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Chapter 6 Issues in Policing: Professional, Social, and Legal

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Title: Chapter 6 Issues in Policing: Professional, Social, and Legal


1
Chapter 6 Issues in Policing Professional,
Social, and Legal
2
Learning Objectives
  • Summarize demographic trends in policing
  • Explain how minority and female officers act and
    are treated
  • Explain police culture and personality
  • Identify distinct policing styles
  • Describe factors that affect police discretion

3
Learning objectives
  • Discuss four major problems of policing
  • Distinguish between deadly and non deadly
    forceand methods for controlling each
  • Explain the importance of less-lethal weapons
  • Be familiar with the Supreme Courts involvement
    with the police through its effort to control
    search and seizure, interrogation, and the
    establishment of the exclusionary rule.

4
Who Are the Police?
  • Traditionally, police officers have been while
    men with a high school education
  • Now, an increasing number of police officers have
    attended college
  • Affirmative action programs have helped to change
    the racial and gender composition to reflect the
    community makeup

5
Who Are the Police?
  • Demographic Makeup
  • For more than 30 years departments have recruited
    women and minority officers
  • Women are now 13 percent of police personnel
  • Minority groups are now 25 percent of police
    personnel
  • Police departments are more heterogeneous, using
    skills (such as language skills) to gain the
    confidence of the community

6
Who Are the Police?
  • Minority Police Officers
  • 1861
  • First African American police officer,
    Washington, D.C.
  • 1872
  • Chicago hired its first African American police
    officer
  • By 1890 an estimated 2000 African American police
    officers were employed in the U.S.

7
Who Are the Police?
  • Minority Police Officers
  • Historically, African American officers were
    assigned to patrol African American communities
  • Early on, racial prejudice was common within
    police departments, and as late as the 1950s,
    some white officers refused to ride with African
    American officers in patrol cars

8
Who Are the Police?
  • Women in Policing
  • 1910 Alice Stebbins, first woman to hold title
    of police officers (Los Angeles)
  • Women endured separate criteria for selection,
    were given menial tasks and were denied
    opportunity for advancement
  • Relief of bias with 1964 Civil Rights Act

9
Who Are the Police?
  • Women in Policing
  • Research indicates that female officers are
    highly successful police officers
  • Relationship strained by tensions and dilemmas
    associated with
  • Sexuality
  • Competition for desirable assignments and
    promotions

10
Who Are the Police?
  • Education Characteristics
  • Today about one-third of police agencies require
    some type of college requirement
  • More than three times the number than in 1990
  • Police departments are the benefactors of police
    officers with higher education

11
The Police Profession
  • The Police Culture
  • Policing has unique characteristics, which
    separates it from other professions
  • So-called blue curtain characterized by
  • Cynicism
  • Clannishness
  • Secrecy
  • Insulation from others in society

12
The Police Profession
  • The Police Culture
  • Joining police subculture means
  • Having to stick up for fellow officers against
    outsiders
  • Maintaining a tough, exterior personality
  • In response to their insulated, and dangerous
    lifestyle, officers develop a distrust or
    suspicion of others motives and behaviors

13
Core Beliefs of the Police Subculture
  • Police are the only real crime fighters
  • No one else understands the real nature of police
    work
  • Loyalty to colleagues counts above everything
    else
  • It is impossible to win the war on crime without
    bending the rules
  • Members of the public are basically unsupportive
    and unreasonably demanding
  • Detective work is better than patrol

14
The Police Profession
  • The Police Personality
  • Some describe the police personality as dogmatic,
    authoritarian, and suspicious
  • Cynicism is found at all levels
  • Negative values and attitudes are believed to
    cause officers to be secretive and isolated

15
Policing Style
16
Police Discretion
  • Use of personal decision making and choice in
    carrying out operations in the criminal justice
    system
  • Critical aspect of professional responsibility is
    the personal discretion each officer has in
    carrying out daily activities
  • Discretion can involve selective enforcement of
    the law

17
Factors that Influence Police Discretion
  • Legal factors
  • Discretion is inversely related to severity of
    offense
  • Environmental factors
  • Community expectations impact the amount of
    discretion expected
  • Departmental factors
  • Organizational policies, practices, customs, and
    supervision
  • Peer factors
  • Situational factors
  • Demeanor and behavior of person encountered
  • Extralegal factors
  • the age, gender, income, or race of the person
    encountered

18
Problems of Policing
  1. Job Stress
  2. Fatigue
  3. Violence
  4. Corruption

19
Problems of Policing-Corruption
  • Categories of Corruption
  • Meat eaters
  • Aggressive misuse of police power for personal
    gain
  • Grass eaters
  • Accepting some benefit during their everyday
    duties (ex accepting gratuity)

20
Four Varieties of Corruption
21
Causes of Corruption
  • No single explanation
  • Wide discretion by police coupled with low public
    visibility
  • Unenforceable laws governing moral standards
    promote corruption

22
Control of Corruption
23
Use of Force
  • National Survey
  • 9 out of 10 subjects who had police contact
    reported that officers acted properly
  • 2 had force used or threatened during contact
  • Black and Hispanics experienced police use of
    force at higher rates than whites

24
Deadly Force
  • Refers to the actions of a police officer who
    shoots and kills a suspect under justifiable
    circumstances
  • Factors Related to Police Shootings
  • Exposure to violence
  • National crime rates
  • Community threat levels
  • Administrative factors
  • Lack of proper training and preparation

25
Controlling Deadly Force
  • Fleeing-Felon rule
  • Tennessee v. Garner
  • Review State-controlled firearms policies
  • Department internal reviews

26
Use of Force
  • Graham v. Connor
  • Supreme Court case establishing the Objective
    Reasonableness standard for use of force
  • Issues of force to be judged from the standpoint
    of a reasonable officer at the time the force was
    used

27
Use of Force
28
Less Lethal Weapons
  • Wide Variety of Weapons
  • Close distance
  • Mid range distance
  • Other Technologies
  • New weapons being developed in the field
  • Nonlethal weapons may help reduce police use of
    force

29
Police and the Rule of Law
  • In the courses of police duties the Rule of Law
    applies to the
  • Investigation
  • Search, seize and gathering of evidence
  • Interviews and interrogations conducted
  • Suspects arrest
  • Case presentation to the prosecutors office with
    sufficient evidence to convict

30
Police and the Rule of Law
  • Interrogations and Confessions
  • Fifth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution
  • The Miranda Warning
  • Right to remain silent
  • Any statements may be used in court of law
  • Right to consult with an attorney and have
    present during interrogation
  • If a person cannot afford an attorney, one will
    be appointed
  • Improperly gathered confessions and statements
    are generally inadmissible

31
Police and the Rule of Law
  • Search and Seizure
  • Manner in which police seize evidence governed by
    search-and-seizure requirements of the Fourth
    Amendment of the U.S. Constitution
  • Search warrant
  • A court order authorizing and directing the
    police to search a designated place for evidence
    of a crime

32
Police and the Rule of Law
  • Warrantless Searches
  • Under certain circumstances a valid search may be
    conducted without a search warrant

33
Six Valid Warrantless Searches
34
Police and the Rule of Law
  • The Exclusionary Rule
  • Weeks v. United States, 1914
  • All evidence obtained by unreasonable searches
    and seizures, coerced confessions or other
    violations of Constitutional rights is
    inadmissible in criminal trials
  • Supreme Court decision created guidelines that
    control misconduct by police officers

35
Police and the Rule of Law
  • The Exclusionary Rule
  • Mapp v. Ohio, 1961
  • Exclusionary rule applicable to states
  • The good faith exception (to the exclusionary
    rule)
  • Evidence is admissible in court if the police
    officers acted in good faith by first obtaining
    court approval for their search even if the
    warrant they received was deficient or faulty
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