Samuel Sinyangwe Profile picture
Feb 5, 2022 12 tweets 6 min read Read on X
We just issued a Cease and Desist letter to #CampaignZero over their attempt to plagiarize our Mapping Police Violence platform. They have until next Weds to stop masquerading as Mapping Police Violence and misappropriating our work & site as their own. Here are the facts. (1/x)
I began building the Mapping Police Violence project in 2014, before I met @deray and before Campaign Zero existed. The first time he found out about my project was in this email on February 4, 2015.
Note that We The Protesters (which later became Campaign Zero) first became an organization after filing for incorporation on June 29, 2015. And Campaign Zero didn’t exist until August 21, 2015. There was no actual CZ/WTP organization when MPV was created and launched.
At no time did I sign any contract or employment agreement with CZ/WTP or transfer ownership of my projects/IP to them. They repeatedly asked me to sign an employment agreement last year (2021) with this language designed to give them legal authority to take my IP.

I refused.
I refused to sign that (or any) agreement because 1) I knew they’d try some shady shit like this and 2) it would’ve contractually put Deray in charge of my work and given him more ability to retaliate when we disagree, as he is trying to do now.
Campaign Zero should make their *own* data projects, instead of plagiarizing my research. What they especially can’t do is masquerade as MPV by stealing our work, analysis and website and presenting it as their own.

A side by side of the two sites’ methods sections:
Mapping Police Violence has been designed to help communities access as much data as they need. Campaign Zero has exploited this to download our exact database & analysis and stand it up on a website they copied with no attribution, pretending as if they’re us doing the work.
Now CZ is claiming they have a “team of experts” to work on my project. But the database and analysis is exactly what we already produced (and we’ve even pushed new updates they haven’t included yet). Where’s their actual work product? They must be waiting for our next update.
Our data will continue to be public. But we produced this analysis and should be credited. We are the primary source and nobody knows our methodology or data better than us. Communities should not be misled about who they are reaching out to when they have questions or requests.
They even put their org’s donate button on the site. As of today, I don’t see it anymore though. Unfortunately for them we have receipts.
#CampaignZero has until next Wednesday to cease and desist from this behavior, restore the actual site and transfer the domain to its rightful home - our official Mapping Police Violence organization. We are ready to pursue all necessary remedies for the theft of our project.
In the meantime you can find the REAL database at its temporary home: mappingpoliceviolence.us.

And here’s more information on why they suddenly decided to steal our platform in retaliation for us calling for basic accountability for how Deray has decided to operate.

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More from @samswey

Aug 28
The Mapping Police Violence organization just released a new data platform documenting over 1,000,000 cases of police use of force nationwide across 58% of the U.S. This is the largest public database of its kind, explore the data at . Here’s what the data tells us about police violence in America🧵…policedata.org
To build a database tracking all reported police use of force, we filed thousands of public records requests to police agencies in all 50 states asking for detailed data specifying how many use of force incidents they reported in total from 2017-2022, what types of force they used and the demographics of the people they used force against. We also obtained available state use of force databases. We then worked to standardizing the data according to what types of force were reported, how agencies documented force, etc. Here are the types of force the police agencies we obtained data from reported using in 2022.Image
What does this data tell us? For every person that police killed, police reported more than 300 non-fatal force incidents, suggesting an estimated 300,000+ people are impacted by police use of physical force each year. 80% or more of these people were reported *by police* to be unarmed. And disparities in overall force were even more extreme than in police killings, with Black people impacted at more than 3x the rate of white people.Image
Read 12 tweets
Jan 31, 2023
Mapping Police Violence documented nearly 1,200 killings by police in 2022, a record year for police violence nationwide. Here’s what the data tells us about rising levels of police violence. (1/x) policeviolencereport.org
1. Killings by police have increased, but these changes haven’t been uniform. GA, NM, OH, TX reported record highs in 2022. CA and MD reported record lows for the decade. Within states, *County Sheriffs Depts* are increasing killings, but most local PDs are not. Image
2. The increase among sheriffs departments in notable, in part, because these are usually elected positions. Are sheriffs doubling down on aggressive policing to appear “tough on crime” to some voters? Will voters have enough info to hold these sheriffs accountable next election? Image
Read 11 tweets
Nov 4, 2022
PAY ATTENTION TO COUNTY SHERIFF ELECTIONS. This is one of the biggest ways you can help combat police violence and mass incarceration this year. Let me break it down… A map of states where sheri...
Sheriffs control most local jails and have also been responsible for a growing share of the nation’s deadly police violence. 1 in every 3 people killed by law enforcement is killed by a sheriff’s department. *Half of those sheriffs are on the ballot in this election.* A chart showing the proport...
Sheriffs are elected positions, policing communities with little oversight, no mayor to fire them and every incentive to be perceived as “tough on crime” to more rural/conservative constituencies. To hold them accountable, they need to be voted out of office.
Read 6 tweets
Sep 22, 2022
Since October 2019, the DOJ missed:
18% of deaths in state prisons
39% of deaths in local jails
62-71% of deaths in police custody

Meanwhile, media orgs and nonprofits like mappingpoliceviolence.us are doing a far better job than the federal government at collecting this info.
Now projects that *have* done a good job tracking these deaths are gone/at risk. Some state databases have been shut down (ex: Colorado’s police shootings database). Non-governmental databases by The Guardian, HuffPo Jail Deaths tracker & Killedbypolice.net no longer exist.
Other projects tracking police killings like Fatal Encounters haven’t been updated in a year. And since deray/Campaign Zero tried to forcibly take over mappingpoliceviolence.org earlier this year they’ve mismanaged it & failed to keep that URL up-to-date or methodologically sound.
Read 5 tweets
Aug 30, 2022
The research indicates Biden’s plan to hire another 100,000 police officers WILL increase arrests, incarceration and police violence ESPECIALLY for petty non-violent issues. Research also indicates these harms WILL be concentrated in Black communities. That much is crystal clear.
Study: “low-level arrest rates declined most in places that reduced police expenditure and personnel…findings suggest increasing police budgets or police force size will likely be accompanied by increases in misdemeanor arrests and their attendant harms.” academic.oup.com/bjc/advance-ar…
Here’s a description of that study and it’s findings/implications from one of the co-authors: slate.com/news-and-polit…
Read 6 tweets
Aug 30, 2022
Low level arrests have been declining in almost every major city, with New York City cutting these arrests by more than 2/3rds since 2014. This spared hundreds of thousands of people from arrest, criminalization and police violence. Now that progress is being actively reversed.
From 2013-2020, the nation’s largest cities saw overall arrests decline by 46% and low level arrests (which make up 2/3rds of all arrests) were cut by more than half. This has outpaced other parts of the country and accelerated during the pandemic. AND… policescorecard.org/findings
These declines in low level arrests are associated with declines in police shootings and killings in cities. And while cities were changing their approach to low level non-violent issues, arrests/enforcement of violent crime remained relatively unchanged. fivethirtyeight.com/features/polic…
Read 4 tweets

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