King County gun violence data
We work with all 39 law enforcement agencies in King County to develop firearm violence reports.
These reports are the most comprehensive and consistent firearm violence analyses available in King County and are published on a quarterly basis. The reports help inform prevention and intervention strategies designed to reach individuals the data suggests are most at risk of firearm violence victimization. While we will continue to prosecute the perpetrators of firearm violence, we recognize that a broader, public health approach is required to achieve lasting reductions of firearm violence.
A public health approach to gun violence
In the context of illegal shootings from a public health approach, there are 3 questions that our Crime Strategies Unit (CSU) has been working to answer.
Who is being shot?
After several years of working closely with law enforcement, we now have a much more meaningful understanding of what illegal shootings look like across King County, including: what types of shootings are happening; where and when are they happening; and who are the victims and perpetrators. Continued and ongoing collection of this data will allow us to examine trends over time and develop responses that are informed by the most recent and reliable data possible.
Why are they being shot?
Research has consistently shown that firearm violence is intensely concentrated within small, identifiable social networks. Firearms violence spreads within these networks. The closer a person is to a victim of firearm violence, the more likely it is to be a victim of firearm violence themselves. Along with our law enforcement partners, CSU is using data to understand the networks of firearm violence in King County and to identify those individuals who are most at risk of victimization.
How can we prevent future shootings?
There is nothing new about using data analytics to identify individuals in harm’s way. Working with law enforcement, public health, and community partners, CSU is seeking to implement prevention and intervention programs. These are designed to reach those individuals that the data indicate are most at risk of becoming gunshot victims. While we will continue to prosecute the perpetrators of illegal shootings, we recognize that a broader public health based approach is required to achieve lasting reductions of firearm violence.
Reports
Each successive report presents the most accurate data available at the time they are released. Minor discrepancies may exist when comparing current and past data as a result of new information revealed from law enforcement investigations. For example, the total fatal shooting victim numbers from a previous year may include a shooting death that was later determined to be a death by suicide. In this hypothetical example, the number of actual fatal shootings from a past year that we are aware of today would be slightly lower than what was represented in that respective report.
2024
- 2024 Q1 King County Firearm Violence Report (335KB)
- 2024 Q2 King County Firearm Violence Report (368KB)
2023
- 2023 Q1 King County Firearm Violence Report (579KB)
- 2023 Q2 King County Firearm Violence Report (367KB)
- 2023 Q3 King County Firearm Violence Report (406KB)
- 2023 Year-end King County Firearm Violence Report (781KB)
2022
- 2022 Q1 King County Firearm Violence Report (464KB)
- 2022 Q2 King County Firearm Violence Report (837KB)
- 2022 Q3 King County Firearm Violence Report (1,101KB)
- 2022 Year-end King County Firearm Violence Report (599KB)
2021
- 2021 Q1 King County Firearm Violence Report (234KB)
- 2021 Q2 King County Firearm Violence Report (258KB)
- 2021 Q3 King County Firearm Violence Report (511kb)
- 2021 Year-end King County Firearm Violence Report (550KB)
2020
2020 King County Firearm Violence: Year End Report (250KB)
2019
2019 King County Firearm Violence: Year End Report (466KB)
2018
2018 King County Firearm Violence: Year End Report (419KB)
2017
History
In 2013, the King County Executive adopted a public health approach to firearm violence aimed at developing evidence-based strategies to reduce preventable injuries and deaths. One of the key early findings by Public Health-Seattle & King County was a lack of essential data collection and sharing mechanisms around firearm violence. In 2016, we partnered with Public Health and seven local law enforcement agencies on the “Shots Fired” project. A primary goal of this project, funded through a federal grant from the Bureau of Justice Assistance, was the uniform collection and standardization of already existing data on illegal shootings in King County.
To accomplish this task, we created the Crime Strategies Unit (CSU)