Fact Sheet | Workplace Homicides from Shootings | January 2013
Workplace Homicides from Shootings
Recent tragedies around the country have focused attention on workplace violence in the United States. The Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries (CFOI) conducted by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) provides an annual count of fatal work injuries in the United States, including homicides. From 2006 to 2010, an average of 551 workers per year were killed as a result of work-related homicides. In 2010 (the last year for which final data are available), CFOI reported a total of 518 workplace homicides, or 11 percent of all fatal work injuries that occurred that year. A total of 77 of those were multiple-fatality homicide incidents in which two or more workers were killed, including 69 homicides and 8 assailant suicides, all of whom were in work status at the time of the incident.
Shootings accounted for 78 percent of all workplace homicides in 2010 (405 fatal injuries). More than four-fifths
(83 percent) of these workplace homicides from shootings occurred in the private sector, while only 17 percent of such
shootings occurred in government. Workplace homicides attributed to shootings involving workers in elementary and secondary schools are relatively
uncommon, although 12 were reported between 2006 and 2010. Of the 405 workplace shooting victims in 2010, 110 (or 27 percent)
occurred in the retail trade industry. 1 Workplace shooting events account for only
a small portion of nonfatal workplace injuries. In 2010, there were 500 nonfatal shootings with days away from work, which was a small fraction of the 1.2 million total nonfatal cases with days away from work reported in that year.
About 4 out of every 5 workplace homicide victims in 2010 were men. The type of assailants in these cases differed, depending on
whether the victim was a man or a woman. Robbers and other assailants accounted for 72 percent of homicides to men, for
example, and only 37 percent of homicides to women. A substantial difference exists when relatives and other personal
acquaintances are the assailants: only 3 percent of homicides to men, but 39 percent to women. Assailants with no known
personal relationship to their victims accounted for about two-thirds of workplace homicides. 2
Last Modified Date: January 4, 2013
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