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Number of fatal shootings by U.S. police in 2017 set to exceed 1,000

A police officer wears a body camera as he works an off-duty security detail at at an Atlanta Braves baseball game in Atlanta, May 24, 2017. AP Photo/John Bazemore

July 1 (Reuters) – Police officers across the United States shot 492 people dead in the first half of 2017, on track to approach 1,000 such incidents for the third year in a row, the Washington Post reported on Saturday.

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The Post, which has been tracking all fatal shootings by police since 2015, said the tally on June 16 of this year was identical to last year’s count.

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The paper said that since 2015 it had found twice as many police shootings than those recorded by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

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“These numbers show us that officer-involved shootings are constant over time,” Geoffrey Alpert, a criminologist at the University of South Carolina, told the Post. “Some places go up, some go down, but its averaging out. This is our society in the 21st century.”

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The Post began its tracking project following the fatal police shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, in August 2015.

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Brown is one of a series of black men killed by law enforcement over the past three years that have sparked a national debate over racial bias in the U.S. criminal justice system.

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