Crime | LAPD Suicide Kills More LA Cops Than Criminals Grim nature of job biggest hazard for officers By Rob Quinn Posted Mar 26, 2008 5:59 AM CDT Copied Los Angeles Police Chief William J. Bratton, center, greets LAPD officers while heading to a news conference at 77th Street Division in Los Angeles on Thursday, May 3, 2007. (AP Photo/Branimir Kvartuc) Cops in Los Angeles are more likely to die by their own hand than from a criminal's bullet, the Los Angeles Times reports. Psychologists trying to improve the LAPD's suicide prevention efforts found that 19 police officers in the city killed themselves between 1998 and 2007, while just seven died on the job. The police say the nature of the work is often to blame. "When you interact day after day, hour after hour with either the victims of crime or the perpetrators of crime, you start thinking this world is dangerous, this world is violent," said the force's top psychiatrist. "It's depressing." The LAPD is working on ways to reach out to troubled officers—including placing dashboard stickers in police cars advertising counseling services. Read These Next Mystery donor to US troops has been identified. Within half hour, Navy fighter jet and copter both go into the sea. The strangely, lonely final days of Gene Hackman. At least two have been arrested in the Louvre heist. Report an error