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Chapter 9: Policing the Police

Use of Force

  • Legitimate: The minimum amount of force needed to control a situation.

  • Conducted Energy Devices: These are devices that produce a shock that temporarily stops muscle function and inflicts pain.

The Force Continuum

  • Force Continuum: This is a guide that officers can use to determine the level of reaction and force they need to use.

  • Level of Threat and Force Necessary

    • Complaint (Level I): Communication or verbal commands

    • Passive Resistance (Level II): Low-level physical tactics

    • Active Resistance (Level III): Use of come-along holds, chemical sprays, or pressure points.

    • Assaultive with the potential for bodily harm (Level IV): Defensive tactics such as using a baton

    • Assaultive with the potential for serious bodily harm or death (Level V): Deadly Force

  • Less-Than-Lethal Force: When an officer uses their baton or hands to defend.

  • Lethal Force: These require “absolute and immediate tactics” this means an officer has to use their firearm.

Objective Reasonableness: Graham v. Connor

  • Graham v. Connor: The court decided that the actions have to match what a reasonable officer would do during the crime without knowing what the future would hold. It also decided that any cases relating to the excessive use of force by a police officer would be analyzed under the fourth amendment.

  • Objective Reasonableness: Based on the totality of the circumstances the decisions made about the amount of force used had to be the same amount of force a reasonable officer in the same position would use.

Excessive Force: The Road to Brutality

  • Excessive Force: When officers use more than the required/legitimate force.

  • Brutality: When officers express a malicious intent to harm.

  • Us versus them attitude: An attitude that separates officers and the community and that can decrease productivity between them both.

Deadly Force

  • Deadly Force: Using force that may result in death or serious injury.

The Fleeing-Felon Rule

  • Fleeing Felon Rule: If a felon is seen fleeing the scene of their crime then an officer is allowed to shoot them. This rule was invalidated later in 1985.

  • Officers can use deadly force when…

    • An individual has committed a felony and is still using deadly force or threatening to.

    • Officer believes that the individual will cause serious injury to the officer arresting them.

    • When preventing a prisoner from escaping prison.

    • Sufficient warnings were given but the riot failed to stop.

High-Speed Pursuits as Deadly Force:

  • Pursuits: When an officer tries to stop a suspect but the suspect flees resulting in a chase.

  • County of Sacramento v. Lewis: The court decided that high-speed pursuits are legal and do not violate the due process clause of the fourth amendment as long as it does not end in death.

  • Scott v. Harris: The court ruled that an officer can hit the car or shoot at the fleeing individual during a high-speed pursuit if they put other innocent bystanders at risk.

Corruption

  • Police Corruption: This is the misuse of an officer’s authority.

  • Grass Eaters: Officers who accept gifts/favors but do not seek out such activities.

  • Meat Eaters: People who demand bribes in exchange for protection from a person whom they are seeking a favor,

Investigate Commissions: From Wickersham to Christopher

  • Commission: A group of individuals that investigate misconduct.

  • The 3 Commission Themes:

    • Improve recruitment and training

    • Improve relationships between the police and the community

    • Improve the police complaint system

  • The first commission to analyze police conduct was Wickersham Commission in the 1930s

Commissions

  • Third Degrees: A technique used in the 1900s that allowed officers to inflict pain on suspects to get a confession.

  • The Wickersham Commission (1931)

    • Precipitating Incident: Prohibition, increasing crime rate, need to reevaluate juvenile justice and adult justice process.

    • Underlying Problem: Increasing crime rates but more specifically organized crime and agents need to be reevaluated

    • Recommendations: Establish a complaints system and bring awareness to problems between the police and minority communities.

  • The Kerner Commission (1965)

    • Precipitating Incident: Riots of the 1960s and minority communities complaining about officers abusing their power.

    • Underlying Problem: Police misconduct, lack of accountability, and no oversight of police procedures.

    • Recommendations: Better recruitment and training standards, accountability to the community, and establishing mechanics for registering complaints.

Models of Civilian Oversight

  • Internal affairs bureaus (IABs): This is where citizens can register complaints.

  • Exonerated: When the complaint was not proven true.

  • Democratic Accountability: Accountability to the community, over a group of individuals with the power to use coercive force.

  • Hierarchical Accountability: Accountability to those structurally higher within the department.

  • Procedural Justice: People are more likely to accept the outcome as fair if they believe the trial and procedures taken to get there were fair

  • Ombudsman: This person reviews all complaints against public servants.

  • Substantiated Complaints: These are complaints against officers that turned out to be true.

  • Early Warning System (EWS): This allows the department to keep track of all complaints against officers, the outcome of the complaints, and repetitive behavior patterns that are potentially problematic.

  • Mediation: A program that encourages settlements outside the traditional enforcement process

PP

Chapter 9: Policing the Police

Use of Force

  • Legitimate: The minimum amount of force needed to control a situation.

  • Conducted Energy Devices: These are devices that produce a shock that temporarily stops muscle function and inflicts pain.

The Force Continuum

  • Force Continuum: This is a guide that officers can use to determine the level of reaction and force they need to use.

  • Level of Threat and Force Necessary

    • Complaint (Level I): Communication or verbal commands

    • Passive Resistance (Level II): Low-level physical tactics

    • Active Resistance (Level III): Use of come-along holds, chemical sprays, or pressure points.

    • Assaultive with the potential for bodily harm (Level IV): Defensive tactics such as using a baton

    • Assaultive with the potential for serious bodily harm or death (Level V): Deadly Force

  • Less-Than-Lethal Force: When an officer uses their baton or hands to defend.

  • Lethal Force: These require “absolute and immediate tactics” this means an officer has to use their firearm.

Objective Reasonableness: Graham v. Connor

  • Graham v. Connor: The court decided that the actions have to match what a reasonable officer would do during the crime without knowing what the future would hold. It also decided that any cases relating to the excessive use of force by a police officer would be analyzed under the fourth amendment.

  • Objective Reasonableness: Based on the totality of the circumstances the decisions made about the amount of force used had to be the same amount of force a reasonable officer in the same position would use.

Excessive Force: The Road to Brutality

  • Excessive Force: When officers use more than the required/legitimate force.

  • Brutality: When officers express a malicious intent to harm.

  • Us versus them attitude: An attitude that separates officers and the community and that can decrease productivity between them both.

Deadly Force

  • Deadly Force: Using force that may result in death or serious injury.

The Fleeing-Felon Rule

  • Fleeing Felon Rule: If a felon is seen fleeing the scene of their crime then an officer is allowed to shoot them. This rule was invalidated later in 1985.

  • Officers can use deadly force when…

    • An individual has committed a felony and is still using deadly force or threatening to.

    • Officer believes that the individual will cause serious injury to the officer arresting them.

    • When preventing a prisoner from escaping prison.

    • Sufficient warnings were given but the riot failed to stop.

High-Speed Pursuits as Deadly Force:

  • Pursuits: When an officer tries to stop a suspect but the suspect flees resulting in a chase.

  • County of Sacramento v. Lewis: The court decided that high-speed pursuits are legal and do not violate the due process clause of the fourth amendment as long as it does not end in death.

  • Scott v. Harris: The court ruled that an officer can hit the car or shoot at the fleeing individual during a high-speed pursuit if they put other innocent bystanders at risk.

Corruption

  • Police Corruption: This is the misuse of an officer’s authority.

  • Grass Eaters: Officers who accept gifts/favors but do not seek out such activities.

  • Meat Eaters: People who demand bribes in exchange for protection from a person whom they are seeking a favor,

Investigate Commissions: From Wickersham to Christopher

  • Commission: A group of individuals that investigate misconduct.

  • The 3 Commission Themes:

    • Improve recruitment and training

    • Improve relationships between the police and the community

    • Improve the police complaint system

  • The first commission to analyze police conduct was Wickersham Commission in the 1930s

Commissions

  • Third Degrees: A technique used in the 1900s that allowed officers to inflict pain on suspects to get a confession.

  • The Wickersham Commission (1931)

    • Precipitating Incident: Prohibition, increasing crime rate, need to reevaluate juvenile justice and adult justice process.

    • Underlying Problem: Increasing crime rates but more specifically organized crime and agents need to be reevaluated

    • Recommendations: Establish a complaints system and bring awareness to problems between the police and minority communities.

  • The Kerner Commission (1965)

    • Precipitating Incident: Riots of the 1960s and minority communities complaining about officers abusing their power.

    • Underlying Problem: Police misconduct, lack of accountability, and no oversight of police procedures.

    • Recommendations: Better recruitment and training standards, accountability to the community, and establishing mechanics for registering complaints.

Models of Civilian Oversight

  • Internal affairs bureaus (IABs): This is where citizens can register complaints.

  • Exonerated: When the complaint was not proven true.

  • Democratic Accountability: Accountability to the community, over a group of individuals with the power to use coercive force.

  • Hierarchical Accountability: Accountability to those structurally higher within the department.

  • Procedural Justice: People are more likely to accept the outcome as fair if they believe the trial and procedures taken to get there were fair

  • Ombudsman: This person reviews all complaints against public servants.

  • Substantiated Complaints: These are complaints against officers that turned out to be true.

  • Early Warning System (EWS): This allows the department to keep track of all complaints against officers, the outcome of the complaints, and repetitive behavior patterns that are potentially problematic.

  • Mediation: A program that encourages settlements outside the traditional enforcement process