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URL: https://policescorecard.org/nh

⇱ Police Scorecard: New Hampshire


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We obtained data on 211 Police and 2 Sheriff’s Depts in the state of New Hampshire.

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Scorecard at a Glance

Average for 4 Sections: 51%

Scores range from 0-100% comparing states with population. States with higher scores spend less on policing, use less force, are more likely to hold officers accountable and make fewer arrests for low-level offenses.

Worse
50th Percentile
Better
Police Funding:  52%
Police Budget Cost per Person
Misconduct Settlements
Fines/Forfeitures
Police Presence/Over-Policing (Officers per Population)
Police Violence:  82%
Force Used per Arrest
Deadly Force per Arrest
Unarmed Victims of Deadly Force per Arrest
Racial Disparities in Deadly Force
Worse
50th Percentile
Better
Police Accountability:  28%
Misconduct Complaints Upheld
Excessive Force Complaints Upheld
Discrimination Complaints Upheld
Criminal Misconduct Complaints Upheld
Approach to Law Enforcement:  44%
Arrest Rate for Low Level Offenses
Homicides Solved
Racial Disparities in Drug Arrests
Jail Incarceration Rate
Jail Deaths per 1,000

Key Findings

30 Killings by Police

That's a higher rate than 10% of US Sheriff Departments.

491 civilian complaints of police misconduct

17% were ruled in favor of civilians from 2016-22.

464,815 arrests made

72% of all arrests were for low-level, non-violent offenses from 2013-23.

Police Funding i

Section Score: 52% -3%

Police Funding By Year

$492.45M  |  1,343,622 Residents  |  $386 per Resident

More Police Funding per Capita than 56% of States

Source: US Census Bureau

Funds taken from communities in fines and forfeitures

Total: $375.43M from 2010-20

More Fines/Forfeitures than 71% of States

Source: US Census Bureau

Number of officers per 1k population

2,854 Officers  |  21.3 per 10k Residents

More Officers per Population than 58% of States

Source: Federal LEOKA Database

Police violence i

Section Score: 82% +2%

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Less-Lethal Force

Used More Force per Arrest than N/A of States

373 Incidents  |  156 every 10k arrests  |  -9%

No Data Found Add Data

Source: Police Department

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Deadly Force

30 Killings by Police from 2013-23  |  0.6 every 10k arrests

^  More Killings by Police per Arrest than 10% of States   

Source: Mapping Police Violence

Deadly Force by Armed Status

13% Unarmed  |  43% Did Not Allegedly Have a Gun

Unarmed Other Alleged Gun Vehicle
13%
27%
57%

^  More Unarmed People Killed per Arrest than 11% of States   

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Police Violence by Race

Black Latinx N.Am API Other White

Population of New Hampshire

90%

New Hampshire Law Enforcement Demographics

People Arrested

6%
6%
86%

People Killed

97%

^  More Racial Disparities in Deadly Force than 3% of States   

Source: Uniform Crime Report, Mapping Police Violence, LEMAS

Police Accountability i

Section Score: 28% -16%

Total civilian complaints

491 from 2016-22  |  17% Ruled in Favor of Civilians

Complaints Not Sustained Complaints Sustained

Use of Force Complaints

56 Reported  |  4% Ruled in Favor of Civilians

Complaints of Police Discrimination

12 Reported  |  0% Ruled in Favor of Civilians

Complaints Reported Ruled in Favor of Civilians

Alleged Crimes Committed by Police

59 Reported  |  8% Ruled in Favor of Civilians

Complaints Reported Ruled in Favor of Civilians

Approach to Law Enforcement i

Section Score: 44% -14%

Source: Uniform Crime Report

Arrests By Year

464,815 Arrests Reported from 2013-2023

Low Level Arrests Other Arrests
More Info

Arrests for Low Level Offenses

336,650 Arrests  |  27 per 1k residents

^  Higher Arrest Rate for Low Level Offenses than 68% of States   

Disparities in Arrests for Low Level Offenses by Race/Ethnicity

Black people were 4.5x more likely and Latinx people were 1.6x more likely to be arrested for low level, non-violent offenses than a white person.

Black Latinx White

Percent of total arrests by type

All Arrests for Low Level Offenses ( 72% )

Drug Possession ( 11% )

Violent Crime ( 2% )

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Homicides Unsolved

227 Homicides from 2013-23  |  111 Unsolved

^  Solved Fewer Homicides than 27% of States   

Percent of Homicides Unsolved by Race

Homicides of Black Victims Unsolved ( 15% )

Homicides of White Victims Unsolved ( 9% )

Source: MAP/Supplementary Homicide Report

Deaths in Jail

23 Deaths from 2013-19  |  15 per 1k Jail Population

Homicide Suicide Other Investigating

100%

^ Higher Rate of Jail Deaths than 95% of States   

Jail Incarceration rate

1,400 Avg Daily Jail Population  |  1 per 1k residents

^  More than 2% of Sheriff's Depts  

People in Jail Without Being Convicted

62 % of People in Jail

New Hampshire Statewide Scores

Rankings are based upon a 0 to 100 percentage scale. States with higher scores use less force, make fewer arrests for low level offenses, solve murder cases more often, hold officers more accountable and spend less on policing overall.

Overall Scores for States where We Have Obtained the Most Data.

👁 Grade Scale
Tap "show more" to see extended list

0-29% 30-59% 60-69% 70-79% 80-89% 90-100% Incomplete
Statewide Score 5YR
* Carroll County 35% -1%
* Lincoln 35% +2%
* Bristol 37% +4%
* Gilford 37% -5%
* Franklin 38% -1%
* Claremont 39% -5%
* Waterville Valley Department Of Public Safety 39% +9%
* Thornton 41% -2%
* Tilton 41% +6%
* Keene 41% +4%
* Lancaster 41%
* Concord 41% -2%
* Carroll 42% +6%
* Hillsboro 42% +7%
* Pittsfield 42% -9%
* Portsmouth 42%
* Orange 43% +2%
* Salisbury 43%
* Newington 43% +4%
* Haverhill 43%
* Belmont 44% -5%
* Goffstown 44% -6%
* Jaffrey 44% -5%
* Woodstock 44% +1%
* New Castle 45% +10%
* Stratford 45%
* Randolph 45%
* Roxbury 45%
* Sharon 45%
* Unity 45%
* Sullivan 45%
* Surry 45%
* Temple 45%
* Westmoreland 45%
* Windsor 45%
* New Hampton 45%
* Croydon 45%
* Nelson 45%
* Errol 45%
* Acworth 45%
* Benton 45%
* Milan 45%
* Derry 45% -1%
* Gilsum 45%
* Henniker 45% -12%
* Holderness 45% -2%
* Langdon 45%
* Marlow 45%
* Nashua 46% -5%
* Winchester 46% +2%
* Salem 46% +3%
* Rye 46% +4%
* Peterborough 46% +8%
* New Boston 46% -15%
* Hinsdale 46% -3%
* Manchester 46% +5%
* Hampton 46% +1%
* Franconia 46% -2%
* Epping 46% -3%
* Conway 46% +2%
* Laconia 47% +10%
* Warren 47% -2%
* Sunapee 47%
* Rochester 47% +2%
* Raymond 47% -2%
* Moultonborough 47% +2%
* Littleton 47% +1%
* Marlborough 47% -6%
* Kensington 47% +1%
* Brookfield 47% -1%
* Bethlehem 47% -4%
* Boscawen 47% -8%
* Ashland 47% -3%
* Allenstown 47% +5%
* Campton 47% -3%
* Seabrook 48% +4%
* Newbury 48% -7%
* North Hampton 48%
* Richmond 48% +3%
* Whitefield 48% -6%
* Stoddard 48% -3%
* Sullivan County 48% +3%
* Sugar Hill 48% -4%
* Wolfeboro 48% +1%
* Madbury 48% +10%
* New Durham 48% -8%
* Dorchester 48% +3%
* Lisbon 48% +5%
* Danbury 48% +8%
* Canaan 48% +1%
* Center Harbor 48% -10%
* Lempster 48% +3%
* Colebrook 48% -3%
* Dunbarton 48% -5%
* Goshen 48% +10%
* Hebron 48% -2%
* Hudson 48% -2%
* Lebanon 48% +3%
* Bennington 49% -4%
* Chichester 49% +5%
* Hancock 49% -4%
* Meredith 49% -8%
* Sanbornton 49% -2%
* Greenfield 50% +2%
* Cornish 50% -2%
* Dublin 50% -6%
Statewide Score 5YR
* Lyme 50% +9%
* Northwood 50% -1%
* Plymouth 50% -2%
* South Hampton 50% -1%
* Wilton 50% -3%
* Newfields 50% -2%
* Northumberland 51% -7%
* Harrisville 51% +9%
* Windham 51% -5%
* Weare 51% -9%
* Troy 51% +1%
* Sutton 51% +12%
* Pembroke 51% -8%
* Newton 51% -2%
* Middleton 51% +4%
* Merrimack 51%
* Jackson 51% -5%
* New London 51% +1%
* Hampton Falls 51% -3%
* Chester 51% -5%
* Grafton 51% +7%
* Alexandria 51% -6%
* Berlin 51% -4%
* Bradford 51% -2%
* Bridgewater 51% +4%
* Dalton 51%
* Effingham 51% -3%
* Durham 51% -17%
* East Kingston 51% +8%
* Francestown 51% +12%
* Hill 52%
* Rindge 52% -6%
* Plaistow 52% -1%
* Ossipee 52% +7%
* Mason 52% +6%
* Lyndeborough 52% +1%
* Londonderry 52% +2%
* Amherst 52% -2%
* Hanover 52% -1%
* Greenland 52% -3%
* Grantham 52% -9%
* Gorham 52% -2%
* Canterbury 52% -5%
* Alstead 52% -5%
* Somersworth 52% -2%
* Rollinsford 52% -3%
* Mont Vernon 53% -1%
* Newport 53% -4%
* Gilmanton 53% -7%
* Lee 53% -17%
* Hooksett 53% -6%
* Deering 53% -4%
* Candia 53% -3%
* Bow 53% -11%
* Alton 53% -5%
* Northfield 54% -2%
* Webster 54% -6%
* Warner 54% -5%
* Walpole 54% +9%
* Wakefield 54% -5%
* Springfield 54% -2%
* Sandwich 54% -3%
* Plainfield 54% +1%
* Nottingham 54% -9%
* Greenville 54% +13%
* Milton 54% -5%
* Fremont 54% -8%
* Fitzwilliam 54% -5%
* Farmington 54% -1%
* Enfield 54% -3%
* Dover 54% +4%
* Deerfield 54% -5%
* Andover 54% +9%
* Barnstead 55% -8%
* Chesterfield 55% +6%
* Charlestown 55% -12%
* Auburn 55% -7%
* Antrim 55% -1%
* Atkinson 56% -4%
* Brookline 56% -4%
* Epsom 56% -4%
* Exeter 56% +2%
* Hopkinton 56% -10%
* Milford 56% -18%
* Pelham 56% -5%
* Strafford 56% -6%
* Tuftonboro 56% -13%
* Tamworth 57% +5%
* Newmarket 57% -7%
* Kingston 57% -10%
* Bartlett 57% -5%
* Freedom 58% -2%
* Hampstead 58% -9%
* Litchfield 58% -4%
* Madison 58% -1%
* Washington 58% -1%
* Brentwood 59% -9%
* Danville 59% -11%
* New Ipswich 59% -8%
* Orford 59% -4%
* Swanzey 59% -2%
* Stratham 60% -10%
* Barrington 60% -8%
* Hollis 60% -5%
* Loudon 61% -9%
* Bedford 61%
* Sandown 63% -9%

* An asterisk indicates this location did not publish enough data to evaluate. Click below to add data to the Scorecard.

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About This Scorecard

This is the first nationwide evaluation of policing in the United States. It was built using data from state and federal databases, public records requests to local police departments, and media reports. While police data is never perfect, and there are additional indicators that still need to be tracked, the Police Scorecard is designed to provide insight into many important issues in policing.

Police Scorecard is an independent 501(c)(3) organization, learn more about our team here. If you have feedback, questions about the project, or need support with an advocacy campaign, contact our Founder, Samuel Sinyangwe.

methodology Source Data

Use this Scorecard to identify issues within police departments that require the most urgent interventions and hold officials accountable for implementing solutions. For example, cities with higher rates of low level arrests could benefit most from solutions that create alternatives to policing and arrest for these offenses. In cities where police make fewer arrests overall but use more force when making arrests, communities could benefit significantly from policies designed to hold police accountable for excessive force. And cities where complaints of police misconduct are rarely ruled in favor of civilians could benefit from creating an oversight structure to independently investigate these complaints.

Here's how to start pushing for change

  • Contact your State's Governor and Attorney General, share your scorecard with them and urge them to enact policies to address the issues you've identified:
  • Look up your state and federal representatives below, then tell them to take action to hold police accountable in your community.
    Find Elected Officials

What's Next

Step 1: COMPLETED

👁 Step 1

Obtain data on 100 California cities. Refine methodology in response to feedback from communities, researchers and local officials.

Step 2: COMPLETED

👁 Step 2

Expand to every major law enforcement agency in America and include additional indicators such as police budgets and jail incarceration.

Step 3: IN PROGRESS

👁 Step 3

Inform data-driven solutions nationwide. Update as new federal, state and local data are collected. Track progress and hold cities accountable to results.

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