As the nation reels from yet another COVID-19 surge, a new report shows the toll this disease has taken on U.S. law enforcement.
Looking at all the ways officers died on duty in 2021, the National Law Enforcement Memorial Fund says last year was the deadliest for U.S. law enforcement in history with 458 total fatalities.
That's a 55% increase compared to last year and 146 more deaths than the previous record year.
Troy Anderson, the Executive Director of Safety and Wellness for the National Law Enforcement Memorial Fund and a retired police sergeant said, "I think that number surprised everybody. I mean, quite frankly, that's a staggering number," he said. "There are no hostages in policing, people come into police work because they want to do better. They want to leave it better than they found it. They believe in the core values of what this is. But they didn't sign up to die. Nobody signed up to die."
COVID-19 was by far the leading killer of law enforcement officers in 2021, accounting for 65% of total fatalities.
"I think there's a couple factors here," Anderson said. "Number one, I think to look at the police culture in general, it is a change adverse culture in many ways, that that is sometimes resistant to some change. And I think that it is a very, closed-off culture, Right? So we don't tend to let in a lot of information from the outside sometimes. Police officers want to make their own determinations."
Despite the clear and present danger COVID-19 presented to officers around the country, vaccine mandates were met with considerable pushback.
"I've made my status very clear but I do not believe the city has the authority to mandate that to anybody let alone that medical history information," Chicago Fraternal Order of Police President John Catanzara said.
In Chicago, the local police union is still fighting a department-wide vaccine mandate and more than 240 officers have lost pay since the mandate took effect back in October. Similar lawsuits have been filed in Los Angeles, Seattle, Boston and elsewhere.
Jim Burch, the president of the National Police Foundation said, "the issue of COVID is something I think we have to acknowledge, and we have to talk about." Burch said, "within policing, there are people who believe in the importance of vaccinations, there are people who are skeptical or have concerns. There are people that may have medical histories that make them you know, question whether or not the vaccine is right for them. Maybe it's religious beliefs, maybe it's something else. But policing and police officers reflect American society as a whole."
While COVID-19 killed almost 5 times as many officers as firearms-related incidents, gun deaths also jumped this year. Sixty-two police officers were killed with a gun, a 38% rise compared to 2020.
The rise in firearm related fatalities has corresponded with a significant rise in overall violence across the country in 2021, though there’s not enough data available to say the two are related.
This story was originally published by Jamal Andress of Newsy.