These Are the Fatal Police Shootings That Don’t Make U.S. Headlines | Inside Story
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- Опубликовано: 11 июн 2024
- We look at a surprising number of police shootings in rural Kentucky, speak with music executive Jason Flom about his work with those wrongfully convicted, and see how Dr. Stanley Andrisse went from prison to becoming an endocrinologist.
0:00 - Intro
1:09 - Police Shootings in Rural Kentucky
10:56 - Interview with Music Executive Jason Flom
16:03 - Dr. Stanley Andrisse's Journey
This episode originally ran on Feb. 23, 2023.
Inside Story is a first-of-its-kind series created to engage with and bring information to one of America’s largest news deserts - its prisons and jails. The series from The Marshall Project was developed by formerly incarcerated people, including host Lawrence Bartley and director Donald Washington, Jr.
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Can't help but notice this guy was on VICE. Great work as I've seen before, to everyone involved in this project.
Thank you! The Marshall Project's Lawrence Bartley and Donald Washington Jr., who are Inside Story's host and director respectively, conceived of the show and we partnered with VICE News to produce season 1. New season soon.
Complete corruption
✊🏻
I'm assuming you're talking about all the cops murdered by these thugs. But it doesn't make the news because it wasn't a black man refusing to folow orders.
It’s a dangerous job. What did you expect? And if you don’t see corruption in that department then you’re just blind.
something tells me you didnt watch the video
Hey, instead of assuming something stupid, maybe you should watch the video first and then comment about how you feel about it.
Hi there. As we reported, officers in rural areas fatally shot about 1,200 people from 2015 through 2020. These deaths seldom attract the public's or national press' attention.
Most killed were White. White people make up the rural majority in nearly every state, and 2/3rds of the people fatally shot by law enforcement in rural areas nationwide were White, our data analysis shows; about 10% were Black. In some states, a disproportionately high number of Black people were shot and killed by the police relative to their share of the rural population, per the data.
In a handful of states, including Kentucky, Pennsylvania and Texas, state troopers are responsible for many of the deaths.
Rural shootings by the Kentucky State Police, the agency with the largest number of such deaths in the six-year period, illustrate both what distinguishes these encounters from other police killings and how they fit within broader patterns nationwide. You can learn how by watching the video.
@@TheMarshallProject do we have a reason for the places that have a disproportionate number of fatal deaths against black people? Is it because there is more crime in the area with more black people? Does this go by city, state, townships, or groups of cities?