hit Hicks in the chest above his bulletproof vest, mortally wounding him. The raw factors in the case are reflected in the report’s data. What is not is that he left behind a wife and son. At his funeral last December, FBI Director Robert S. Mueller reflected on the loss, which could be said for many of the officers killed in 2008. “Today, we weep for Sam’s family, which has lost a cherished husband, a devoted father, a loving son, brother, uncle, and grandson,” Mueller said. “And we weep for our nation, which has lost one of its bravest protectors.”
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