Police Integrity Research Group
BGSU RESEARCHERS STUDY CRIME BY SWORN OFFICERS TO INFORM THE PUBLIC AND IMPROVE POLICING
Bowling Green Professor Phil Stinson and his Police Integrity Research Group study the phenomenon of police crime (that is, crime committed by sworn law enforcement officers) for the public good. Prior research in this area was limited to observational studies and surveys, and no government agencies collect, aggregate, or disseminate information on sworn law enforcement officers who commit crimes. We primarily rely on news articles and court records to locate and track individual criminal cases where sworn law enforcement officers who are arrested for one or more crimes. Our internal research database currently includes information on more than 24,000 criminal arrest cases during the years 2005-2024 involving over 19,610 individual nonfederal sworn law enforcement officers, each of whom were charged with one or more crimes. The arrested officers were employed by 6,005 state, local, and special law enforcement agencies located in 2,074 counties and independent cities in all 50 states and the District of Columbia.
New cases are logged into an object-relational database system, OnBase, and tracked over time to determine numerous outcomes such as final adverse employment status and criminal case dispositions. Currently, new 2025 arrest cases are being logged into the database, and we are now fully coding arrest cases from the year 2020 on more than 270 quantitative variables. Coding has been completed on 18,032 criminal arrest cases from the years 2005-2019 involving 14,722 individual nonfederal sworn law enforcement officers, each of whom were charged with one or more crimes. The officers arrested in years 2005-2019 were employed by 5,033 state, local, and special law enforcement agencies located in 1,889 counties and independent cities in all 50 states and the District of Columbia. A restricted-use data set of arrest cases from the years 2005-2011 (244 coded variables for 6,724 cases) is available to qualified university-affiliated researchers for secondary data analysis from the National Archive of Criminal Justice Data at the Inter-University Consortium of Political and Social Research.
THE HENRY A. WALLACE POLICE CRIME DATABASE
The Henry A. Wallace Police Crime Database is a publicly-available web-based searchable database. The database includes summary information for 170 variables on 18,032 criminal arrest cases from the years 2005-2019 involving 14,722 individual nonfederal sworn law enforcement officers across the United States, each of whom were charged with one or more crimes. The arrested officers were employed by 5,033 state, local, and special law enforcement agencies located in 1,889 counties and independent cities in all 50 states and the District of Columbia.
The research methodology captures many cases of nonfederal sworn law enforcement officers who have been arrested. The research is designed to capture the phenomenon of police crime at state and local law enforcement agencies across the United States. It does not, however, capture every case.
The publicly-available database is named for Henry A. Wallace (1888-1965), who promoted progressive ideas in order to give the power back to the people. As the 33rd Vice President of the United States, Wallace advocated for an informed public and was committed to social justice, equality, and peace within the United States. He encouraged citizens to take a stand for civil rights and to denounce hatred and injustice. The purpose of the Henry A. Wallace Police Crime Database is to inform the public about crimes committed by nonfederal sworn law enforcement officers across the United States.

IN THE NEWS
What we learned about police officers accused of sexually abusing kids
The Washington Post
December 19, 2024
Former West Virginia police chief sentenced to prison for raping teen
The Washington Post
December 19, 2024
The 'perfect' predator
The Washington Post
December 18, 2024
Indiana decertifies ex-South Bend cop who sexually abused teen in 2021
The Washington Post
December 16, 2024
DOJ unveils new guidelines to prevent child sexual abuse by school police
The Washington Post
December 12, 2024
A West Virginia police chief paid $100 to rape a teen, then tried to cover it up
The Washington Post
November 14, 2024
Ex-school cop in South Carolina gets probation for sexually abusing students
The Washington Post
September 3, 2024
An SRO repeatedly accused of sexual misconduct worked at schools for years
The Washington Post
September 2, 2024
New Orleans ordered to pay $1 million to teen sexually assaulted by cop
The Washington Post
August 21, 2024
Teen sexually assaulted by New Orleans cop feared reporting him
The Washington Post
August 20, 2024
Updated: 03/07/2025 09:58AM