News

Urbana Police report use-of-force data highlights racial disparities amid community context

Urbana Police report use-of-force data highlights racial disparities amid community context

“It means we must be honest about where we deploy, how often we are sent, and how encounters unfold.” Photo: Contributed/Urbana Police Department


URBANA, IL (Chambana Today) — Annual reports from the Urbana Police Department show African American residents account for a large share of the people involved in police use-of-force incidents in the city over the past four years.

According to the department’s 2021 through 2024 annual use-of-force reports, African Americans represented between 74% and 81% of the individuals subjected to force during those years.

In 2021, Urbana police used some form of force on 156 people in 125 incidents. Of those individuals, 115 — about 74% — were African American.

That same year, displaying or pointing a firearm at a citizen accounted for 81 of the 125 incidents, or about 64%. Officers pointed or displayed firearms at 89 people, including 75 African Americans, or 84%.

In 2022, officers used force on 107 people in 95 incidents. Of those, 79 individuals — or 74% — were African American.

Displaying or pointing firearms occurred in 42 of those incidents, about 44%. Officers pointed or displayed firearms at 42 citizens, including 30 African Americans, or 71%.

In 2023, police used force on 88 people in 69 incidents. African Americans accounted for 65 of those individuals, again about 74%.

That year, 36 incidents — about 52% — involved officers displaying or pointing firearms. Officers pointed firearms at 36 people, including 28 African Americans, or 78%.

The department’s 2024 report shows police used force on 89 people in 72 incidents involving 85 total force actions. Of those 89 individuals, 72 — or 81% — were African American.

In 2024, 28 of the 85 force actions, or about 33%, involved displaying or pointing firearms. Officers pointed or displayed firearms at 43 citizens, including 37 African Americans, or 86%.

Urbana Police Chief Larry Boone acknowledged the disparities while discussing the data, saying statistics alone do not tell the full story.

“Our data indicates that African American residents appear more frequently in our use-of-force reports,” Boone said. “But numbers alone never tell the full story.”

Boone said many police calls occur in neighborhoods with higher levels of crime, repeat calls for service and fewer non-police resources.

“Historically and structurally, those areas are disproportionately Black,” Boone said. “That does not mean race causes force, and it does not excuse disparities.”

The chief said the department must examine how officers are deployed and how encounters with residents unfold.

“Disparities, even in a small department, affect trust,” Boone said. “And trust matters deeply in Urbana.”

Boone said the department plans to continue sharing the data publicly and working with residents, the University of Illinois and community organizations to better understand the numbers and reduce disparities.

He said efforts will include reducing unnecessary police contact, improving decision-making during encounters and supporting prevention programs so police are not the default response to every community challenge.

Recent Headlines

23 hours ago in Sports, Trending

Tom Brady says he’s weighed coming out of retirement, but the NFL doesn’t like the idea

Tom Brady revealed in an interview released on Thursday that he considered coming out of retirement, but the National Football League wasn't particularly receptive to the idea.

24 hours ago in National, Trending

Savannah Guthrie to return to ‘Today’ on April 6 after mother’s disappearance

After a two-month absence sparked by her 84-year-old mother's apparent abduction, Savannah Guthrie will return to NBC's "Today" show next month, saying in an interview that aired Friday "joy will be my protest."

23 hours ago in News, Sports

Fighting Illini advance to Elite Eight, tie program records with third top five win

Illinois (27-8) dominates Houston in Sweet 16, setting up big-ten showdown with Iowa.

2 days ago in Sports

Lewis Hamilton makes it clear he’s back in the F1 chase: ‘I’ve not lost what I had’

Lewis Hamilton is F1's most decorated driver. He's won the most races (105), claimed the most poles (104) and has been on the podium 207 times. And the British driver is tied at seven with Michael Schumacher for world championships.

2 days ago in Sports

March Madness meets the iPad era: How coaches’ challenges are changing the game

Florida's Boogie Fland was driving to the basket with 1:10 remaining and a three-point lead over Iowa when Hawkeyes forward Cooper Koch stepped into the lane, swatted at the ball and it sailed out of bounds. Officials ruled it Florida's ball.