The facts, plainly. Two sources for everything.

An independent, non-partisan public record of police-involved deaths, serious injuries, criminal charges, funding and litigation involving the Edmonton Police Service and Calgary Police Service, 2022–2026. Every entry links to the public sources it is built from.

Sourced from ASIRT / Police Review Commission, courts, budgets & news Minimum two independent sources per fact Corrections & right of reply
Edmonton, 2000–2022: police-involved deaths (Tracking (In)Justice)*
$437M+
EPS 2024 operating budget; Calgary $603M gross
14%+
EPS share of the entire City of Edmonton operating budget
Independent sources required before anything is published

*Historical context figure spanning 2000–2022; see Agencies & funding for sourcing and the 2022–2026 record.

Live map

Where it happened

Each marker is a verified incident at its reported location. Click a marker for the plain-fact summary and its sources. Locations are mapped at the precision reported publicly — many are approximate.

0 incidents shown
Death Serious injury Marker position reflects the most precise location reported; see each record for precision.
What this is

A documentary record, built to be trusted

This project lays out what is already on the public record — from Alberta's police oversight body, the courts, municipal budgets, and accredited news media — in one place, plainly, with every claim traceable to its source.

It is not an allegation of wrongdoing beyond what those sources state. Officers are named only where an official or court source has named them in connection with a charge. No private or home information is ever published.

About the project
Follow the money

Funding & litigation

Edmonton and Calgary together budget over a billion dollars a year on policing. We track the budgets, their growth, and — where it can be obtained — the cost of lawsuits and settlements.

Litigation totals are largely not published by either service and require freedom-of-information requests. Where we cannot verify a figure with two sources, we say so rather than guess.

Agencies & funding
The cycle

Why almost no one is held to account

Of 438 ASIRT investigations between 2018 and 2024, only 6% led to a charge and just 13 ended in a conviction. Investigations take two to five years; civil suits take years more; the officer's defence is paid from public funds while families pay their own way — often into a confidential settlement. That cycle is documented here, with sources.

See how the cycle works →
438ASIRT investigations (2018–2024)
28led to a charge (6%)
13ended in a conviction