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Police Brutality
& Racism: Media Money Maker?
Copyright © 2009 ShootDontShoot |
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Once you've
worked in law enforcement long enough, you see how much
media twists the truth about police brutality that it's a
joke, yet a game you have to play |
Before
I started in law enforcement nearly 17 years ago, I was told
that the department I was applying for had a lot of "race"
problems. I never understood what that officer meant until
I started working there. The department I worked at was
about half black and half white. However, I could
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careless
if it was a 1/3 green, 1/8 purple, etc. I had good
friends of all colors and grew up in a multi-cultural area
so I pretty much blew off his information.
After I started
working there, it only took about a year to start
realizing that some of the hard workers that were "white"
were being labeled as racists by some of the black
officers. These officers were always making gun
arrests, dope arrests, etc. When a white officer
heard of what someone had said about them (racist), they
would simply counter with "They're only saying that
because they're lazy." And from what I could see on
the face, it appeared that the officers accusing them of
being racists didn't seem to work as hard as |
the
officers being labeled. But the point is, the officer that
told me the department had race problems was right.
So how would I deal this situation
As a
brand new police officer I wasn't sure how to deal with this.
I was excited to finally be in police work, and I wanted to
work. But I knew I wasn't a racist, yet knew that the
harder I worked, or more arrests I made, the more chance I would
be labeled as a racist. So I ignored it and simply "did my
job." I would patrol in mostly high drug areas, I would
run plates and stop cars that turned down side streets quickly
after seeing me, I would watch prostitutes and stop the cars
that picked them up, I would stop cars that made hand-to-hand
transactions with guys that stood on corners for hours on end.
I did everything I could to put myself in positions where crime
was factually more prevalent.
And then it happened
I was
finally labeled a racist. Not by anyone at my work (as of
yet), but by the media. One day while training an officer
I tried to stop a car in a high drug area that had an improper
plate on it (I had checked the plate, which was partially
hanging off of the car by one bolt, and it came back to a
different vehicle which is sometimes indicative of a stolen
car). When I tried to initiate a traffic stop, the driver
simply kept driving until reaching their residence. Now
keep something in mind; while trying to stop this vehicle, I
couldn't see the race of the occupants due to the tint on the
windows from the manufacturer. I could only tell that
there were two occupants. Anyway, after making the stop,
the driver began screaming at my partner and myself asking us
"Why the f**k" we stopped them. I had experienced
this type of attitude before and was very calm, telling the lady
(who was about 6'0", 300 lbs) that I stopped her because the
plate wasn't registered to the vehicle. I explained that I
needed to see her license and registration, and we would be on
our way. She refused and continued to scream at us,
causing several neighbors to come out including her own family.
She then began walking away and I even walked with her telling
her I would be arresting her if she didn't show me her license,
and finally said "just show me the registration," and she still
refused, still screaming. Finally I grabbed on to her, and
the fight was on.
The next day my partner and I (both white) were labeled as
"racists" and "police brutality" in the news
My
phone started ringing off the hook from friends telling me I
better turn on the news. For two days straight, morning,
lunch, evening and night time news was all about the incident I
just described. It was the 'BIG STORY," literally. I
can remember the news showing the graphics to big story with
each letter of the words coming out one by one, and big, to
finally form the two words (the point is, you can see how much
it affected me). The lady had went to the media and said
she was beat up and stopped simply because she was black.
I was in shock. I was accused of something I hadn't
remotely done. The media made a frenzy of it, even asking
the second day on the lady's behalf why "leaders of the
department" were not taking action
to remove my partner and I from the force. Of course they
never said our names, but everyone on the department knew who
they were talking about.
I was exonerated by our Internal Affairs as doing nothing wrong
After
the reports went through and IA interviewed myself, the
witnesses, suspect, etc., it was determined that my partner nor
I did anything wrong. And life went on, but that one
incident changed the way I looked at police work. I found
myself hesitant to stop vehicles as much, didn't patrol the same
areas as I did prior, and basically found myself scared a bit to
do my job. In fact, I started writing more tickets on the
freeways and simply got away from a lot of what drew me to the
job in the first place. That was going after the "real
criminals," at least in my eyes.
Conclusion
Let me
just say first that I realize there are real situations out
there where racism and police brutality are real. I'm just
saying, in my opinion, media blows a lot of things out of
proportion and twists and dramatizes incidents that have no
business making the news in the way that they are presenting it.
When media twists or exaggerates the truth, they only fuel the
fire of tension by causing more doubt, and I believe make it
worse for whites and blacks to come together when it comes to
police work. Now I can
only speak for me and some of the officers I work with, and what
I've seen them go through. But when the media, fellow
officers, etc. start breaking you down as an officer by calling
you a racist, it can change your attitude after awhile.
One incident of course won't do it, but repeated incidents can.
This goes for what the officer sees in the headlines as well
because one incident across the country still impacts the local
officer. After seeing so much of this, you start
questioning yourself saying things like "Is it worth it?", "Do I
really need all this heat?" I can remember thinking at
times "Screw it, if they don't want my help then I'm out of
here." But you know in the back of your mind that the good
people in those areas DO need your help.
What's your opinion?
Other
related articles from ShootDontShoot:
Becoming a Police Officer |
Police Oral Boards |
Police Interview: Tough Questions |
Police Pursuits |
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