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Principles of Law Enforcement

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Title: Principles of Law Enforcement


1
Principles of Law Enforcement
  • Chapter 11
  • Police and the Community

2
Student Objectives
  • To explain the meaning of police community
    relations and its importance to the safety and
    quality of life in a community
  • To explore public attitudes regarding police
  • To describe some minority populations and their
    specific problems and interactions with the police

3
Objectives Cont..
  • To look at problems of some special populations,
    including senior citizens, young people, the
    homeless, crime victims, disabled people, and
    show how the police assist them
  • To acquaint students with current community crime
    prevention programs that focus on crime reduction
    and improvement

4
Introduction
  • This chapter deals with relationships between
    the police and the citizens they are paid to
    protect. This chapter also emphasizes the need
    for proper relationships between the police and
    the community. It defines police human relations,
    police public relations, and police community
    relations. It also looks at the public opinion
    of the police and the problems and opportunities
    of multiculturalism.

5
Proper Police-Community Relationships
  • Police are definitely needed in the U.S.
  • Arrests
  • Handle Emergencies
  • Maintain Order
  • Traffic Control
  • Give us a sense of security

6
Police and Emergency workers cleaning up WTC
7
Police-Community Relationships Cont
  • The police are not part of the military and
    should not be viewed as mercenaries
  • If police were to see themselves or if the
    community sees them as an occupying army, urban
    unrest results
  • The police cannot do its job without the support
    of the public and the public cannot have peace
    and order without the police

8
Police Community Relationships Cont
  • Police Chiefs are one of the key figures in
    establishing good community relationships
  • They are obligated to to educate the public about
    the causes of crime and the inability of the
    police acting alone to control crime
  • By initiating positive interaction with the
    community the results are increased citizen
    support, higher morale in the department, less
    hostile external forces, and increased resources

9
Police Community Relationships Cont..
  • The most important persons in the police
    department are the officers in terms of improving
    police community relations
  • People receive their impression of a dept through
    the actions of the officers they encounter

10
Police Relations
  • 3 Types of Police Relations
  • Human Relations
  • Public Relations
  • Community Relations

11
Police Relations Cont..
  • Police Human Relations refers to everything we
    do, with, for and to each other as citizens and
    as human beings (Following the Golden Rule)
  • Police Public Relations is the police through a
    variety of activities they are intent on creating
    a favorable image of themselves
  • Police Community Relations can be negative or
    positive depending on the quality of police
    interactions

12
Picture from Life Magazine July 15, 1966
13
Public Opinion and the Police
  • No doubt the police have a difficult job
  • No one really knows what we want they police to
    do
  • Chap 5 called the crime fighters, order
    maintainers, and service providers
  • It is much easier for the police to perform their
    duties if they have the support of the public

14
Public Opinion Cont
  • The results of an opinion poll about the police
    were
  • 60 said they had great respect for the police
  • 32 said some
  • 7 said hardly any
  • 1 had no opinion

15
Public Opinion Cont..
  • Picture taken during the Los Angeles Watts Riots
  • Police are rendering 1st aid to a Mexican who had
    been stabbed

16
Public Opinion Cont..
  • Public Opinion has remained fairly constant over
    time with vast majority giving favorable ratings
  • Whites and older citizens usually give police
    better ratings
  • African-Americans and younger people tend to give
    less favorable ratings

17
Salary and Law Enforcement
  • In a survey concerning police pay the following
    results were obtained
  • 5 citizens report too much
  • 40 too little
  • 44 about right
  • 11 failed to respond
  • Overall blacks and whites have positive attitudes
    towards the police

18
Police Perception of the Public
  • 73 thought the public was against them and the
    public would give them a bad rating
  • 12 felt the public liked the police
  • Although police tend to exaggerate this point

19
Police Perception of the Public Cont..
  • One reason police feel that the public does not
    like them is because they spend a large portion
    of their time dealing with criminals and unsavory
    type people

20
Police and Minority Communities
  • Over the past 3 decades the most significant
    problem facing the police has been the tension
    and the outright hostility between the police and
    the minority group citizens
  • Tension has also existed between the police and
    Hispanic-Americans, Asian-Americans, and other
    groups including gays and women
  • One way to overcome this is to make sure the
    police departments adequately hire minorities

21
Police and Minority Communities
22
Multiculturalism
  • There has been much training in this area
  • Police Departments in many areas offer policy
    academy sensitivity training
  • One had a program called Host a Deputy where
    families invite a deputy into their home for the
    evening
  • IACP sponsors a 2 day training course on Cultural
    Diversity

23
Diversity
  • Police cannot eliminate diversity but must learn
    how to manage it and learn from it
  • There are 4 facts about Cultural Diversity
  • As the work force becomes more diverse
    hostilities increase during encounters among
    people of different races
  • No, the melting pot never melted. Many prefer the
    right to remain different

24
Diversity Cont
  • Most messages we send to one another are not
    communicated verbally but by posture, facial
    expressions, gestures, tone of voice, and other
    non-verbal messages. This is what shapes our
    attitudes and feelings towards each other
  • Among certain ethnic groups, inflammatory words
    are used for effect and not intent

25
The African-American Community
  • The 1990 Censes reports that almost 12.1 or 30
    million African-Americans live in the U.S.
  • They historically faced discrimination in U.S.
    society until 1954 when the supreme ct ruled on
    Brown vs Board of Education which officially
    declared segregation unconstitutional

26
African-American Community Cont..
  • In 1964 President L. Johnson signed into law the
    1964 Civil Rights Act which strengthened the
    rights of all citizens regardless of age, race,
    religion, national origin
  • The 50s and 60s saw demonstrations, marches, and
    protests by minorities to win rights

27
A week before his death Dr. King led a march in
Memphis
28
Confronting Protests and Riots
  • Police contacts with minorities were not the
    major reasons for the riots in the 1960s
  • Police actions were usually just the
    precipitators of the riots
  • The riots in Watts, Harlem, Newark, and Detroit
    were all precipitated by arrests of
    African-Americans by white officers

29
Watts 1 year after the riots
30
Solutions
  • Officers must attempt to understand the attitudes
    of all community members including those of
    minority residents
  • If police really look they will find that the
    real minority is not defined by class or race
  • The real minority is comprised of the few
    criminals who victimize society with little fear
    of being caught

31
The Hispanic-American Community
  • There are 22 million Hispanic-Americans living in
    the U.S.
  • They have suffered discrimination and are
    handicapped because of language barriers
  • Their relationships with police have often been
    as tense as with African-Americans
  • Affirmative action has integrated
    Hispanic-Americans into police departments and
    has allowed for promotions as well
  • Many departments are sending officers to lengthy
    courses on Spanish and culture

32
The Asian-American Community
  • There are 7 million Asian-Americans or 3 of the
    population in the U.S.
  • One of the fastest growing ethnic groups
  • The Asian-American population is very diverse
    with people from China, Japan, Vietnam, Laos and
    others
  • Usually this segment has the lowest crime rates
    although it has increased in the past decade

33
Women
  • Women have often been critical of how police have
    handled domestic violence cases
  • They have also complained because of officers
    insensitivity in rape and other sexual assault
    cases
  • Police have become much more sensitive during the
    past 2 decades and large departments have
    established sex crime units
  • Discrimination against women in terms of hiring
    and promotion has been officially eliminated

34
The Gay Community
  • There have been numerous verbal and physical
    attacks on the members of the gay community (Gay
    Bashing)
  • Police departments have created bias units to
    investigate crimes committed due to racial,
    religious, ethnic, or sexual orientation
  • IACP rescinded its policy of opposing the
    employment of gay and lesbian officers
  • San Francisco PD recruits homosexuals and this
    has reduced fears of reporting crimes by members
    of the gay community

35
Police and Special Populations
  • Senior Citizens
  • Have the lowest criminal victimization rate
  • They experience a tremendous fear of crime
  • The population is aging rapidly and by 2030 there
    will be 66 million older people in our society
  • The increasing number of older person coupled
    with the fear of victimization will be
    challenging for future law enforcement

36
Senior Citizens Cont..
  • Senior citizens tend to suffer abuse at the hands
    of relatives and loved ones
  • There are approximately 1.5 million cases of
    report elderly abuse that occurs each year
  • Many programs have been established to address
    the concerns of the elderly (AARP) (TRIAD)
    (Wanderers Program) to address Alzheimers Disease

37
Senior Citizens Cont..
  • Alzheimers was discovered in 1906 by Dr. Alois
    Alzheimer
  • It is estimated that approximately 4 million
    people have it in the US
  • A patient can live for up to 20 years with the
    onset of the disease
  • Police have to be very delicate when approaching
    someone with Alzheimers

38
Programs for Young People
  • Young people are targets for community police
    programs because they are impressionable
  • Over a 10 year period the number of juveniles
    arrested for violent crimes increased by 68
  • The number of arrests for murder increased by
    168 and only 13 for adults
  • In a nationwide poll of Chiefs of Police, 92
    stated the government must invest in programs
    that children and youth if it is serious about
    reducing crime

39
Programs for Young People Cont..
  • The drug dealers and gang members compete with
    the parents and law abiding citizens for our
    childrens loyalty daily
  • There are numerous police programs
  • D.A.R.E. Drug Abuse Resistance Education where
    officers teach children in the classroom about
    the dangers of drugs and serve as positive role
    models

40
Other Programs for Young People
  • Officer Friendly- Designed to help children see
    and talk to police officers
  • Police Explorer Programs- Officers doing projects
    with the young and showing them what police work
    and emergency preparedness is all about
  • Police Trading Cards- Like baseball trading
    cards
  • School Resource Officers- Designed to combat the
    upsurge of school violence
  • Anti Abduction Programs- Includes I.D. Kits
  • Police Athletic Programs- Includes baseball,
    basketball, boxing, football leagues
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