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25 US States with the Highest Number of Police Officers Per Capita

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In this article, we take a look at the 25 US states with the highest number of police officers per capita. If you would like to skip our detailed analysis of the police industry, you can directly go to the 5 States with the Highest Number of Police Officers Per Capita

Police in Numbers - An Overview

The latest Census of State and Local Law Enforcement Agencies report by the Bureau of Justice Statistics was published in June 2018. As per the report, there were 17,541 state and local law enforcement agencies in the country, a term that collectively refers to the state police, local police, highway patrol, special jurisdiction police, and sheriff’s offices. This number includes all agencies that have at least one full-time equivalent (FTE) sworn officer. A sworn officer refers to an officer of the law with arrest powers, whereas FTE refers to the number of full-time sworn officers plus half of the part-time sworn officers. 

Across these 17,000 agencies, 1,214,260 individuals were employed, 64.86% (787,565) of whom were sworn, whereas the rest were civilian employees. There were 372 total police personnel per every 100,000 residents of the US. There was one full-time sworn officer for every 415 residents. From 1996 to 2008, the full-time employment rate in local and state law enforcement agencies increased by 32%, adding 292,000 more officers. In agencies with 24 or fewer FTE sworn officers, the ratio of full-time sworn female personnel was 8%, whereas for agencies with 500 or more FTE sworn officers, it was 15%. Local police departments accounted for 67% of all law enforcement agencies, which added up to 11,824 departments. You can take a look at the 12 Best Prison and Law Enforcement Stocks to Buy Now

Tech and Trends - Modernizing Law Enforcement

While the demographics of these law enforcement agencies can differ, a similarity across many of them has been the increased focus on the use of technology. The Thomson Reuters Future of Policing survey from March 2023 reported that almost all of the law enforcement respondents it interviewed claimed that investment in new technology was a way to combat the shortage of police workforce. A 2017 study by the Center for Crime and Justice Policy discovered that body-worn cameras led to fewer incidents of use of force and officer complaints. In the experimental group, the percentage of officers with at least one complaint decreased from 54.6% to 38.1%. For the same group, the rate of officers involved in at least one incident of use of force declined from 31.2% to 19.7%. 

On the other hand, the percentage of officers with at least one complaint in the control group decreased from 48% to 45.5%. Furthermore, in the same group, the percentage of officers who generated at least one report of use of force increased from 26.3% to 27.3%. The body-worn cameras also lowered the cost spent on investigating misconduct allegations. The average cost of such an investigation was $5,692 without the cameras and $1,686 with the cameras. The average cost of the camera itself ranged from $828 to $1,097, which led to net savings of $2,909 to $3,178 per user per year. Thus, instances of technology have not only increased efficiency for the department but also resulted in reduced costs.