2024 Gun Violence Data Fort Worth Crime Rate Statistics
Workplace Incidents
Nationally, the data on workplace violence is stark. In 2022, firearms accounted for 83% of workplace homicides (435 of 524), making them by far the most lethal mechanism of workplace violence⁸.
Fort Worth’s rapidly diversifying economy adds complexity. The city is home to major corporate campuses, manufacturing operations, distribution centers, and a growing logistics sector. Many of the newer facilities sit on the city’s expanding edges, in growth corridors that are farther from established police substations and emergency services. Organizations operating in these areas face the reality that initial incident response will depend almost entirely on whatever systems they have on-site.
What’s Happening in Schools
The Timberview High School shooting on October 6, 2021 sent a clear signal across the region. A student opened fire inside the school in Arlington (Mansfield ISD), injuring four people before fleeing⁵. The school serves families from across the southern DFW metroplex, including communities bordering Fort Worth. The incident made national headlines, but the security lesson was local.
Timberview had security protocols in place. It had procedures. A firearm still entered the building, and once it was used, the outcome depended on how fast the threat was identified, how quickly information reached decision-makers, and how rapidly a coordinated response began.
Fort Worth ISD, the city’s largest district, serves approximately 71,000 students across 122 campuses (2023-2024 data)⁹. The district has invested in campus police officers, controlled access points, and security infrastructure. But the challenge of securing that many facilities across a city covering 350 square miles is immense. Weapons have been confiscated on FWISD campuses in multiple incidents, a pattern that reinforces the need for detection capabilities that work before a weapon is used.
Here’s what concerns us about these patterns: the security measures in place at these schools weren’t necessarily the wrong ones. Metal detectors, controlled entry, and campus police can be effective. But when they fail, and they will fail eventually, organizations need a second layer that kicks in immediately.
Response Time Reality Check
Fort Worth’s physical size is a security liability that no amount of strategic policing can fully overcome. The city covers more than 350 square miles, making it one of the most geographically spread-out major cities in Texas². When a call comes in from the far western or southern edges of the city, even a rapid response requires significant travel time.
The staffing picture compounds the problem. As of 2024, FWPD operates with approximately 1,700 sworn officers, well below the department’s authorized strength of approximately 1,900³. For a city now over one million residents, that works out to roughly 1.8 officers per 1,000 people. FBI data shows the average for cities of comparable size is approximately 2.4 per 1,000 — though no universal police staffing standards formally exist, and ratios alone are not a recommended basis for staffing decisions¹⁰. That gap isn’t a criticism of the officers on the street. It’s a math problem that the department has been transparent about.
Fewer officers stretched across more square miles, serving a population that grows every year. Priority 1 calls (active shootings, violent crimes in progress) demand surge response, but when patrol zones are already thinly covered, the capacity for that surge is constrained.
The practical implication for any Fort Worth organization: those first minutes between an incident and police arrival belong to whatever security infrastructure you’ve invested in. If that infrastructure is limited to cameras that record footage for later review and alarms that call a monitoring company, you’ve already lost the window where intervention matters most.
Healthcare and Government Facilities
Fort Worth’s healthcare sector has grown alongside the population, and each new facility inherits a unique security tension. Hospitals need to stay accessible. Emergency departments can’t lock down the way a school building can. JPS Health Network, the county’s public safety-net hospital, handles a high volume of trauma and behavioral health cases, both of which carry elevated risk for workplace violence.
Tarrant County government buildings, including the courthouse and municipal offices, rely on screening at primary entry points. These systems work during normal traffic. During peak hours or high-profile proceedings, the volume of visitors tests the capacity of screening protocols, and secondary access points can become vulnerabilities if not continuously monitored.
The common thread: these facilities can’t simply restrict access. They need security systems that function within the constraints of buildings designed to serve the public.