Nation/World

Aren't more white people than black people killed by police? Yes, but no.

Dylan Noble died on the last Saturday of June.

Police in Fresno, Calif., received a report of a man walking a downtown street with a rifle, but when they arrived they instead found Noble speeding by in his pickup.

When they tried to pull him over, the 19-year-old led police to a nearby gas station and then exited his car.

"The driver then turned towards officers with one hand concealed behind his back, and told officers he hated his life," the Fresno PD said in a statement. "As he continued to advance towards officers, an officer-involved shooting occurred."

The department framed it as a "suicide-by-cop." His family insisted that could not be the case, urged federal officials to investigate, and demanded that video from the body cameras worn by both officers involved be released.

"I am outraged that the police would shoot my son and say that it is his fault," Veronica Nelson, Noble's mother, told reporters at a press conference not long after the shooting. "So please join me as I'm demanding justice for Dylan."

[Raw emotions, further protests deepen US divide over race and policing]

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Noble's friends and family gathered for days at the gas station parking lot where he was killed — some waving Confederate flags and others chanting "white lives matter."

And soon, they were angry at their inability to garner more attention. At a time when dozens of police killings have prompted outrage, why hadn't this one? Was it because Noble was white?

Many across the nation find themselves this week asking similar questions in the days since two recent police shootings of black men — in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and Falcon Heights, Minnesota — have sparked nationwide protests:

Doesn't the available data show more white Americans are being killed by police officers? Where is the outrage for them?

"If we have a shooting we end up assuming that it had to be racial," former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, R, said Saturday during an interview with Fox News, in which he argued that national concerns about police killings of black men are overblown.

"When in fact, as we know. . .more white people have been shot by police officers this year than minorities," he said.

Huckabee is not, factually, incorrect.

In 2015, The Washington Post launched a real-time database to track fatal police shootings and the project continues this year. As of Sunday, 1,502 people have been shot and killed by on-duty police officers since Jan. 1, 2015. Of them, 732 were white, while 381 were black (and 382 were of another or unknown race).

However, data scientists and policing experts often note, comparing how many or how often white people are killed by police to how many or how often black people are killed by the police is statistically dubious unless you first adjust for population.

[Police shootings highlight unease among black gun owners]

According to the most recent U.S. census data, there are nearly 160 million more white people in America than there are black people. White people make up roughly 62 percent of the U.S. population but only about 49 percent of those who are killed by police officers. African-Americans, however, account for 24 percent of those fatally shot and killed by the police despite being just 13 percent of the U.S. population. As The Post noted in a new analysis published last week, that means black Americans are 2.5 times more likely to be shot and killed by police officers than white Americans.

American police officers have shot and killed the exact same number of unarmed white people as they have unarmed black people: 50 each. However, because white people make up approximately five times the population of black people, that means unarmed black Americans were five times as likely to be shot and killed by a police officer as unarmed white Americans.

A young black man (ages 18 to 29) — like Michael Brown in Ferguson — has been shot and killed by police 175 times since January 2016, 24 of them unarmed. In that same period of time, there have been 172 young white men shot and killed by police, 18 unarmed. Once again, while in raw number there were similar totals of white and black victims, blacks were killed at rates disproportionate to their percentage of the U.S. population. Of all of the unarmed men shot and killed by police in 2015, 40 percent of them were black, even though black men make up just six percent of the nation's population.

And, when considering shootings confined within a single race, a black person shot and killed by police is more likely to have been unarmed than a white person. About 13 percent of all black people who have been fatally shot by police since January 2015 were unarmed, compared to 7 percent of all white people.

In response to these statistics, critics of police reform — often political conservatives and police unions — typically argue that the reason more black men and women are shot and killed by police is that black Americans commit more violent crime.

"There's too much violence in the black community," former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani said Sunday on CBS' Face The Nation. "(I)f you want to deal with this on the black side, you've got to teach your children to be respectful to the police and you've got to teach your children that the real danger to them is not the police; the real danger to them, 99 out of 100 times, 9,900 out of 10,000 times, are other black kids who are gonna kill them. That's the way they're gonna die."

[2 years after Ferguson, fatal shootings by police are up]

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As the New York Daily News noted: Giuliani is wrong about the so-called "black-on-black" crime rate. According to FBI numbers from 2014, about 90 percent of black homicide victims were killed by other black people. The "white-on-white" murder rate that same year — homicides in which a white person was killed by another white person — was 82 percent of all murders of white people.

However, it is true that a disproportionate amount of murders and other violent crimes are committed by black Americans.

Because detailed FBI data on crime can lag behind by several years, the most-cited statistics on this point refer to 2009 crime data. According to that data, out of all violent crimes in which someone was charged, black Americans were charged with 62 percent of robberies, 57 percent of murders, and 45 percent of assaults in the country's 75 biggest counties — despite the fact that black Americans made up just 15 percent of the population in those counties.

"Such a concentration of criminal violence in minority communities means that officers will be disproportionately confronting armed and often resisting suspects in those communities, raising officers' own risk of using lethal force," wrote Heather Mac Donald, a conservative researcher, in a Wall Street Journal column headlined "The Myth of Black Lives Matter" that was originally published in February and re-published this weekend. The assertion that the black men and women killed by police are primarily violent criminals and that that explains racial disparities in who gets killed by law enforcement is the premise of Mac Donald's new book, "The War on Cops."

However, despite these arguments, police reform advocates and researchers as well at The Post's own analysis has consistently concluded that there is no correlation between violent crime and who is killed by police officers.

A 2015 study by a University of California-Davis researcher concluded there was "no relationship" between crime rates by race and racial bias in police killings. A report released last week by the Center for Policing Equity, which reviewed arrest and use of force data from 12 police departments, concluded that black residents were more often targeted for use of police force than white residents, even when adjusting for whether the person was a violent criminal.

"We've been hearing these arguments going around without any data or any evidence from folks who are saying that police are killing so many people – particularly black people – because they say black people are in high-crime communities and potentially involved in criminal activity," Samuel Sinyangwe, a data analyst and activist with Campaign Zero — a policy-oriented activist collective associated with the Black Lives Matter protest movement — told The Huffington Post earlier this year.

[Aftermath of fatal Minnesota officer-involved shooting of black man is captured on video]

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In a report released earlier this year, Campaign Zero compared violent crime rates of 50 major cities to the rate at which police officers killed people, concluding that there was no correlation.

As part of its data effort, The Post tracks the "threat level" of each person who is shot and killed by a police officer: Were they shooting at the officer? Were they threatening the officer? Were they fleeing?

Overall, the majority of the people who have been shot and killed by police officers in 2015 and 2016 were, based on publicly available evidence, armed with a weapon and attempting to attack the officer or someone else.

However, an independent analysis of The Post's data conducted by a team of criminal justice researchers concluded that, when factoring in threat level, black Americans who are fatally shot by police are, in fact, less likely to be posing an imminent lethal threat to the officers at the moment they are killed than white Americans fatally shot by police.

The study also sought to answer whether officers were more likely to shoot and kill someone who is unarmed if the shooting happened to occur in a high crime area. They concluded that is not the case.

"The only thing that was significant in predicting whether someone shot and killed by police was unarmed was whether or not they were black," said Justin Nix, a criminal justice researcher at the University of Louisville and one of the report's authors, said in April. "Crime variables did not matter in terms of predicting whether the person killed was unarmed."

"This just bolsters our confidence that there is some sort of implicit bias going on," Nix said. "Officers are perceiving a greater threat when encountered by unarmed black citizens."

Racial disparities in the rate of police shootings does not mean, however, that criminal justice experts are not concerned about how many people are being killed by police officers — including white people.

Statistics kept by the FBI have never counted more than 460 police shootings in a single year. However, The Post's database chronicled 990 fatal police shootings in 2015, and 494 of those people were white.

Among them are several cases that drew national headlines. Two officers will face trial for the shooting of 6-year-old Jeremy Mardis, 2015's youngest police shooting victim. The family of Zachary Hammond, who was shot and killed by officers in Seneca, S.C., received a $2.15 million settlement.

And the civil suit is still pending in the case of Deven Guilford, a white 17-year-old who was killed during a traffic stop. Guilford flashed his headlights on a snowy Michigan night in February 2015 to signal to an oncoming driver to turn off his high beams. The driver turned out to be an officer, who did a U-turn and pulled Guilford over. In a confrontation captured on several cameras the two argued, then fought.

Guilford voluntarily exited the car and laid on the ground when commanded – but he refused to set down his cellphone. Frost shocks him with a stun gun. The video goes black. Then the sound of gunshots.

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"Deven went from flashing his lights to being dead six minutes later," Hugh Davis, an attorney for Guilford's family, told The Post in December. "And there is no explanation for it."

In Fresno, Noble was at least the seventh person shot and killed by the city police department since 2015, and one of three white men (the other four were Hispanic men), according to the Post database.

And cellphone video obtained by The Fresno Bee raises new questions about the police account of the shooting.

In the video, Noble can be seen lying on the ground next to his pickup as officers yell at him to keep his hands up. One officer fires one shot. Noble can be seen raising his arm and heard saying "I've been shot." Then another shot can be heard.

Late last week the FBI announced it would open an investigation.

The Washington Post's Steven Rich contributed to this report

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