Background characteristicsof police applicants
A “homogeneous group”– Working class and lower-middle class– Conservative political views– Assertiveness and physicality– Taste for risk and excitement– Some say authoritarian – others, not
Looking for steady work with good benefits Idealistic, want to help others Prefer outside work – not be “cooped up” Lifetime interest (friends and relatives in law enforcement)
The police personality
Police learn norms and values on the job,like other occupational groups
Recruits learn caution at the academy– Police work can be dangerous– Stories of officers hurt and killed Patrol work teaches powerful lessons– Constant exposure to the unpleasant aspects of human nature– Reality vs. altruistic, “helping” orientation– Badge + gun compliance; almost anyone can prove dangerous– Justice not always possible Some consequences– Pre-existing characteristics interact with police environment – Shortcuts to decision-making: profiling, the “symbolic assailant” – Territoriality , solidarity, code of silence
Blog post: “When Hard Heads Collide”
Why place limits onthe police?
Democratic values – Balance of power between citizens and the State– Public trust and confidence in the police – Fairness to the weak – “the little guy”
Professionalism– Avoid brutalizing the police– Encourage craftsmanship and attention to detail
Weak-willed may falsely confess Innocent may confess to gain leniency Witnesses may shape their testimony to what
authorities want Officers convinced of someone’s guilt might lie or shade the truth
– Avoid the descent to misconduct “Slippery slope”: “grass eating” to “meat eating”
Carl Klockars’“The Dirty Harry Problem”
Police driven by the “noble cause” of making the world safer
Means – ends dilemma: are “bad” meansjustified when seeking “good” ends?
Police frustrated by laws and regulations– Miranda v. Arizona (1966): If custodial interrogation must read rights– Exclusionary rule (Mapp v. Ohio, 1961): Evidence gathered in violation of the
Constitution is inadmissible– Conduct that “shocks the conscience”: Due Process clause, Fourteenth Amendment– Right to counsel: Sixth Amendment– Criminal and civil law– Agency regulations
Police frustrated by moral standards imposed by outsiders. Police frustrated by practical obstacles
– Uncertainty, lack of information– Uncooperative victims, witnesses and suspects
Blog post: “You Can’t Manage Your Way out of Rampart”
Dirt Harry was a “utilitarian”-- a moral “relativist”
Concerned with consequencesof an act
Utility (“greatest happiness”)to all concerned– Calculus of costs and benefits– Short-term (act utilitarianism)– Long term (rule utilitarianism)
Difficulties?Difficulties?Difficulties?Difficulties?
Utilitarianism - difficulties
Predicting consequences Calculating cost and benefits Individual rights may be overlooked No moral compass
The opposite of relativism --Absolutism
Categorical imperative (Immanuel Kant)– Universality of decisions – same acts
would be taken regardless of circumstances– Human beings are not just means to an end
Other tests– Is one acting from a sense of duty?– Is an act motivated or affected by self-interest?– Is the decision based on underlying principles or on
personal preferences?Difficulties?Difficulties?Difficulties?Difficulties?
Absolutism – the difficulties
In the real world, consequences of an act are important Pressures and expectations on police Severely limit police practices and techniques
– Lying and deception– Undercover
Two models of lawenforcement
What’s the worst kind of error?– Type 1: Arrest and convict the
innocent (guilty not charged)– Type 2: Failure to arrest or
convict anyone, or mistakenlyexonerate or acquit the guilty
Crime control model– Maximize efficiency of crime control– Prone to type 1 errors
Due process model– Getting it right is more important– Prone to type 2 errors
Causes and enablers ofmisconduct
Officer selection– Personalities drawn into policing– Weeding out unsuitable candidates
Workplace issues– Pressures to produce (how work is measured)– Meeting legal requirements for search and arrest– Getting along with coworkers– Citizen expectations– Limited resources
Police culture– Peer pressures “code of silence”– Solidarity - “us” v. “them” mentality
Rampart
• In September 1999 officer Rafael Perez wascharged with stealing three kilograms of cocaine from an evidence locker. In a plea deal he accused fellow officers of Rampart “CRASH” (anti-gang unit) of framing and beating suspects, planting evidence and covering up brutality, including unnecessary shootings.
• Investigation led to the dismissal of more than 150 felony convictions. $70 million was paid to persons, mostly gang members, who were unjustly arrested, beaten or shot. Nine officers were charged with crimes, including filing false police reports, and 23 were fired or suspended. Some of the convictions and firings were later overturned.
• Perez and his partner, Nino Durden, pled guilty to State drug charges for the cocaine theft and to Federal civil rights violations for covering up a shooting. Each served a total of five years.
• Blog post: “You Can’t Manage Your Way out of Rampart”
Page 14: “While it is impossible to substantiatecompletely, it appears that the application of ourhiring standards was compromised when theseofficers were hired during periods of acceleratedhiring in the late 1980s and early 1990s. This is not tosay that anyone intended to do so. But, one need only look at the pre-employment histories of these four people to see that something was seriously wrong when they were approved for hire. The fact that these menwere hired with egregious information in their packages leaves only two explanations: 1) Recognize that erosion has occurred and shore up the systems to prevent it from recurring; or, 2) Insist that the application of our standards did not erode, which means that criminal conduct, drug dealing, financial irresponsibility and violent behavior are consistent with our standards. Clearly, there has been erosion, the blame for which cannot be placed on one individual or group, but rather on a multifaceted system with competing interests. We must recognize that it has occurred and commit ourselves to never sacrificing quality for the expediency of numbers.”
LAPD Board of Inquiry Report into Rampart, March 1, 2000
Discussion about four of the fired officers
...on the other hand
On 2/9/06 a Federal court jury awarded$5 million each to LAPD Sgt. Edward Ortiz,former officer Paul Harper and former Sgt.Brian Liddy, who were fired in 2000 andtried for allegedly framing a suspect while working at Rampart.
After being acquitted or having their cases dismissed, each sued the City for malicious prosecution. They accused prosecutors, detectives and former Chief Parks of making them “scapegoats” by suborning false testimony from officer Rafael Perez in exchange for a greatly reduced sentence.
Ortiz and Harper went back on the force. Liddy is now working in private security.
In July 2008 the Federal awards to the three officers were upheld by the Ninth Circuit, which agreed that disciplinary policies encouraged filing charges against officers even if there was no probable cause.
Edward Ortiz — Convicted of obstructing justice (overturned). One of three sued for malicious prosecution, shared a $15-million jury award.
Brian Liddy — Convicted of obstructing justice (overturned.) Shared in $15-million award. Later fired for misconduct related to a narcotics arrest.
Paul Harper — Acquitted of obstructing justice, shared the $15-million award.
Michael Buchanan — Convicted of obstructing justice (overturned)
Manuel Chavez — Pleaded no contest to assault under color of authority for the 1996 beating of a gang member. Sentenced to 60-days in jail and three years probation.
Shawn Gomez — Pleaded no contest to filing a false report in the 1996 beating of a gang member. Sentenced to three years' probation and ordered to serve 400 hours of community service.
Ethan Cohan — Pleaded guilty to obstructing justice and filing a false report in the 1996 beating of gang member. Sentenced to one year in jail.
Outcomes for other key players, from the Los Angeles Times (7/12/06)
But on the OTHERhand...
On February 28, 2005 19 persons, includingfive former cops, were charged withcommitting twenty robberies during1999-2001.
Led by LAPD officer Ruben Palomares, theywore LAPD uniforms & used LAPD cars to stage phony raids, stealing drugs, guns and money from drug dealers and others.
Those charged include former LAPD officers William Ferguson and Jesse Moya, former LBPD officer Joseph Ferguson, and former LASD deputy Rodrigo Duran.
William Ferguson was appointed an LAPD officer even though his background check turned up five prior arrests for theft and burglary.
Many of those charged have pled guilty. Palomares, serving 15 years for trying to buy ten kilos of cocaine from DEA agents in 2001, is cooperating. He was originally fingered as corrupt by Rampart figure Rafael Perez, who encouraged investigators to check out all of Palomares’ arrests.
Maywood P.D.
On 4/29/09 the California Atty. Generalreleased a study of Maywood PD
It concludes that Maywood officers have engaged in extensive misconduct– Routine use of excessive force– Lack of probable cause to justify searches and arrests– Lack of cause to stop cars, and punitive impoundments– Sexual assaults by an on-duty officer– Discouraging the public from filing complaints
Causes and enablers of these problems– Hiring unqualified officers and those rejected from other agencies– Poor supervision, including supervisory indifference to obvious problems– Lack (until recently) of a professional Chief
In June 2009 Maywood consented to a court order– Revamped selection, training and supervision– Install cameras at the station & in police cars– Officers to carry digital recorders on patrol
Corruption
Slippery slope– “Grass eating” -- passively accepting
gratuities– “Meat eating” -- actively seeking illicit gain
Causes– Rotten apples: one infects others– Environmental: political atmosphere allows corruption to flourish
Most serious corruption is drug-related– Large sums of money– Social ambivalence about drugs
Neutralizers– Drugs are “victimless” crimes– Drug dealers don’t deserve profits– Taking money punishes drug dealers– Officers are heroes -- they’re poorly paid and deserve more
Article: “The Craft of Policing”
1980’s: Buddy Boys –NYPD 77th. Precinct
Impoverished high-crime drug sales area Officer misconduct
– Illegal drugs and alcohol abuse– New officers “tested” to see if they “measured up”
“Tough on crime” - extralegal means to punish offenders– Falsification of arrest reports, perjury
Burning money - “psychological” abuse of suspects Traditional corruption – payoffs, thefts of evidence, robberies of drug dealers,
resale of drugs, housebreaks disguised as “searches” Dumping ground for problem officers “Grass eating” to “meat eating”
– Began with burning and flushing confiscated dope– Progressed to selling dope to other dealers
Preventing misconductand corruption
Continuous dialogue within an agency “Supply side” issues
– Officer selection – Internal and external pressures– Measuring performance
Agency climate– Corrective or punitive?– Distinguish between working
mistakes & willful misconduct – Communications must flow up as
well as down– Enhance bond between managers and
subordinates Supervision
– Quantity and quality– Avoiding co-optation
Technology– Early warning programs– Recorders, cameras
Agency guidelines– Establish explicit boundaries– Thorough and realistic– Enforce through inspection– Disclose results of internal
investigations “High-risk” units (drugs, intelligence)
– Oversight by command staff– Careful, merit-based selection– Rotation
The Craft of Policing
Selection, training and supervision often fail – Unsuitable candidates always slip through– Internal controls ignored or insufficient– Supervisors can’t be everywhere
Quantity v. quality– Superiors just want numbers– Craze for measurement and quantification far
outweigh quality concerns Means v. ends
– Frustration over bad guys getting away with it– Justification in media, culture and politics for
brutality (“Dirty Harry”)– Problem of the “symbolic assailant”