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xchrom

(108,903 posts)
Tue Aug 19, 2014, 04:35 AM Aug 2014

Video Killed Trust in Police Officers

http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2014/08/police-officers-havent-earned-our-instinctive-trust/378657/

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Until I was 11, I trusted police officers, for reasons that Hans Fiene captures in The Federalist. "For many conservatives, especially those of us living in nice, comfy suburbs, it’s hard to apply the 'power corrupts' doctrine to law enforcement because we’ve never seen corrupted enforcers of the law," he writes. "We’ve never been wrongly arrested. We’ve never witnessed our children put in jail based on the false reports of police officers. We’ve never seen our neighbors beaten or tased without cause. And in the extremely unlikely scenario that a police officer drove into our neighborhood and murdered our unarmed friend in cold blood, we cannot possibly fathom a scenario where the justice system wouldn’t be on our side and where that police officer wouldn’t spend the rest of his life in jail."

Personal experience shapes attitudes more powerfully than anything else. But it wasn't a run-in with the law that changed me. Video killed my trust in police officers. On March 3, 1991, or shortly thereafter, I watched a TV news report like this one:



Until that day, my 11-year-old's notion of race in America included an awareness of slavery, which seemed like ancient history; knowledge of Martin Luther King and Rosa Parks as venerated heroes from the distant past; and the Cosby family from the eponymous TV show, who established my notion of a contemporary black family. Then the Rodney King beating happened an hour's drive from my house, and less than six months later, after an overwhelmingly white jury acquitted the police officers who did the beating, the L.A. riots began. These events forced suburban Californians my age to confront parts of reality we'd never imagined. I couldn't grok why police officers would attack a man like that, or how a jury could acquit them, but I'd seen it with my own eyes. The incident didn't turn me against all law enforcement, but I started to believe that there were good cops and bad cops. Soon after, I was in the car with my mom when she got pulled over for a speeding ticket and wondered, slightly fearfully, if we'd get a bad cop. The officer turned out to be perfectly polite, of course. I didn't yet understand that he might or might not have behaved the same if we'd been a black family.

As events in Ferguson, Missouri unfold, several observers have noticed that "this time is different." Unlike during past instances of police officers killing or assaulting young black men in suspicious though not yet demonstrably criminal circumstances, some prominent conservatives are doubting the official police narrative or criticizing their militarized response to protesters. Some attribute this to a growing libertarian influence in the GOP, and it's no accident that Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky has offered one of the strongest calls for police reform.

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Video Killed Trust in Police Officers (Original Post) xchrom Aug 2014 OP
ILlove Cell Phone Videos Sparhawk60 Aug 2014 #1
AND... doxydad Aug 2014 #2
Win-Win Sparhawk60 Aug 2014 #3
Video on cops is like light on roaches rock Aug 2014 #4
 

Sparhawk60

(359 posts)
1. ILlove Cell Phone Videos
Tue Aug 19, 2014, 07:00 AM
Aug 2014

Same here. I used to trust the police. Yes, there may have been one or two bad apple, but the vast majority were good, honest people doing their job. Fast forward 20 years, and after seeing countless videos showing the police lied, I no longer trust them.

It is no longer “one or two bad apples”. I have seen too many cases where 10 or more cops all swear the bad guy was “coming right at them”, only to have a cell phone video surface showing the “bad guy” just standing there before being assaulted by the police. A cop who stands by and covers for other police is a bad apple, and that is just about all of them.

doxydad

(1,363 posts)
2. AND...
Tue Aug 19, 2014, 07:04 AM
Aug 2014

Fortunately we now have phone cameras to assure that bad cops don't get away with brutality. Problem is....we need to be there when it happens. The answer is Lapel Cameras for all police to wear.

http://www.vievu.com/

 

Sparhawk60

(359 posts)
3. Win-Win
Tue Aug 19, 2014, 07:14 AM
Aug 2014

Lapel cameras are a win-win. Use of force AND complaints drop drastically when the police have to wear cameras. I would love to have a lapel camera if I was a police officer. Any time a complaint is files against me, I just roll out the footage showing I did nothing wrong. …….of course, that also means I can’t abuse people with impunity any more.

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