tellner
Senior Master
JKS, if a cop is being rude I don't like it, but I've had bad days and can deal. Someone abusing his authority may rest assured that I'll find a predatory lawyer, people in the press and so on to make life miserable enough for his superiors that it rains down on him for a long time. And I'll have enough money to pay the medical bills for whatever he did to me. It's all good.
It's the criminal conduct under color of law that bothers me. Just one case currently making the rounds here...
Two off duty police were at a downtown Greek restaurant here. They grabbed a customer's dinner according to witnesses. When the customer objected they hit him. He hit back. They drew on him and showed their badges, threatening to arrest the customer and several others. OK, drunken *******s are drunken *******s, and nobody is immune. What bothers me is that the entire precinct covered it up. They altered records, "lost" witness reports, and didn't refer it to IA. It was only when one officer couldn't believe what was happening and anonymously raised a flag that action was taken. His anonymity was broken, and last I heard he was being forced out of his job.
Or the State Troopers who for years stopped migrant families at the end of the harvest season, confiscated all of their earnings from the season and left them by the road without even their cars. And without turning the money in, by the bye It got so bad that the State Legislature finally got involved. It culminated in a referendum that overwhelmingly overturned civil forfeiture.
Or the case of one of our students whose cousin was getting married at 14 (not in Oregon). Pregnant. By the officer who arrested her for underage and drunk. In the back of his cruiser the night he arrested her. And didn't get fired much less charged even though 15 will get you 20 in that State.
Or the vice cop who was frequenting prostitutes. I don't know whether he got a discount.
Or a student of ours who was a cadet with a local sheriff's department. She came to us in tears because a bunch of the deputies had been roughing up a confused old man and then cuffed him hand and foot to a chair. She made the career-ending mistake of not going along with it. She called for first aid and gave him water. The next week she started getting sent alone on domestic violence calls with no partner and no gun in the rural part of the county.
We told her to complain. She said she was afraid because she'd seen complaints shredded in front of her. Besides, the sheriff had been screwing underage explorer scouts on company time during training exercises. He was finally convicted, by the bye. So we told her to talk to someone in the AoJ department and to ditch the hicks and take the summer internship with the FBI. I prayed over that decision and don't know if I gave her the right advice.
Or Abner Louima. The whole precinct covered up for the torture and near murder of an innocent man, intimidation of witnesses and death threats against the victim, the nurses and the doctor who treated him. In the end all but one or two walked. Most are still with the NYPD. A couple long-time NYPD officers assure me that their careers are stalled and they won't be promoted for a long time.
Well whoop-de-****ing-doo. If a bunch of Haitian immigrants had done that to a cop the Department wouldn't have rested until every one of them was dead or behind bars.
And a thousand others. I know that anecdotes are not data. But one sees a pattern after a couple decades. Police have broad powers of discretion. Due to the close working environment and danger they face they have (according to an retired police captain AoJ professor I had) a clan-type organizational structure. They will tend to give the benefit of the doubt to the people they rely on. And they are hostile to outside scrutiny or judgment by anyone other than another LEO.
To some degree that's understandable although not good. You have to trust people to use their discretion with discretion up to a certain point and save the big hammer for the big problems. But there is always a danger that tolerance for the little sins will turn into the covering up the big ones. Solidarity becomes secrecy. It doesn't take much, just a few influential training officers taking a bunch of rookies slightly the wrong way during their first year. Accepting a little gratuity here and there. And so it goes. The same thing happens in every walk of life, but most people don't have the powers and prestige of a police officer.
I am absolutely confident that people like you and Drac would not do anything like that. But that's because I have some idea of what you guys are like personally. I'm less willing to extend the same courtesy to everyone wearing a badge these days. Every time an officer looks the other way there's a risk that it will diminish the average citizen's respect for the law and its servants just a little bit. And when that reaches a certain critical threshold no amount of guns, badges or laws will suffice. Law enforcement is one of those magic things that only works because people believe in it. If they stop believing the magic goes away forever.
It's tough. The majority of cops are good people just like the majority of all people. I don't know how to answer the guy's question when it's an officer doing something criminal under the protection of his uniform. I'm afraid the answer will have to come from the police themselves. A willingness to hold police to the same or higher standards, better esprit de corps, less hostility towards Internal Affairs and civilian review would go a long way. Beyond that, I don't know. I just don't know.
It's the criminal conduct under color of law that bothers me. Just one case currently making the rounds here...
Two off duty police were at a downtown Greek restaurant here. They grabbed a customer's dinner according to witnesses. When the customer objected they hit him. He hit back. They drew on him and showed their badges, threatening to arrest the customer and several others. OK, drunken *******s are drunken *******s, and nobody is immune. What bothers me is that the entire precinct covered it up. They altered records, "lost" witness reports, and didn't refer it to IA. It was only when one officer couldn't believe what was happening and anonymously raised a flag that action was taken. His anonymity was broken, and last I heard he was being forced out of his job.
Or the State Troopers who for years stopped migrant families at the end of the harvest season, confiscated all of their earnings from the season and left them by the road without even their cars. And without turning the money in, by the bye It got so bad that the State Legislature finally got involved. It culminated in a referendum that overwhelmingly overturned civil forfeiture.
Or the case of one of our students whose cousin was getting married at 14 (not in Oregon). Pregnant. By the officer who arrested her for underage and drunk. In the back of his cruiser the night he arrested her. And didn't get fired much less charged even though 15 will get you 20 in that State.
Or the vice cop who was frequenting prostitutes. I don't know whether he got a discount.
Or a student of ours who was a cadet with a local sheriff's department. She came to us in tears because a bunch of the deputies had been roughing up a confused old man and then cuffed him hand and foot to a chair. She made the career-ending mistake of not going along with it. She called for first aid and gave him water. The next week she started getting sent alone on domestic violence calls with no partner and no gun in the rural part of the county.
We told her to complain. She said she was afraid because she'd seen complaints shredded in front of her. Besides, the sheriff had been screwing underage explorer scouts on company time during training exercises. He was finally convicted, by the bye. So we told her to talk to someone in the AoJ department and to ditch the hicks and take the summer internship with the FBI. I prayed over that decision and don't know if I gave her the right advice.
Or Abner Louima. The whole precinct covered up for the torture and near murder of an innocent man, intimidation of witnesses and death threats against the victim, the nurses and the doctor who treated him. In the end all but one or two walked. Most are still with the NYPD. A couple long-time NYPD officers assure me that their careers are stalled and they won't be promoted for a long time.
Well whoop-de-****ing-doo. If a bunch of Haitian immigrants had done that to a cop the Department wouldn't have rested until every one of them was dead or behind bars.
And a thousand others. I know that anecdotes are not data. But one sees a pattern after a couple decades. Police have broad powers of discretion. Due to the close working environment and danger they face they have (according to an retired police captain AoJ professor I had) a clan-type organizational structure. They will tend to give the benefit of the doubt to the people they rely on. And they are hostile to outside scrutiny or judgment by anyone other than another LEO.
To some degree that's understandable although not good. You have to trust people to use their discretion with discretion up to a certain point and save the big hammer for the big problems. But there is always a danger that tolerance for the little sins will turn into the covering up the big ones. Solidarity becomes secrecy. It doesn't take much, just a few influential training officers taking a bunch of rookies slightly the wrong way during their first year. Accepting a little gratuity here and there. And so it goes. The same thing happens in every walk of life, but most people don't have the powers and prestige of a police officer.
I am absolutely confident that people like you and Drac would not do anything like that. But that's because I have some idea of what you guys are like personally. I'm less willing to extend the same courtesy to everyone wearing a badge these days. Every time an officer looks the other way there's a risk that it will diminish the average citizen's respect for the law and its servants just a little bit. And when that reaches a certain critical threshold no amount of guns, badges or laws will suffice. Law enforcement is one of those magic things that only works because people believe in it. If they stop believing the magic goes away forever.
It's tough. The majority of cops are good people just like the majority of all people. I don't know how to answer the guy's question when it's an officer doing something criminal under the protection of his uniform. I'm afraid the answer will have to come from the police themselves. A willingness to hold police to the same or higher standards, better esprit de corps, less hostility towards Internal Affairs and civilian review would go a long way. Beyond that, I don't know. I just don't know.