PERSPECTIVE ON POLICE
When Cops Become the Gangsters
The war on drugs has spawned an ominous form of corruptionprotector becoming
the
criminal.
by JOSEPH D. MCNAMARA [Retired Police Chief of San Jose,
Is a Research Fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University.
His Forthcoming Book Is "Gangster Copsthe Hidden Cost of America's War on Drugs."]
September 21, 1999 Los Angeles Times
Fax: 2132374712
It may not be much comfort to Police Chief Bernard C. Parks and
the
people of Los Angeles during the current corruption scandal, but the pattern of small gangs of
cops
committing predatory crimes has occurred in almost every large city in the nation and in a great
many
less populated areas as well.
Six years after retiring from 35 years in policing, I began research for
a
book on police administration. Studying the nation's police forces, I was stunned to discover that
the
old-type corruption uncovered when cops occasionally were caught taking payoffs from gangsters
had
been replaced by something considerably more ominous. Throughout the country, small groups of
cops were the gangsters.
The lure of fortunes to be made in illegal drugs has led to thousands
of
police feloniesarmed robbery, kidnapping, stealing drugs, selling drugs, perjury, framing people
and
even some murders. These police crimes were committed on duty, often while the cop gangsters
were
wearing their uniforms, the symbol of safety to the people they were supposed to be protecting.
Of course, only a small percentage of American police officers are
recidivist felons. Sadly, however, these predatory criminals are protected by a code of silence.
Otherwise honest officers who knew or suspected what was going on did not report the crooks,
and at
times even lied rather than testify against other cops.
A code of silence is not unique to police. It exists in the White
House,
among students, doctors, lawyers, business executives and other groups. Indeed, even as children,
our
parents and peers admonish us not to tattle. Basic human characteristics of loyalty, trust and
security
are involved. These motivations are even more intense in police work. If cops make an error of
judgment, they or someone else may be killed, or they can be sent to jail for using too much force.
And
even the most ethical officers fear being falsely accused of brutality or other crimes and of being
railroaded to prison because their chiefs or mayors will not support them in politically volatile
cases.
Furthermore, the code of silence is strengthened because many cops
chafe
under the pressure from superiors to make petty arrests for drugs. State and local police made
approximately 1.4 million drug possession arrests last year. Very few took place with search
warrants,
although the 4th Amendment, with few exceptions, requires the police to obtain a judicial warrant
to
search people or their homes. It is so common for police to lie about how they obtained drug
evidence
that the term "testilying" has replaced "testifying" in police jargon. Ambitious politicians and
police
brass calling for more arrests condemn the code of silence while ignoring widespread police
perjury in
drug cases. It is not surprising that many cops feel that the only one they can really trust is another
cop.
Nevertheless, it is perverse when those sworn to enforce the law
instead
shelter predatory criminals who happen to carry a badge. Minorities tend to be the victims of the
most
grievous police crimes. The current Los Angeles police shooting scandal, like the thousands of
cop
crimes elsewhere, does immeasurable damage to the credibility of the criminal justice system.
Mayors
and police chiefs usually assure their citizens that there are only a few rotten apples when these
scandals are publicized. Yet the number and similarity of police gangster crimes nationally indicate
a
crisis in American policing.
Official corruption will be a major problem as long as we cling to the
present drug policies. The code of silence cannot be totally eliminated. But the harm to good cops
and
to society can be reduced if politicians abandon their demagogic calls for a police war against
drugs.
Police officers who are true partners with the community in reducing crime will be far more likely
to
report thugs on the force than cops who think they're part of a warring occupation army.
Copyright 1999 Los Angeles Times. All Rights Reserved
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