
An officer shot a driver after another officer was struck by a vehicle in the 1500 block of North Meridian on Thursday, Nov. 14, 2024.
Eric Weddle / WFYIThe number of incidents where Indianapolis police officers intentionally fired weapons at another person dropped in 2025 compared to previous years.
The Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department recorded eight officer-involved shootings last year.
IMPD Chief Chris Bailey acknowledged the decrease but said even one such incident is unwanted.
“I want that number to be zero, because that means our officers weren't put in a position where they could have lost their life, and a community member isn't losing theirs,” Bailey said, “There's trauma that occurs on both sides of that.”
All of the people who were shot by police were Black men, half of the incidents proved fatal. A majority of the incidents involved suspects who had guns.
The number of officer-involved shootings spiked in 2023 and 2024, marking a high of 18. The city entered into a review of practices with the Department of Justice in 2024.
IMPD Chief Chris Bailey said the report should be completed.
“With the change in administration in January, everything has been just pushed back consistently. So I believe that the report is done. It's just not been released,” he said.
The department plans to publicly release the information when they have it. Federal investigators were supposed to look at IMPD data, policies, and practices that led to increased shootings.
Contact WFYI managing city editor Jill Sheridan at jsheridan@wfyi.org.
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