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Police brutality in the United States

Police brutality is the repression by personnel affiliated with law enforcement when dealing with suspects and civilians. The term is also applied to abuses by "corrections" personnel in municipal, state, and federal prison camps, including military prisons.

March 7, 1965: Alabama police attack the Selma to Montgomery marchers on "Bloody Sunday"

The term police brutality is usually applied in the context of causing physical harm to a person. It may also involve psychological harm through the use of intimidation tactics that often violate human rights. From the 18th-20th centuries, those who engaged in police brutality have acted with the implicit approval of the local legal system, such as during the Civil Rights Movement era. In the contemporary era, individuals who engage in police brutality may do so with the tacit approval of their superiors or they may be rogue officers. In either case, they may perpetrate their actions under color of law and, more often than not, the state apparatus engages in a subsequent cover-up of their repression.[citation needed]

In the 2000s, the federal government attempted tracking the number of people killed in interactions with US police, but the program was defunded.[1] In 2006, a law was passed to require reporting of homicides at the hands of the police, but many police departments do not obey it.[2] Some journalists and activists have provided estimates, limited to the data available to them. In 2019, 1,004 people were shot and killed by police according to The Washington Post, whereas the Mapping Police Violence project counted 1,098 killed.[3][4][5] Statista claimed that in 2020, 1,021 people were killed by police, while the project Mapping Police Violence counted 1,126.[6][5] From 1980 to 2018, more than 30,000 people have died by police violence in the United States, according to a 2021 article published in The Lancet.[7] For 2022, Mapping Police Violence counted at least 1,176 individuals killed, making it the deadliest year on record.[8] The US police has killed more people compared to any other industrialized democracy, with a disproportionate number of people shot being people of color.[9][10][11] Since 2015, around 2,500 of those killed by police were fleeing.[12]

Since the 20th century, there have been many public, private, and community efforts to combat police corruption and brutality. These efforts have identified various core issues that contribute to police brutality, including the insular culture of police departments (including the blue wall of silence), the aggressive defense of police officers and resistance to change in police unions,[13] the broad legal protections granted to police officers (such as qualified immunity), the historic racism of police departments, the militarization of the police, the adoption of tactics that escalate tension (such as zero tolerance policing and stop-and-frisk), the inadequacies of police training and/or police academies, and the psychology of possessing police power.[14][15][16][17] The US legal doctrine of qualified immunity has been widely criticized as "[having] become a nearly failsafe tool to let police brutality go unpunished and deny victims their constitutional rights," as summarized in a 2020 Reuters report.[18]

Regarding solutions, activists and advocates have taken different approaches. Those who advocate for police reform offer specific suggestions to combat police brutality, such as body cameras, civilian review boards, improved police training, demilitarization of police forces,[19] and legislation aimed at reducing brutality (such as the Justice in Policing Act of 2020). Those who advocate to defund the police call for the full or partial diversion of funds allocated to police departments, which would be redirected toward community and social services.[20] Those who advocate to dismantle the police call for police departments to be dismantled and rebuilt from the ground up. Those who advocate to abolish police departments call for police departments to be disbanded entirely and to be replaced by other community and social services.[21][22]

History Edit

Slave patrols roots Edit

In the Southern United States, some of the earliest roots of policing can be found in slave patrols. Beginning in the 18th century, white volunteers developed slave patrols (also known as "paddyrollers"), which were squadrons that acted as vigilantes.[23] In 1704, the first slave patrol was established in South Carolina.[24] Eventually, all states with legal slavery had slave patrols, and they functioned as the first publicly funded police force in the South.[25] These patrols focused on enforcing discipline and policing of African-American slaves. They captured and returned fugitive slaves, quashed slave rebellions, terrorized slaves in order to prevent rebellions (including beatings and[23][26] searches of slave lodges), broke up slave meetings, and kept slaves off roadways.[25] The patrols also administered discipline of indentured servants.[25] The patrols had broad influence and powers; they could forcefully enter any person's house, if they suspected the person of sheltering fugitive slaves.[23] During the American Civil War, slave patrols remained in place. After the Civil War, in the Reconstruction period, the former slave patrol groups joined with other white militias and groups, such as the Ku Klux Klan. Meanwhile, early police forces of the South began to take on the role of policing and regulating the movement of African-Americans who had gained their freedom. New laws were put in place to restrict their rights, which were known as Black Codes.[23] According to some historians, the transition from slave patrols to police forces in the South was a seamless one.[25]

Texas Rangers Edit

In 1823, the Texas Rangers was established by Stephen F. Austin. The Rangers used violence, harassment, and intimidation to protect the interests of white colonists. They worked in an area that was governed by Mexico, which later became the Republic of Texas, followed by the state of Texas. The Rangers were known to be particularly active across the Mexico-United States border. Their work included capturing indigenous people who were accused of attacking white settlers, investigating crimes such as cattle raiding, and raiding Mexican vaquero cattle ranches. They intimidated Mexican and Mexican-American people into leaving their land and homes, in support of white colonial expansion. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the Texas Rangers supported and participated in extrajudicial killings and lynch mobs, such as La Matanza (1910–1920) and Porvenir massacre (1918).[2][27][28][29][30]

Early police departments Edit

In 1838, the United States developed its first formal police department, located in Boston. This was followed by New York City (1845), San Francisco (1849), Chicago (1851), New Orleans (1853), Cincinnati (1853), Philadelphia (1855), Newark, New Jersey (1857), Baltimore (1857). By the 1880s, all major US cities had police departments.[31] As written by Dr. Garry Potter, "Early American police departments shared two primary characteristics: they were notoriously corrupt and flagrantly brutal. This should come as no surprise in that police were under the control of local politicians."[32] The local political ward leader, who was often a tavern owner or gang leader, would appoint the chief of police of a neighborhood. The chief would be expected to follow the orders and expectations of the ward leader, which often included intimidating voters, harassing political opponents, and ensuring that the ward's business interests remained intact.[33] The police officers typically had little qualifications or training as law enforcement officers, and they often took bribes and kickbacks. If conflicts arose, it was common for police officers to use force and brutality.[32]

In the 19th century, police brutality was often directed at European immigrant communities,[33] particularly those from Ireland, Italy, Germany, and Eastern Europe.[34] The different cultures of these communities were often framed as "dangerous", which called for the enforcement of law and order.[33] For example, Irish immigrants were considered a "dangerous" class, and they experienced discrimination by nativists.[35] Meanwhile, organized crime and political parties were often intertwined, and police typically cast a blind eye toward gambling and prostitution, if managed by politically influential figures.[36]

Strike breaking Edit

 
Person beaten by police during the 1912–1913 Little Falls textile strike in Little Falls, New York

After the Civil War, industrialization and urbanization grew rapidly in the United States. This was accompanied by a rising organized labor movement, in which workers formed unions and joined in organized actions, such as strikes. Between 1880 and 1900, New York City had 5,090 strikes and Chicago had 1,737 strikes. The economic elites of the era typically characterized these strikes as "riots", and they encouraged the police to break the strikes. Consequently, the police broke up strikes through two primary methods: extreme violence and making "public order" arrests at a mass scale.[37] Some state governments authorized privatized police forces to repress strikes, such as the Coal and Iron Police in Pennsylvania. Private detective agencies, such as Pinkerton, often supervised these efforts. Violent confrontations came out of this system, such as the Latimer Massacre (1897), in which 19 unarmed miners were killed, and the Coal Strike of 1902, which involved a pitched battle for five months. Ultimately, state governments decided that it would be easier to police labor with public forces, leading to the establishment of state police forces (such as the Pennsylvania State Police, formed in 1905).[2]

Jim Crow South Edit

By the late 19th century, local and state governments began to pass Jim Crow laws. These laws enforced strict racial segregation in schools, parks, neighborhoods, restaurants, and other public places.[38] This era saw a rise in lynchings and mob murders of African-Americans, with the police not arresting the perpetrators.[23] It was estimated that "at least one-half of the lynchings are carried out with police officers participating, and that in nine-tenths of the others the officers either condone or wink at the mob action," as reported by Arthur F. Rapper in 1933.[39] Meanwhile, African-Americans suffered police brutality, such as the 1946 beating of Isaac Woodward in Batesburg, South Carolina.[40] Due to the brutality of Jim Crow laws, many African-Americans fled to Northern and Western cities in the Great Migration, where they experienced police brutality, as well.[33]

Professionalization of police Edit

In the United States, the passage of the Volstead Act (popularly known as the National Prohibition Act) in 1919 had a long-term negative impact on policing practices. During Prohibition (1919–33), the problem of police corruption was only worsened, as crime was growing dramatically in response to the demand for illegal alcohol. Many law enforcement agencies stepped up the use of unlawful practices. Police officers were commonly bribed so that bootlegging and speakeasies could continue, in addition to the flourishing organized crime underworlds of cities such as Chicago, New York City, and Philadelphia.[41] Some police officers became employed by organized crime syndicates, and they helped perform duties, such as harassment and intimidation of rivals.[36]

By the time of the Hoover administration (1929–1933), the issue had risen to national concern and a National Committee on Law Observation and Enforcement (popularly known as the Wickersham Commission) was formed to look into the situation.[42] The resulting "Report on Lawlessness in Law Enforcement" (1931) concluded that "[t]he third degree—that is, the use of physical brutality, or other forms of cruelty, to obtain involuntary confessions or admissions—is widespread."[43] In the years following the report, landmark legal judgments such as Brown v. Mississippi helped cement a legal obligation to respect the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.[44]

The result was the beginning of a new era in law enforcement in the United States, which aimed to professionalize and reform the industry. It was decided that police should function separately from political wards or leaders, and police precincts were altered to no longer overlap with political wards.[34] Police departments became more bureaucratic with a clear chain of command. New practices were put into place to recruit, train, and reward police officers. By the 1950s, police officers began to win collective bargaining rights and form unions, after a long period of not being allowed to form unions (particularly after the Boston police strike in 1919).[45]

However, these changes were not welcomed by all community members. Police departments adopted tactics that often antagonized people, such as aggressive stop and frisk.[46] Police departments also became increasingly insular and "isolated from public life" as a result of these changes, according to crime historian Samuel Walker. For these reasons, among other reasons, they were particularly unequipped to handle the cultural and social upheaval of the 1960s.[34]

Civil Rights Movement era Edit

The Civil Rights Movement was the target of numerous incidents of police brutality in its struggle for justice and racial equality, notably during the Birmingham campaign of 1963–64 and during the Selma to Montgomery marches of 1965. Media coverage of the brutality sparked national outrage, and public sympathy for the movement grew rapidly as a result. Martin Luther King Jr. criticized police brutality in his speeches. Furthermore, the period was marked by riots in response to police violence against African-Americans and Latinos, including the Harlem riot of 1964, 1964 Philadelphia race riot, Watts riots (1965), Division Street riots (1966), and 1967 Detroit riot.[47] In 1966, the Black Panther Party was formed by Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale, in order to challenge police brutality against African-Americans from disproportionately white police departments.[48][49] The conflict between the Black Panther Party and various police departments often resulted in violence with the deaths of 34 members of the Black Panther Party[50] and 15 police officers.[51]

In 1968, the American Indian Movement was organized in Minneapolis, Minnesota, in response to widespread police brutality used against urban Native Americans. Founded by Dennis Banks, Clyde Bellecourt, Vernon Bellecourt, and Russell Means, the movement grew while 75 percent of Native Americans had moved to urban areas, becoming Urban Indians as a result of federal Indian Termination Act and other policies. A.I.M. was later accepted by traditional Elders living at Native American reservations.

The Civil Rights Movement and A.I.M. were also targeted by the FBI in a program called COINTELPRO (1956–79, and beyond). Under this program, the FBI would use undercover agents and police to create violence and chaos within political groups, such as the American Indian Movement, Socialist Worker's Party, the Black Panther Party, and the Organization of Afro-American Unity.[52] The police and undercover agents would harm organizers and assassinate leaders. Black Panther leaders Mark Clark and Fred Hampton, were killed in a 1969 FBI raid at Hampton's apartment in Chicago.[53]

External video
  3/7/91: Video of Rodney King Beaten by Police Released[54]

In the United States, race and accusations of police brutality continue to be closely linked, and the phenomenon has sparked a string of race riots over the years. Especially notable among these incidents was the uprising caused by the arrest and beating of Rodney King on March 3, 1991, by officers of the Los Angeles Police Department. The atmosphere was particularly volatile because the brutality had been videotaped by a civilian and widely broadcast afterward. When the four law enforcement officers charged with assault and other violations were acquitted, the 1992 Los Angeles Riots broke out.

Anti-war demonstrations Edit

During the Vietnam War, anti-war demonstrations were sometimes quelled through the use of billy clubs and tear gas. One notorious assault took place during the August 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago. Some rogue police officers took off their badges, in order to escape identification, and brutally assaulted protesters. Journalists were assaulted inside the convention hall.[55] The actions of the police were later described as a "police riot" in the Walker Report to the U.S. National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence.[56] On May 15, 1969, police opened fire on protesters in People's Park in Berkeley, California, which resulted in serious injuries for some protesters.[57] The 1970 Kent State shootings of 13 university students by the National Guard have been described as the culmination of such violent confrontations.[58]

War on drugs Edit

In June 1971, President Richard M. Nixon declared a War on Drugs. This new "war" brought in stricter policing and criminal laws, including no-knock warrants and mandatory sentencing. As was the case with Prohibition, the War on Drugs was marked by increased police misconduct. War on drugs policing—notably stop and frisk and Special Weapons and Tactics (SWAT) teams—contributed to police brutality, especially targeting minority communities.[59] Years later, Nixon aide John Ehrlichman, explained: "The Nixon campaign in 1968, and the Nixon White House after that, had two enemies: the antiwar left and black people... We knew we couldn't make it illegal to be either... but by getting the public to associate the hippies with marijuana and blacks with heroin, and then criminalizing both heavily, we could disrupt those communities. We could arrest their leaders, raid their homes, break up their meetings, and vilify them night after night on the evening news."[60] Throughout a series of court cases, the 4th amendment has been interpreted in differing ways. Terry v. Ohio ruled frisks constitutional if the police officer had "reasonable suspicion". As time progressed, frisks have become more similar to arrests. Stop and frisk used to not involve any handcuffs, weapons, or arrest, now they do. War on drugs has increased the amount of power police officers have.[61][62]

The war on drugs has been seen as responsible for police misconduct towards African-Americans and Latinos. While white people and African-Americans both use and sell drugs at roughly similar rates, African-Americans are over six times as likely to be incarcerated for drug-related charges, according to 2015 data.[63][53] Specifically, the use of stop and frisk tactics by police have targeted African-Americans and Latinos. In looking at data from New York in the early 2000s up to 2014, people who had committed no offense made up 82% to 90% of those who were stopped and frisked. Of those people stopped, only 9% to 12% were white. People who were stopped felt that they had experienced psychological violence, and the police sometimes used insults against them. Stop and frisk tactics caused people to experience anxiety about leaving their homes, due to fears of police harassment and abuse.[59]

With the militarization of the police, SWAT teams have been used more frequently in drug possession situations.[15] SWAT teams can be armed with weapons like diversionary grenades. In cases where SWAT teams were used, only 35% of the time were drugs found in peoples' homes. African-Americans and Latinos are disproportionately the targets of these raids,[59] and according to the ACLU, "Sending a heavily armed team of officers to perform 'normal' police work can dangerously escalate situations that need never have involved violence."[64]

Post 9/11 Edit

 
Protest against police brutality in New York City, December 2014

After the attacks of September 11, 2001, human rights observers raised concerns about increased police brutality in the U.S. An extensive report prepared for the United Nations Human Rights Committee, published in 2006, stated that in the U.S. the War on Terror "created a generalized climate of impunity for law enforcement officers, and contributed to the erosion of what few accountability mechanisms exist for civilian control over law enforcement agencies. As a result, police brutality and abuse persist unabated and undeterred across the country."[65] The culture of impunity for police is reinforced by law enforcement operations with the FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Force, which undertakes "disruption" actions against suspects instead of investigations and criminal charges. During the "war on terror", there have been noted increases in enforcement power for officers. By 2007, discussion on the appropriateness of using racial profiling and force against people of color has decreased since 9/11.[65] Racial profiling specifically increased for those of South Asian, Arab, Middle Eastern, and Muslim origins.[65] An example of increased use of police use of force has been in the use of tasers. From 2001 to 2007, at least 150 deaths were attributed to tasers and many injuries occurred. People of color have been the main people who have been targeted the most with regards to increased taser use.[65]

A decision by the House and the Senate in Hawaii was expected in May 2014 after police agreed in March 2014 not to oppose the revision of a law that was implemented in the 1970s, allowing undercover police officers to engage in sexual relations with sex workers during the course of investigations. (A similar program in the United Kingdom resulted in physical and emotional abuse of victims, and children born without fathers when the undercover operation ended; see UK undercover policing relationships scandal). Following initial protest from supporters of the legislation, all objections were retracted on March 25, 2014. A Honolulu police spokeswoman informed Time magazine that, at the time of the court's decision, no reports had been made in regard to the abuse of the exemption by police, while a Hawaiian senator stated to journalists: "I suppose that in retrospect the police probably feel somewhat embarrassed about this whole situation." However, the Pacifica Alliance to Stop Slavery and other advocates affirmed their knowledge of police brutality in this area and explained that the fear of retribution is the main deterrent for sex workers who seek to report offending officers. At a Hawaiian Senate Judiciary Committee hearing, also in March 2014, an attorney testified that his client was raped three times by Hawaiian police before prostitution was cited as the reason for her subsequent arrest.[66]

Recent incidents Edit

The prevalence of police brutality in the United States is not comprehensively documented, and the statistics on police brutality are much less available. The few statistics that exist include a 2006 Department of Justice report, which showed that out of 26,556 citizen complaints made in 2002 about excessive use of police force among large U.S. agencies (representing 5% of agencies and 59% of officers), about 2,000 were found to have merit.[67]

Other studies have shown that most police brutality goes unreported. In 1982, the federal government funded a "Police Services Study", in which over 12,000 randomly selected civilians were interviewed in three metropolitan areas. The study found that 13.6 percent of those surveyed claimed to have had cause to complain about police service (including verbal abuse, discourtesy and physical abuse) in the previous year. Yet only 30 percent of those filed formal complaints.[68] A 1998 Human Rights Watch report stated that in all 14 precincts it examined, the process of filing a complaint was "unnecessarily difficult and often intimidating."[69]

Statistics on the use of physical force by law enforcement are available. For example, an extensive U.S. Department of Justice report on police use of force released in 2001 indicated that in 1999, "approximately 422,000 people 16 years old and older were estimated to have had contact with police in which force or the threat of force was used."[70] Research shows that measures of the presence of black and Hispanic people and majority/minority income inequality are related positively to average annual civil rights criminal complaints.[71]

Police brutality can be associated with racial profiling. Differences in race, religion, politics, or socioeconomic status often exist between police and the citizenry. Some police officers may view the population (or a particular subset thereof) as generally deserving of punishment. Portions of the population may perceive the police to be oppressors. In addition, there is a perception that victims of police brutality often belong to relatively powerless groups, such as minorities, the disabled, and the poor.[72] According to a 2015 and 2016 project by The Guardian, more white people are killed by police in raw numbers than black people are, but after adjusting this finding based on the fact that the black population is smaller than the white population, twice as many black people are killed by police per capita than white people are.[73][74][specify] A 2019 study showed that people of color face a higher likelihood of being killed by police than white men and women do, that risk peaks in young adulthood, and men of color face a nontrivial lifetime risk of being killed by police.[75][76]

Race was suspected to play a role in the shooting of Michael Brown in 2014. Brown was an unarmed 18-year-old African American who was shot by Darren Wilson, a white police officer in Ferguson, Missouri. The predominately black city erupted after the shooting. Riots following the shooting generated much debate about the treatment of African-Americans by law enforcement.

A 2006 Human Rights Watch report revealed that five state prison systems permit the use of aggressive, unmuzzled dogs on prisoners as part of cell removal procedures.[77]

On 23 August 2020, a Black man in Kenosha, identified as Jacob Blake, was shot by police multiple times in the back. He was shot in front of his three young sons and suffered critical injuries. Later, he was reported by Civil Rights attorney Ben Crump to be in stable condition but remained in an intensive care unit. The shooting came as demonstrators continued to decry police violence in the American cities.[78] It was later determined that Kenosha police officers were responding to a domestic violence call concerning Blake made by his girlfriend, and at the time of the shooting, "Blake was armed with a knife and had resisted arrest despite multiple Taser shots" and commands by police to drop the weapon.[79][80] In a report published on January 5, 2021, Kenosha County District Attorney Michael Graveley declined to issue criminal charges against the three officers involved in the shooting, concluding that their "use of force… was justified, in keeping with Wisconsin Law, in keeping with the Kenosha Police Department's use of force training and policy, and widely accepted law enforcement use of force standards."[80]

Kisela v. Hughes Edit

In May 2010, police responded to a call of a woman, Amy Hughes, erratically hacking a tree with a large kitchen knife. Hughes began advancing on a civilian, later identified to be Hughes' roommate. Officer Kisela decided to fire four shots toward Hughes and she was later treated for non-life-threatening injuries. It was later discovered that Hughes had a history of mental illness. Hughes filed a lawsuit against Officer Kisela, claiming excessive use of force and a violation of her Fourth Amendment right. The Supreme Court ruled in favor of the officer, stating that the officer had probable cause to believe that the suspect posed a serious threat to the public and to other officers. The Court ruled that Officer Kisela is entitled to immunity.[81]

Water protectors Edit

Water protectors have faced police brutality at the hands of militarized law enforcement. Notable cases include the Dakota Access Pipeline protests in 2016 when the Morton County sheriff's department (supplemented by officers from six states) attacked hundreds of water protectors with concussion grenades, tear gas, rubber bullets, and water cannons in sub-freezing temperatures.[82] They subjected water protectors to strip searches after arrest.[83] Energy Transfer Partners (the pipeline company) also employed a private security firm who used attack dogs and pepper spray against water protectors who were attempting to defend sacred burial sites from being bulldozed. Several water protectors were treated for dog bites. Police observed but did not intervene.[84][85]

At the Stop Line 3 pipeline protests in Minnesota, militarized police have subjected water protectors to pepper spray and rubber bullets during a series of arrests, and protesters who've been jailed have reported mistreatment from officers such as lack of proper food, solitary confinement, and denial of medications. Over 600 people were arrested between January and August 2021.[86] Enbridge (the pipeline company) enables increased police militarization by funding an escrow account that law enforcement uses to buy equipment and to train and pay officers. Enbridge had paid $2 million to law enforcement agencies through escrow by August 2021.[87]

George Floyd protests Edit

 
A memorial for George Floyd, who was murdered by a police officer
 
George Floyd protests in Raleigh, North Carolina on May 30, 2020
 
Protesters in Minneapolis on 26 May 2020, the day after the murder of George Floyd

In May 2020, the issue of police brutality saw a surge in public response following the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis. Related protests occurred nationwide and internationally beginning in Minneapolis, Minnesota on May 26, 2020. In 2016, Tony Timpa was killed in the same way in Dallas. These protests were attended by thousands of people across the United States and had a worldwide impact on the outlook of police brutality.[88]

#SayHerName movement Edit

The campaign #SayHerName was created in December 2014 by Kimberlé Crenshaw. This movement was brought about to raise awareness for the victims of police brutality that were black women.[89][90] The #SayHerName movement is a social movement inside the Black Lives Matter movement. As Crenshaw told NPR, "Say Her Name is trying to raise awareness by insisting that we say their names because if we can say their names we can know more about their stories."[90]

The name of Breonna Taylor was part of the Say Her Name movement. Taylor was killed by police in Louisville, Kentucky in March 2020. Police officers forced entry into her apartment, and Taylor was shot six times after her boyfriend Kenneth Walker shot officer Jonathan Mattingly. Breonna Taylor's death lead to worldwide protests and outrage.[91][90]

Investigation Edit

In the United States, investigation of cases of police brutality has often been left to internal police commissions and/or district attorneys (DAs). Internal police commissions have often been criticized for a lack of accountability and for bias favoring officers, as they frequently declare upon review that the officer(s) acted within the department's rules, or according to their training. For instance, an April 2007 study of the Chicago Police Department found that out of more than 10,000 police abuse complaints filed between 2002 and 2003, only 19 (0.19%) resulted in meaningful disciplinary action. The study charges that the police department's oversight body allows officers with "criminal tendencies to operate with impunity," and argues that the Chicago Police Department should not be allowed to police itself.[92]

Investigations can be conducted by civilian complaint review board (CCRB), which act as an independent agency that can investigate, conduct hearings, and make recommendations in response to complaints of police brutality.[93] However, only 19% of large municipal police forces have a CCRB, such as the Civilian Complaint Review Board (New York City), Civilian Office of Police Accountability (Chicago), Citizen Police Review Board (Pittsburgh), and Police Review Commission (Berkeley).[94] Law enforcement jurisdictions that have a CCRB have an excessive force complaint rate against their officers of 11.9% verses 6.6% complaint rate for those without a CCRB. Of those forces without a CCRB, only 8% of the complaints were sustained.[95] Thus, for the year 2002, the rate at which police brutality complaints were sustained was 0.53% for the larger police municipalities nationwide.

The ability of district attorneys to investigate police brutality has also been called into question, as DAs depend on help from police departments to bring cases to trial. It was only in the 1990s that serious efforts began to transcend the difficulties of dealing with systemic patterns of police misconduct.

 
Logo on T-shirts sold at Daytona Beach Police Department headquarters in Florida, cited in a lawsuit against the DBPD alleging police brutality, is said to show the DBPD condones violence.[96][97]

Beyond police departments and DAs, mechanisms of government oversight have gradually evolved. The Rodney King case triggered the creation of the Independent Commission on the Los Angeles Police Department, informally known as the Christopher Commission, in 1991. The commission, mandated to investigate the practices of the LAPD, uncovered disturbing patterns of misconduct and abuse, but the reforms it recommended were put on hold. Meanwhile, media reports revealed a frustration in dealing with systemic abuse in other jurisdictions as well, such as New York and Pittsburgh. Selwyn Raab of The New York Times wrote about how the "Blue Code of Silence among police officers helped to conceal even the most outrageous examples of misconduct."[98]

Within this climate, the police misconduct provision of the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994 was created, which authorized the Attorney General to "file lawsuits seeking court orders to reform police departments engaging in a pattern or practice of violating citizens' federal rights."[99] As of January 31, 2003, the Department of Justice had used this provision to negotiate reforms in twelve jurisdictions across the U.S. (Pittsburgh Bureau of Police, Steubenville Police Department, New Jersey State Police, Los Angeles Police Department, District of Columbia Metropolitan Police Department, Highland Park, Illinois Police Department, Cincinnati Police Department, Columbus Police Department, Buffalo Police Department, Mount Prospect, Illinois Police Department, Seattle Police Department, and the Montgomery County, Maryland Police Department).[100]

Data obtained by the Associated Press in 2016 showed a racial disparity in officers' use of stun guns.[101]

On 15 May 2020, Amnesty International suggested that American authorities should avoid repressive measures that unduly restrict human rights in the name of "protecting" people from COVID-19. The videos verified by researchers and Amnesty's Crisis Evidence Lab claimed the use of detention as a first resort; excessive and unnecessary use of force in the enforcement of COVID-19 lockdowns; and the imposition of mandatory quarantines in inhumane conditions.[102]

On 22 June 2020, the University of Chicago reported that the police departments in the 20 largest American cities were failing to meet even the most basic international human rights standards governing the use of lethal force. The study revealed that America's biggest police forces lack legality, as they are not answerable to human rights compliant laws authorizing the use of lethal force.[103]

Causes Edit

Numerous doctrines, such as federalism, separation of powers, causation, deference, discretion, and burden of proof have been cited as partial explanations for the judiciaries' fragmented pursuit of police misconduct. However, there is also evidence that courts cannot or choose not to see systemic patterns in police brutality.[104] Other factors that have been cited as encouraging police brutality include institutionalized systems of police training, management, and culture; a criminal-justice system that discourages prosecutors from pursuing police misconduct vigorously; a political system that responds more readily to police than to the residents of inner-city and minority communities; and a political culture that fears crime and values tough policing more than it values due process for all its citizens.[105] Around 1998, it was believed that without substantial social change, the control of police deviance was improbable at best.[106]

Legal protections Edit

Police officers often still hold significant advantages in legal proceedings and in courts. Records of officer performance and misconduct are sometimes hidden from public view through laws, such as 50-a in New York (repealed in 2020).[107][108] The law of qualified immunity often shields police officers from prosecution, since it only permits lawsuits against government officials when they have violated a "clearly established" constitutional or statutory right.[109] When cases of police are investigated for crimes, the collection of evidence is typically conducted by police officers, including witness statements, and police may have been the only witnesses. Prosecutors tend to have a close working relationship with police officers, which creates another conflict of interest, and they are often reluctant to aggressively pursue cases against law enforcement.[2] Furthermore, courts tend to sympathize with police officers over civilians, who are often viewed as the "good party" in the case.[110] In 2015, The Washington Post reported that 54 officers had been charged with fatally shooting someone while on duty over the preceding decade. In the 35 cases that had been resolved, a total of 21 officers were acquitted or their charges were dropped.[111]

Police unions Edit

There is a direction on or around correlation between rates of police union membership and number of people killed by police.[112] Collective bargaining rights introduced by police unions from the 1950s onward (which are negotiated largely in secret) led to a substantial increase of police killings and other abuses especially towards people from racial minorities.[113][114] Unions have negotiated labor contracts that stop law enforcement agencies firing officers after egregious acts of misconduct.[115] A University of Oxford study of the 100 largest US cities found that increased protections for officers directly correlated with increased levels of violence and other abuses against citizens by police officers.[114] A study by the University of Chicago found that after deputies gained collective bargaining rights in Florida sheriff's offices incidents of violent misconduct increased by around 40%.[116][113][117] Researchers at the University of Victoria also found a 40% increase of killing when collective bargaining rights we enacted, with the overwhelming majority of people being killed being non white, the authors of the study described unions as "protection of the right to discriminate".[112] A systemic pattern of "serious violations of the U.S. Constitution and federal law," was found by a Justice Department investigation of Baltimore's police department.[114] A Minneapolis councilperson described the Minneapolis Police Union as a "protection racket".[118]

Blue wall of silence Edit

Police departments in the United States typically follow an unofficial cultural code, known as the "blue wall of silence". This can also be referred to as the "curtain of silence", "cocoon of silence", "blue code", or "blue shield". According to this rule, police officers do not report misconduct or abuse committed by other officers, and they will not step in when their colleagues are engaging in illegal or abusive behavior. This is because police officers typically consider themselves as part of a larger "brotherhood" or family among other officers.[119][120][121][122] However, when neglected, officers are influenced to further speak out against the police officer that made the offense. On the other hand, if an officer does decide to speak out against another police officer, that same police officer may be subjected to harassment and in some cases, be ostracized.[123] The Blue Wall of Silence is ultimately held together by fear of exile, and when the police force is often treated as a "brotherhood", speaking against "brothers" gives a perceived reality of betrayal and infidelity. This perception often steers officers away from breaking The Wall, leading into a spiral that ends in the wall remaining amidst.[124][123]

Racial profiling Edit

Police brutality can be associated with racial profiling. Differences in race, religion, politics, ability, or socioeconomic status sometimes exist between police and the citizenry.[125] For example, in 2016, about 27% of sworn in police officers were people of color.[126] The leadership of police department and police unions tend to be primarily white, as well.[127] Meanwhile, police officers often work in non-white communities.[128] Portions of the population may perceive the police to be oppressors.[125] In addition, there is a perception that victims of police brutality often belong to relatively powerless groups, such as racial or cultural minorities, the disabled, and the poor.[72]

Beginning in the 1960s, police departments began to offer cultural sensitivity and diversity trainings.[129] However, these trainings are generally found to be ineffective and removed from the everyday reality of policing.[2]

Since the 1970s, police departments have increasingly hired more non-white officers, following a court order to diversify police departments.[128] The percentage of non-white officers doubled (14% to 27%) between 1987 and 2016.[126] However, according to studies, there is no evidence that non-white officers are less aggressive to non-white civilians.[126] Furthermore, there is no correlation between non-white officers and lower rates of police brutality or community satisfaction with policing. For example, police forces in New York and Philadelphia have comparatively diverse police forces, but they have been criticized for their aggressive tactics and racial profiling. This is explained by the fact that police department priorities are set by politicians[2] and the larger systematic issues of police culture and racism are still prevalent.[126]

Militarization of police Edit

Police brutality is often linked to the "warrior mentality" and militarization of police departments.[2] Under this system, new recruits enter police academies, where they may be instructed in a manner similar to paramilitary training[130] or what is called a "warrior training". Some police academies even employ independent training companies, such as Close Quarters Battle, which has trained the United States Marine Corps, Navy Seals, and the special forces of other countries.[2] These trainings focus on fear and defensive tactics, rather than community interaction and outreach. The recruits will focus on learning how to kill and aggressively manage crisis situations, as well as engaging in drill formations and standing at attention.[130] Recruits will learn that any situation, including seemingly routine ones (such as traffic stops) can turn deadly, and they receive minimal training in how to manage complex social situations.[2] As noted by Rosa Brooks, "Many police recruits enter the academy as idealists, but this kind of training turns them into cynics."[130]

Once they are trained and working, police often think of crime as a war, in which they are "warriors", and some people are their enemies.[131][2] The police are provided with military equipment, such as tanks, and some work in militarized units, such as Special Weapons and Tactics (SWAT) teams. Their equipment partially comes from the Department of Defense, due to the 1033 program. Established in 1990 by President George H. W. Bush, the program allows the DoD to give law enforcement their excess equipment (local authorities only pay for shipping costs), with an estimated $7.4 billion of property transferred since the program began.[132] Furthermore, an estimated 19% of police officers are military veterans,[133] documenting a "revolving door" between the military and the police, a phenomenon also found among FBI agents.[134] Internal police records—provided by the Boston and Miami departments—"indicate that officers with military experience generate more civilian complaints of excessive force."[135]

Broken windows theory Edit

Since the 1980s, police departments have adopted the broken windows theory, as advocated by criminologists like George L. Kelling and James Q. Wilson. This theory posits that signs of disorder or decay in neighborhoods (such as broken windows, graffiti, loitering, drug use, prostitution, etc.) create an impression that the area is neglected, thereby leading to further chaos and crime. Therefore, if police departments directly respond to smaller neighborhood issues, they can help prevent larger issues.[136][137][138] By the 1990s, police departments had increasingly adopted this philosophy, and they adopted policing methods inspired by it, such as stop-and-frisk in New York City (adopted in 2001).[136] Police departments were empowered to intervene in civilian life and act as moral authorities. Meanwhile, the problems associated with poor living standards were blamed on civilians, rather than political or economic forces. Consequently, police were given the ability to increase arrests, aggressive policing, and harassment of civilians, which further contributed to police brutality and racial profiling.[2]

Threat hypothesis Edit

Academic theories such as the threat hypothesis and the community violence hypothesis have been used to explain police brutality. The threat hypothesis implies that "police use force in direct response to a perceived threat from racial and/or economic groups viewed as threatening to the existing social order."[139] According to the community violence hypothesis, "police use force in direct response to levels of violence in the community."[139] This theory explains that force is used to control groups that threaten the community or police themselves with violence. This theory is applied mostly to shield non minorities from competition, fear, and perceived inconveniences. This is usually exercised on a minority, usually of African descent, without evidence or reasonable doubt. The strain minorities feel, weaken their mental health and discourages them.[140] This ultimately caters to a white community as they no longer must worry about an African potentially winning over their economic position.[141] Additionally, Threat Hypothesis also enables a "safer" environment for whites, as whites generally don't feel safe when around people of color. Usually, when around people of color, whites tend to police them. This makes the environment unsafe for nonwhites.[142]

This style of policing is a less grotesque way of wrongly punishing people of color, the far more intense example would be the act of lynching, which would display a person of color be murdered and tortured in front of an audience.[143]

Police dogs Edit

A 2020 investigation coordinated by the Marshall Project found evidence of widespread deployment of police dogs in the U.S. as disproportionate force and disproportionately against people of color. A series of 13 linked reports, found more than 150 cases from 2015 to 2020 of K-9 officers improperly using dogs as weapons to catch, bite and injure people.[144] The rate of police K-9 bites in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, a majority-Black city of 220,000 residents, averages more than double that of the next-ranked city, Indianapolis, and nearly one-third of the police dog bites are inflicted on teenage men, most of whom are Black. Medical researchers found that police dog attacks are "more like shark attacks than nips from a family pet" due to the aggressive training police dogs undergo. Many people bitten were not violent and were not suspected of crimes. Police officers are often shielded from liability, and federal civil rights laws don't typically cover bystanders who are bitten by mistake. Even when victims can bring cases, lawyers say they struggle because jurors tend to love police dogs.[145]

Solutions Edit

Body cameras Edit

Many policies have been offered for how to prevent police brutality. One proposed solution is body worn cameras. The theory of using body cameras is that police officers will be less likely to commit misconduct if they understand that their actions are being recorded.[146] The United States Department of Justice under Obama's administration supplied $20 million for body cameras to be implemented in police departments.[147] During a case study attempting to test the effects that body cameras had on police actions, researchers found evidence that suggested that police used less force with civilians when they had body cameras.[146]

Police are supposed to have the cameras on from the time they receive a call of an incident to when the entire encounter is over.[148] However, there is controversy regarding police using the equipment properly.[149] The issue regarding an officer's ability to turn on and off the record button is if the police officer is trustworthy. In 2017, Baltimore Police Officer Richard A. Pinheiro Jr. was caught planting evidence. The officer did not realize 30 seconds of footage was available even before switching the camera on.[150] To solve this problem, it has been proposed to record police officers' entire shift and not allowing access for police officers to turn on and off the record button. This can cause technical and cost issues due to the large amount of data the camera would accumulate, for which various solutions have been proposed.[151][152][153][154]

Another possible issue that can occur is the public's inability to access the body camera footage.[155][156][157]

According to a survey done by Vocativ in 2014, "41 cities use body cams on some of their officers, 25 have plans to implement body cams and 30 cities do not use or plan to use cams at this time."[149] There are other issues that can occur from the use of body cameras as well. This includes downloading and maintenance of the data which can be expensive. There is also some worry that if video testimony becomes more relied upon in court cases, not having video evidence from body cameras would decrease the likelihood that the court system believes credible testimony from police officers and witnesses[146]

Civilian review boards Edit

Civilian review boards have been proposed as another solution to decreasing police brutality. Benefits of civilian review boards can include making sure police are doing their jobs and increasing the relationship the police have with the public.[158] Civilian review boards have gotten criticism though. They can be staffed with police who can weaken the effectiveness of the boards. Some boards do not have the authority to order investigations into police departments. They can also lack the funding to be an effective tool.[158] The origins of the Civilian Review Boards date back as far as 1950, when "18 organizations formed the "Permanent Coordination Committee on Police and Minority Groups" to lobby the city to deal with police misconduct in general."[159] Due to the political climate of the time, the Civilians Boards were used as a false solution to help the public feel as if they were heard. Unbeknownst to the public, the Civilian Review Boards would ultimately house Officers among its staff, decreasing the effectiveness.[159]

Lawsuits and qualified immunity Edit

Excessive use of force is a tort, and police officers may be held liable for damages should they take unconstitutional actions.[160] The ability to sue in federal court was first introduced as a remedy for police brutality and misconduct in 1871 during the Reconstruction era as the Third Enforcement Act. The act allowed plaintiffs to sue directly in federal courts which were important as it allowed plaintiffs to bypass state courts during the Jim Crow era. The theory behind this solution to police brutality is that by taking the civil action to a federal court level, the case will be heard fairly and the financial judgments are intended to have a deterrent effect on future police misconduct in that department.[161]

Since 1967, this remedy has been restricted by Supreme Court precedents through qualified immunity which grants police officers immunity from lawsuits unless their actions violated "clearly established" law.[162] In practice, most jurisdictions rely on court precedent to define clearly established law, so to be successful plaintiffs often must show that a previous court case found the particular act at hand unlawful.[163]: 45–4  For example, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals granted immunity to an officer who shot a 14-year-old who dropped a BB gun as he raised his hands, because unlike a 2011 case where an officer was held liable for shooting a man who lowered a shotgun, the boy had pulled the BB gun from his waistband.[164][165] This is often a stringent requirement, and in a majority of cases since 2005, police officer have been granted immunity for their actions.[164] Lawsuits are sometimes successful, however. For example, in a 2001 settlement, New York City was required to pay a plaintiff $7.125 million in damages and the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association was required to pay $1.625 million. At that time, it was the most money the city had ever paid to settle a police brutality lawsuit and is considered the first time that a police union has paid a claim to settle a brutality suit.[166]

Redirecting funds to other departments (defund the police) Edit

 
Marchers holding "Defund The Police" during George Floyd protests, June 5, 2020

After the murder of George Floyd, there have been widespread calls to defund the police.[167][168] The idea behind this is that money is diverted from policing to the areas needed to prevent crime, for example, housing, employment, welfare, etc.[167] There have been calls for this since society has seen a lack of reform in policing around police brutality and discrimination.

Police abolition Edit

The police abolition movement is a political movement that advocates replacing policing with other systems of public safety.[169] Police abolitionists believe that policing, as a system, is inherently flawed and cannot be reformed—a view that rejects the ideology of police reformists.[170][171] While reformists seek to address the ways in which policing occurs, abolitionists seek to transform policing altogether through a process of disbanding, disempowering, and disarming the police.[172] Abolitionists argue that the institution of policing is deeply rooted in a history of white supremacy and settler colonialism and that it is inseparable from a pre-existing racial capitalist order, and thus believe a reformist approach to policing will always fail.[173][174][175][170]

Police abolition is a process that requires communities to create alternatives to policing. This process involves the deconstruction of the preconceived understandings of policing and resisting co-option by reformists. It also involves engaging in and supporting practices that reduce police power and legitimacy, such as defunding the police.[172][176][177]

New York anti-restraint law Edit

 
Protesters holding "We Can't Breathe" during Eric Garner protests, December 7, 2014

On June 8, 2020, both houses of the New York state assembly passed the Eric Garner Anti-Chokehold Act, which makes it so any police officer in the state of New York who injures or kills somebody through the use of "a chokehold or similar restraint" can be charged with a Class C felony, punishable by up to 15 years in prison.[178] New York Governor Andrew Cuomo signed the "long overdue" police reforms into law on June 12, 2020.[179][178]

Effects Edit

Police brutality is the misuse of power by the police force to intentionally harm individuals.[citation needed] The excessive force imposed by police officers has increased[180] over the past decade and caused social misinterpretations of the role that police officers play in the community.

In 2015, the percentage of people who have confidence in the police hit its lowest since 1993 at 52 percent.[181] Of this 52 percent, Democrats saw the biggest drop in confidence. Democrats' confidence in police dropped to 42% from 2017 to 2018 compared with 2012–2013, a larger change than for any other subgroup. Over the same period, Independents' (51%) and Republicans' (69%) confidence in the police has not changed.[181]

Firearms usage Edit

The Supreme Court Decision of Tennessee v. Garner made it possible to shoot a fleeing suspect only if they may cause harm to innocent people to prevent officers from shooting every suspect that tries to escape.

Stereotypes Edit

Lorie Fridell, Associate Professor of Criminology at University of South Florida, states that "racial profiling was the number one issue facing police [in the 1990s]", which led her to two conclusions: "bias in policing was not just a few officers in a few departments and, overwhelmingly, the police in this country are well-intentioned." According to a Department of Justice report, "Officers, like the rest of us, have an implicit bias linking blacks to crime. So the black crime implicit bias might be implicated in some of the use of deadly force against African-Americans in our country".[182]

A 2014 experiment conducted on white undergraduate female students showed that there was a higher degree of fear of racial minorities. The paper concluded that people with a higher fear of racial minorities and dehumanization had "a lower threshold for shooting Black relative to White and East Asian targets".[183]

 
Protest march in response to the Jamar Clark shooting, Minneapolis, Minnesota

While the Justice Department reported that Cleveland police officers used "excessive deadly force, including shootings and head strikes with impact weapons; unnecessary, excessive, and retaliatory force, including Tasers, chemical sprays, and their fists" on the victim, there was no real repercussions from their actions.[184]

Black Americans and the US police Edit

In a report released concerning the shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, the Justice Department admitted to the Ferguson's police department's pattern of racial bias. The department argued that it is typically an effort to ticket as many low-income black residents as possible in an attempt to raise local budget revenue through fines and court fees.

Statistics Edit

Data released by the US Bureau of Justice Statistics (2011) showed that from 2003 to 2009 at least 4,813 people died while being arrested by local police. Of the deaths classified as law enforcement homicides, there were 2,876 deaths; of those, 1,643 or 57.1% of the deaths were "people of color".[185][186]

According to the police violence tracking website fatalencounters.org showed the records of over 29,000 people were killed in police interactions across the US since 2000.[187] In 2016, police killed 574 White Americans, 266 African Americans, 183 Hispanics, 24 Native Americans, and 21 Asians. However, for every million in population, police killed 10.13 Native Americans, 6.66 African Americans, 3.23 Hispanics, 2.9 White Americans, and 1.17 Asians.[73]

According to the 2020 Police Violence Report, 1,126 people were killed by police, of which in 16 cases police officers were charged with a crime. 620 of the deaths began with police officers responding to reports of non-violent offenses or no crime. 81 people killed by the police were unarmed.[188]

Sam Sinyangwe, founder of the Mapping Police Violence project, stated in 2015 that "black people are three times more likely to be killed by police in the United States than white people. More unarmed black people were killed by police than unarmed white people last year, even though only 14% of the population are black people."[182] According to the Mapping Police Violence project, in 2019, there were only 27 days where police in the United States didn't kill someone.[189]

Critics of police brutality also note that sometimes this abuse of force or power can extend to police officer civilian life as well. For example, critics note that women in around 40% of police officer families have experienced domestic violence[190] and that police officers are convicted of misdemeanors and felonies at a rate of more than six times higher than concealed carry weapon (CCW) permit holders.[191]

Public reaction Edit

 
Protest march in response to the Philando Castile shooting, St. Paul, Minnesota, July 7, 2016
 
Minneapolis high school students protesting the shooting of Michael Brown on the Hennepin Avenue Bridge

A 2001 publication noted that local media rarely reported scandals involving out-of-town police unless events made it onto a network videotape.[192] According to a 2002 analysis, there is often a dramatic increase in unfavorable attitudes toward the police in the wake of highly publicized events such as the Rampart scandal in the late 1990s and the killings of Amadou Diallo (February 1999) and Patrick Dorismond (March 2000) in New York City.[193] A 1997 study found that when viewers are shown footage of police arrests, they may be more likely to perceive the police conduct as brutal if the arresting officers are Caucasian.[194]

Public opinion polls following the 1991 beating of Rodney King in Los Angeles and the 1992 killing of Malice Green in Detroit indicate that the incidents appear to have had their greatest effect on specific perceptions of the way local police treat black people, and markedly less effect on broader perceptions of the extent of discrimination against them.[195]

To draw attention to the issue of police brutality in America, multiple basketball players for the NBA, including Kyrie Irving and LeBron James, wore shirts labeled "I Can't Breathe", referring to the death of Eric Garner at the hands of the New York City Police Department on July 17, 2014.[196] Concerned African-Americans also started a movement referred to as "Black Lives Matter" to try to help people understand how police are affecting African-American lives, initially prompted by the 2013 acquittal of George Zimmerman of the 2012 killing of Trayvon Martin in Sanford, Florida, and further sparked by the shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, on August 9, 2014.[197][198] In 2016, Colin Kaepernick, a quarterback then playing for the San Francisco 49ers, started a protest movement by refusing to stand for the national anthem at the start of games,[199][200] receiving widespread support and widespread condemnation, including from then-President Donald Trump.[201]

In May and June 2020, support for the Black Lives Matter movement surged among Americans as a result of the protests and unrest that broke out across the United States following the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis. A tracking poll by Civiqs found that, for the first time ever, more white Americans supported the Black Lives Matter movement than opposed it.[202] Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden condemned police violence against African American communities and called for racial justice while speaking at George Floyd's funeral service.[203][204]

While many celebrities have joined in on the "Black Lives Matter" campaign, many of the initiatives occurring in communities across the country are led by local members of the Black Lives Matter Global Network. The purpose of this network is to demand change at the local level and stop unfair punishment or brutality towards Black communities.[205]

Legal and institutional controls Edit

Responsibility for investigating police misconduct in the United States has mainly fallen on local and state governments. The federal government does investigate misconduct but only does so when local and state governments fail to look into cases of misconduct.[206]

Laws intended to protect against police abuse of authority include the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which prohibits unreasonable searches and seizures; the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which protects individuals against self-incrimination and being deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process; the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which bans cruel and unusual punishments; the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which includes the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses; the Civil Rights Act of 1871; and the Federal Tort Claims Act. The Civil Rights Act has evolved into a key U.S. law in brutality cases. However, 42 U.S.C. § 1983 has been assessed as ultimately ineffective in deterring police brutality.[207] The federal government can place charges on police officers who commit police misconduct. These prosecutions do not often occur as the federal government tends to defer to local and state governments for prosecution.[206] The federal government also has the ability to investigate police departments if they are committing unlawful actions. When an investigation reveals violations by a police department, the Department of Justice can use §14141[208] to file a lawsuit. Like other tools at their disposal, the federal government also rarely uses this statute.[206] In a 1996 law journal article, it was argued that Judges often give police convicted of brutality light sentences on the grounds that they have already been punished by damage to their careers.[209] A 1999 article attributed much of this difficulty in combating police brutality to the overwhelming power of the stories mainstream American culture tells about the encounters leading to police violence.[210]

In 1978, surveys of police officers found that police brutality, along with sleeping on duty, was viewed as one of the most common and least likely to be reported forms of police deviance other than corruption.[211]

In Tennessee v. Garner (1985), the Supreme Court ruled that the Fourth Amendment prevents police from using deadly force on a fleeing suspect unless the police have good reason to believe that the suspect is a danger to others.[212]

The Supreme Court in Graham v. Connor (1989) stated that the reasonableness of a police officer using force should be based on what the officer's viewpoint was when the crime occurred. Reasonableness should also factor in things like the suspect's threat level and if attempts were made to avoid being arrested.[213]

In 1967, the U.S. Supreme Court introduced the legal doctrine of qualified immunity, originally with the rationale of protecting law enforcement officials from frivolous lawsuits and financial liability in cases where they acted in good faith in an unclear legal situation.[214][18] Starting in around 2005, courts increasingly applied this doctrine to cases involving the use of excessive force, eventually leading to widespread criticism that it "has become a nearly failsafe tool to let police brutality go unpunished and deny victims their constitutional rights" (as summarized in a 2020 Reuters report).[18]

On May 25, 2022, President Joe Biden signed an executive order that would ban chokeholds and carotid restraints, adopt body camera policies, limit the use of no-knock warrants to certain circumstances, and adopt updated use-of-force standards that encourage de-escalation for all federal law enforcement agents.[215][216]

In art Edit

In July 2019, the Glimmerglass Festival in Cooperstown, New York, premiered Jeanine Tesori and Tazewell Thompson′s opera Blue about African-American teenagers as an ′endangered species′; often falling victim to police brutality.[217]

See also Edit

References Edit

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Further reading Edit

  • "Methods That Police Use on the Mentally Ill Are Madness". The Atlantic. March 25, 2015.
  • "Here Are 13 Killings by Police Captured on Video in the Past Year". Mother Jones. May 20, 2015.
  • "FBI chief: 'unacceptable' that Guardian has better data on police violence". The Guardian. October 8, 2015.
  • "Police Killings Surpass the Worst Years of Lynching, Capital Punishment, and a Movement Responds". Jerome Karabel for The Huffington Post. November 4, 2015.
  • "Police Killings Won't Stop". Chris Hedges for Truthdig, September 25, 2016.
  • Schwartz, Joanna (2023). Shielded: How the Police Became Untouchable. New York: Viking. ISBN 9780593299364. OCLC 1315739343.

External links Edit

  • The Counted: Tracking people killed by police in the United States—The Guardian
  • PuppycideDB. The first nationwide database tracking police shootings of animals.

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Police brutality is the repression by personnel affiliated with law enforcement when dealing with suspects and civilians The term is also applied to abuses by corrections personnel in municipal state and federal prison camps including military prisons March 7 1965 Alabama police attack the Selma to Montgomery marchers on Bloody Sunday The term police brutality is usually applied in the context of causing physical harm to a person It may also involve psychological harm through the use of intimidation tactics that often violate human rights From the 18th 20th centuries those who engaged in police brutality have acted with the implicit approval of the local legal system such as during the Civil Rights Movement era In the contemporary era individuals who engage in police brutality may do so with the tacit approval of their superiors or they may be rogue officers In either case they may perpetrate their actions under color of law and more often than not the state apparatus engages in a subsequent cover up of their repression citation needed In the 2000s the federal government attempted tracking the number of people killed in interactions with US police but the program was defunded 1 In 2006 a law was passed to require reporting of homicides at the hands of the police but many police departments do not obey it 2 Some journalists and activists have provided estimates limited to the data available to them In 2019 1 004 people were shot and killed by police according to The Washington Post whereas the Mapping Police Violence project counted 1 098 killed 3 4 5 Statista claimed that in 2020 1 021 people were killed by police while the project Mapping Police Violence counted 1 126 6 5 From 1980 to 2018 more than 30 000 people have died by police violence in the United States according to a 2021 article published in The Lancet 7 For 2022 Mapping Police Violence counted at least 1 176 individuals killed making it the deadliest year on record 8 The US police has killed more people compared to any other industrialized democracy with a disproportionate number of people shot being people of color 9 10 11 Since 2015 around 2 500 of those killed by police were fleeing 12 Since the 20th century there have been many public private and community efforts to combat police corruption and brutality These efforts have identified various core issues that contribute to police brutality including the insular culture of police departments including the blue wall of silence the aggressive defense of police officers and resistance to change in police unions 13 the broad legal protections granted to police officers such as qualified immunity the historic racism of police departments the militarization of the police the adoption of tactics that escalate tension such as zero tolerance policing and stop and frisk the inadequacies of police training and or police academies and the psychology of possessing police power 14 15 16 17 The US legal doctrine of qualified immunity has been widely criticized as having become a nearly failsafe tool to let police brutality go unpunished and deny victims their constitutional rights as summarized in a 2020 Reuters report 18 Regarding solutions activists and advocates have taken different approaches Those who advocate for police reform offer specific suggestions to combat police brutality such as body cameras civilian review boards improved police training demilitarization of police forces 19 and legislation aimed at reducing brutality such as the Justice in Policing Act of 2020 Those who advocate to defund the police call for the full or partial diversion of funds allocated to police departments which would be redirected toward community and social services 20 Those who advocate to dismantle the police call for police departments to be dismantled and rebuilt from the ground up Those who advocate to abolish police departments call for police departments to be disbanded entirely and to be replaced by other community and social services 21 22 Contents 1 History 1 1 Slave patrols roots 1 2 Texas Rangers 1 3 Early police departments 1 4 Strike breaking 1 5 Jim Crow South 1 6 Professionalization of police 1 7 Civil Rights Movement era 1 8 Anti war demonstrations 1 9 War on drugs 1 10 Post 9 11 1 11 Recent incidents 1 11 1 Kisela v Hughes 1 11 2 Water protectors 1 11 3 George Floyd protests 1 11 4 SayHerName movement 2 Investigation 3 Causes 3 1 Legal protections 3 2 Police unions 3 3 Blue wall of silence 3 4 Racial profiling 3 5 Militarization of police 3 6 Broken windows theory 3 7 Threat hypothesis 3 8 Police dogs 4 Solutions 4 1 Body cameras 4 2 Civilian review boards 4 3 Lawsuits and qualified immunity 4 4 Redirecting funds to other departments defund the police 4 5 Police abolition 4 6 New York anti restraint law 5 Effects 5 1 Firearms usage 5 2 Stereotypes 5 3 Black Americans and the US police 5 4 Statistics 6 Public reaction 7 Legal and institutional controls 8 In art 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistory EditSlave patrols roots Edit In the Southern United States some of the earliest roots of policing can be found in slave patrols Beginning in the 18th century white volunteers developed slave patrols also known as paddyrollers which were squadrons that acted as vigilantes 23 In 1704 the first slave patrol was established in South Carolina 24 Eventually all states with legal slavery had slave patrols and they functioned as the first publicly funded police force in the South 25 These patrols focused on enforcing discipline and policing of African American slaves They captured and returned fugitive slaves quashed slave rebellions terrorized slaves in order to prevent rebellions including beatings and 23 26 searches of slave lodges broke up slave meetings and kept slaves off roadways 25 The patrols also administered discipline of indentured servants 25 The patrols had broad influence and powers they could forcefully enter any person s house if they suspected the person of sheltering fugitive slaves 23 During the American Civil War slave patrols remained in place After the Civil War in the Reconstruction period the former slave patrol groups joined with other white militias and groups such as the Ku Klux Klan Meanwhile early police forces of the South began to take on the role of policing and regulating the movement of African Americans who had gained their freedom New laws were put in place to restrict their rights which were known as Black Codes 23 According to some historians the transition from slave patrols to police forces in the South was a seamless one 25 Texas Rangers Edit See also Texas Ranger DivisionIn 1823 the Texas Rangers was established by Stephen F Austin The Rangers used violence harassment and intimidation to protect the interests of white colonists They worked in an area that was governed by Mexico which later became the Republic of Texas followed by the state of Texas The Rangers were known to be particularly active across the Mexico United States border Their work included capturing indigenous people who were accused of attacking white settlers investigating crimes such as cattle raiding and raiding Mexican vaquero cattle ranches They intimidated Mexican and Mexican American people into leaving their land and homes in support of white colonial expansion In the late 19th and early 20th centuries the Texas Rangers supported and participated in extrajudicial killings and lynch mobs such as La Matanza 1910 1920 and Porvenir massacre 1918 2 27 28 29 30 Early police departments Edit In 1838 the United States developed its first formal police department located in Boston This was followed by New York City 1845 San Francisco 1849 Chicago 1851 New Orleans 1853 Cincinnati 1853 Philadelphia 1855 Newark New Jersey 1857 Baltimore 1857 By the 1880s all major US cities had police departments 31 As written by Dr Garry Potter Early American police departments shared two primary characteristics they were notoriously corrupt and flagrantly brutal This should come as no surprise in that police were under the control of local politicians 32 The local political ward leader who was often a tavern owner or gang leader would appoint the chief of police of a neighborhood The chief would be expected to follow the orders and expectations of the ward leader which often included intimidating voters harassing political opponents and ensuring that the ward s business interests remained intact 33 The police officers typically had little qualifications or training as law enforcement officers and they often took bribes and kickbacks If conflicts arose it was common for police officers to use force and brutality 32 In the 19th century police brutality was often directed at European immigrant communities 33 particularly those from Ireland Italy Germany and Eastern Europe 34 The different cultures of these communities were often framed as dangerous which called for the enforcement of law and order 33 For example Irish immigrants were considered a dangerous class and they experienced discrimination by nativists 35 Meanwhile organized crime and political parties were often intertwined and police typically cast a blind eye toward gambling and prostitution if managed by politically influential figures 36 Strike breaking Edit nbsp Person beaten by police during the 1912 1913 Little Falls textile strike in Little Falls New YorkAfter the Civil War industrialization and urbanization grew rapidly in the United States This was accompanied by a rising organized labor movement in which workers formed unions and joined in organized actions such as strikes Between 1880 and 1900 New York City had 5 090 strikes and Chicago had 1 737 strikes The economic elites of the era typically characterized these strikes as riots and they encouraged the police to break the strikes Consequently the police broke up strikes through two primary methods extreme violence and making public order arrests at a mass scale 37 Some state governments authorized privatized police forces to repress strikes such as the Coal and Iron Police in Pennsylvania Private detective agencies such as Pinkerton often supervised these efforts Violent confrontations came out of this system such as the Latimer Massacre 1897 in which 19 unarmed miners were killed and the Coal Strike of 1902 which involved a pitched battle for five months Ultimately state governments decided that it would be easier to police labor with public forces leading to the establishment of state police forces such as the Pennsylvania State Police formed in 1905 2 Jim Crow South Edit Main article Jim Crow laws By the late 19th century local and state governments began to pass Jim Crow laws These laws enforced strict racial segregation in schools parks neighborhoods restaurants and other public places 38 This era saw a rise in lynchings and mob murders of African Americans with the police not arresting the perpetrators 23 It was estimated that at least one half of the lynchings are carried out with police officers participating and that in nine tenths of the others the officers either condone or wink at the mob action as reported by Arthur F Rapper in 1933 39 Meanwhile African Americans suffered police brutality such as the 1946 beating of Isaac Woodward in Batesburg South Carolina 40 Due to the brutality of Jim Crow laws many African Americans fled to Northern and Western cities in the Great Migration where they experienced police brutality as well 33 Professionalization of police Edit In the United States the passage of the Volstead Act popularly known as the National Prohibition Act in 1919 had a long term negative impact on policing practices During Prohibition 1919 33 the problem of police corruption was only worsened as crime was growing dramatically in response to the demand for illegal alcohol Many law enforcement agencies stepped up the use of unlawful practices Police officers were commonly bribed so that bootlegging and speakeasies could continue in addition to the flourishing organized crime underworlds of cities such as Chicago New York City and Philadelphia 41 Some police officers became employed by organized crime syndicates and they helped perform duties such as harassment and intimidation of rivals 36 By the time of the Hoover administration 1929 1933 the issue had risen to national concern and a National Committee on Law Observation and Enforcement popularly known as the Wickersham Commission was formed to look into the situation 42 The resulting Report on Lawlessness in Law Enforcement 1931 concluded that t he third degree that is the use of physical brutality or other forms of cruelty to obtain involuntary confessions or admissions is widespread 43 In the years following the report landmark legal judgments such as Brown v Mississippi helped cement a legal obligation to respect the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment 44 The result was the beginning of a new era in law enforcement in the United States which aimed to professionalize and reform the industry It was decided that police should function separately from political wards or leaders and police precincts were altered to no longer overlap with political wards 34 Police departments became more bureaucratic with a clear chain of command New practices were put into place to recruit train and reward police officers By the 1950s police officers began to win collective bargaining rights and form unions after a long period of not being allowed to form unions particularly after the Boston police strike in 1919 45 However these changes were not welcomed by all community members Police departments adopted tactics that often antagonized people such as aggressive stop and frisk 46 Police departments also became increasingly insular and isolated from public life as a result of these changes according to crime historian Samuel Walker For these reasons among other reasons they were particularly unequipped to handle the cultural and social upheaval of the 1960s 34 Civil Rights Movement era Edit The Civil Rights Movement was the target of numerous incidents of police brutality in its struggle for justice and racial equality notably during the Birmingham campaign of 1963 64 and during the Selma to Montgomery marches of 1965 Media coverage of the brutality sparked national outrage and public sympathy for the movement grew rapidly as a result Martin Luther King Jr criticized police brutality in his speeches Furthermore the period was marked by riots in response to police violence against African Americans and Latinos including the Harlem riot of 1964 1964 Philadelphia race riot Watts riots 1965 Division Street riots 1966 and 1967 Detroit riot 47 In 1966 the Black Panther Party was formed by Huey P Newton and Bobby Seale in order to challenge police brutality against African Americans from disproportionately white police departments 48 49 The conflict between the Black Panther Party and various police departments often resulted in violence with the deaths of 34 members of the Black Panther Party 50 and 15 police officers 51 In 1968 the American Indian Movement was organized in Minneapolis Minnesota in response to widespread police brutality used against urban Native Americans Founded by Dennis Banks Clyde Bellecourt Vernon Bellecourt and Russell Means the movement grew while 75 percent of Native Americans had moved to urban areas becoming Urban Indians as a result of federal Indian Termination Act and other policies A I M was later accepted by traditional Elders living at Native American reservations The Civil Rights Movement and A I M were also targeted by the FBI in a program called COINTELPRO 1956 79 and beyond Under this program the FBI would use undercover agents and police to create violence and chaos within political groups such as the American Indian Movement Socialist Worker s Party the Black Panther Party and the Organization of Afro American Unity 52 The police and undercover agents would harm organizers and assassinate leaders Black Panther leaders Mark Clark and Fred Hampton were killed in a 1969 FBI raid at Hampton s apartment in Chicago 53 External video nbsp 3 7 91 Video of Rodney King Beaten by Police Released 54 In the United States race and accusations of police brutality continue to be closely linked and the phenomenon has sparked a string of race riots over the years Especially notable among these incidents was the uprising caused by the arrest and beating of Rodney King on March 3 1991 by officers of the Los Angeles Police Department The atmosphere was particularly volatile because the brutality had been videotaped by a civilian and widely broadcast afterward When the four law enforcement officers charged with assault and other violations were acquitted the 1992 Los Angeles Riots broke out Anti war demonstrations Edit During the Vietnam War anti war demonstrations were sometimes quelled through the use of billy clubs and tear gas One notorious assault took place during the August 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago Some rogue police officers took off their badges in order to escape identification and brutally assaulted protesters Journalists were assaulted inside the convention hall 55 The actions of the police were later described as a police riot in the Walker Report to the U S National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence 56 On May 15 1969 police opened fire on protesters in People s Park in Berkeley California which resulted in serious injuries for some protesters 57 The 1970 Kent State shootings of 13 university students by the National Guard have been described as the culmination of such violent confrontations 58 War on drugs Edit See also War on drugs In June 1971 President Richard M Nixon declared a War on Drugs This new war brought in stricter policing and criminal laws including no knock warrants and mandatory sentencing As was the case with Prohibition the War on Drugs was marked by increased police misconduct War on drugs policing notably stop and frisk and Special Weapons and Tactics SWAT teams contributed to police brutality especially targeting minority communities 59 Years later Nixon aide John Ehrlichman explained The Nixon campaign in 1968 and the Nixon White House after that had two enemies the antiwar left and black people We knew we couldn t make it illegal to be either but by getting the public to associate the hippies with marijuana and blacks with heroin and then criminalizing both heavily we could disrupt those communities We could arrest their leaders raid their homes break up their meetings and vilify them night after night on the evening news 60 Throughout a series of court cases the 4th amendment has been interpreted in differing ways Terry v Ohio ruled frisks constitutional if the police officer had reasonable suspicion As time progressed frisks have become more similar to arrests Stop and frisk used to not involve any handcuffs weapons or arrest now they do War on drugs has increased the amount of power police officers have 61 62 The war on drugs has been seen as responsible for police misconduct towards African Americans and Latinos While white people and African Americans both use and sell drugs at roughly similar rates African Americans are over six times as likely to be incarcerated for drug related charges according to 2015 data 63 53 Specifically the use of stop and frisk tactics by police have targeted African Americans and Latinos In looking at data from New York in the early 2000s up to 2014 people who had committed no offense made up 82 to 90 of those who were stopped and frisked Of those people stopped only 9 to 12 were white People who were stopped felt that they had experienced psychological violence and the police sometimes used insults against them Stop and frisk tactics caused people to experience anxiety about leaving their homes due to fears of police harassment and abuse 59 With the militarization of the police SWAT teams have been used more frequently in drug possession situations 15 SWAT teams can be armed with weapons like diversionary grenades In cases where SWAT teams were used only 35 of the time were drugs found in peoples homes African Americans and Latinos are disproportionately the targets of these raids 59 and according to the ACLU Sending a heavily armed team of officers to perform normal police work can dangerously escalate situations that need never have involved violence 64 Post 9 11 Edit nbsp Protest against police brutality in New York City December 2014After the attacks of September 11 2001 human rights observers raised concerns about increased police brutality in the U S An extensive report prepared for the United Nations Human Rights Committee published in 2006 stated that in the U S the War on Terror created a generalized climate of impunity for law enforcement officers and contributed to the erosion of what few accountability mechanisms exist for civilian control over law enforcement agencies As a result police brutality and abuse persist unabated and undeterred across the country 65 The culture of impunity for police is reinforced by law enforcement operations with the FBI s Joint Terrorism Task Force which undertakes disruption actions against suspects instead of investigations and criminal charges During the war on terror there have been noted increases in enforcement power for officers By 2007 discussion on the appropriateness of using racial profiling and force against people of color has decreased since 9 11 65 Racial profiling specifically increased for those of South Asian Arab Middle Eastern and Muslim origins 65 An example of increased use of police use of force has been in the use of tasers From 2001 to 2007 at least 150 deaths were attributed to tasers and many injuries occurred People of color have been the main people who have been targeted the most with regards to increased taser use 65 A decision by the House and the Senate in Hawaii was expected in May 2014 after police agreed in March 2014 not to oppose the revision of a law that was implemented in the 1970s allowing undercover police officers to engage in sexual relations with sex workers during the course of investigations A similar program in the United Kingdom resulted in physical and emotional abuse of victims and children born without fathers when the undercover operation ended see UK undercover policing relationships scandal Following initial protest from supporters of the legislation all objections were retracted on March 25 2014 A Honolulu police spokeswoman informed Time magazine that at the time of the court s decision no reports had been made in regard to the abuse of the exemption by police while a Hawaiian senator stated to journalists I suppose that in retrospect the police probably feel somewhat embarrassed about this whole situation However the Pacifica Alliance to Stop Slavery and other advocates affirmed their knowledge of police brutality in this area and explained that the fear of retribution is the main deterrent for sex workers who seek to report offending officers At a Hawaiian Senate Judiciary Committee hearing also in March 2014 an attorney testified that his client was raped three times by Hawaiian police before prostitution was cited as the reason for her subsequent arrest 66 Recent incidents Edit See also Stop and frisk The prevalence of police brutality in the United States is not comprehensively documented and the statistics on police brutality are much less available The few statistics that exist include a 2006 Department of Justice report which showed that out of 26 556 citizen complaints made in 2002 about excessive use of police force among large U S agencies representing 5 of agencies and 59 of officers about 2 000 were found to have merit 67 Other studies have shown that most police brutality goes unreported In 1982 the federal government funded a Police Services Study in which over 12 000 randomly selected civilians were interviewed in three metropolitan areas The study found that 13 6 percent of those surveyed claimed to have had cause to complain about police service including verbal abuse discourtesy and physical abuse in the previous year Yet only 30 percent of those filed formal complaints 68 A 1998 Human Rights Watch report stated that in all 14 precincts it examined the process of filing a complaint was unnecessarily difficult and often intimidating 69 Statistics on the use of physical force by law enforcement are available For example an extensive U S Department of Justice report on police use of force released in 2001 indicated that in 1999 approximately 422 000 people 16 years old and older were estimated to have had contact with police in which force or the threat of force was used 70 Research shows that measures of the presence of black and Hispanic people and majority minority income inequality are related positively to average annual civil rights criminal complaints 71 Police brutality can be associated with racial profiling Differences in race religion politics or socioeconomic status often exist between police and the citizenry Some police officers may view the population or a particular subset thereof as generally deserving of punishment Portions of the population may perceive the police to be oppressors In addition there is a perception that victims of police brutality often belong to relatively powerless groups such as minorities the disabled and the poor 72 According to a 2015 and 2016 project by The Guardian more white people are killed by police in raw numbers than black people are but after adjusting this finding based on the fact that the black population is smaller than the white population twice as many black people are killed by police per capita than white people are 73 74 specify A 2019 study showed that people of color face a higher likelihood of being killed by police than white men and women do that risk peaks in young adulthood and men of color face a nontrivial lifetime risk of being killed by police 75 76 Race was suspected to play a role in the shooting of Michael Brown in 2014 Brown was an unarmed 18 year old African American who was shot by Darren Wilson a white police officer in Ferguson Missouri The predominately black city erupted after the shooting Riots following the shooting generated much debate about the treatment of African Americans by law enforcement A 2006 Human Rights Watch report revealed that five state prison systems permit the use of aggressive unmuzzled dogs on prisoners as part of cell removal procedures 77 On 23 August 2020 a Black man in Kenosha identified as Jacob Blake was shot by police multiple times in the back He was shot in front of his three young sons and suffered critical injuries Later he was reported by Civil Rights attorney Ben Crump to be in stable condition but remained in an intensive care unit The shooting came as demonstrators continued to decry police violence in the American cities 78 It was later determined that Kenosha police officers were responding to a domestic violence call concerning Blake made by his girlfriend and at the time of the shooting Blake was armed with a knife and had resisted arrest despite multiple Taser shots and commands by police to drop the weapon 79 80 In a report published on January 5 2021 Kenosha County District Attorney Michael Graveley declined to issue criminal charges against the three officers involved in the shooting concluding that their use of force was justified in keeping with Wisconsin Law in keeping with the Kenosha Police Department s use of force training and policy and widely accepted law enforcement use of force standards 80 Kisela v Hughes Edit In May 2010 police responded to a call of a woman Amy Hughes erratically hacking a tree with a large kitchen knife Hughes began advancing on a civilian later identified to be Hughes roommate Officer Kisela decided to fire four shots toward Hughes and she was later treated for non life threatening injuries It was later discovered that Hughes had a history of mental illness Hughes filed a lawsuit against Officer Kisela claiming excessive use of force and a violation of her Fourth Amendment right The Supreme Court ruled in favor of the officer stating that the officer had probable cause to believe that the suspect posed a serious threat to the public and to other officers The Court ruled that Officer Kisela is entitled to immunity 81 Water protectors Edit Water protectors have faced police brutality at the hands of militarized law enforcement Notable cases include the Dakota Access Pipeline protests in 2016 when the Morton County sheriff s department supplemented by officers from six states attacked hundreds of water protectors with concussion grenades tear gas rubber bullets and water cannons in sub freezing temperatures 82 They subjected water protectors to strip searches after arrest 83 Energy Transfer Partners the pipeline company also employed a private security firm who used attack dogs and pepper spray against water protectors who were attempting to defend sacred burial sites from being bulldozed Several water protectors were treated for dog bites Police observed but did not intervene 84 85 At the Stop Line 3 pipeline protests in Minnesota militarized police have subjected water protectors to pepper spray and rubber bullets during a series of arrests and protesters who ve been jailed have reported mistreatment from officers such as lack of proper food solitary confinement and denial of medications Over 600 people were arrested between January and August 2021 86 Enbridge the pipeline company enables increased police militarization by funding an escrow account that law enforcement uses to buy equipment and to train and pay officers Enbridge had paid 2 million to law enforcement agencies through escrow by August 2021 87 George Floyd protests Edit Main article George Floyd protests See also List of police reforms related to the George Floyd protests and List of police violence incidents during George Floyd protests nbsp A memorial for George Floyd who was murdered by a police officer nbsp George Floyd protests in Raleigh North Carolina on May 30 2020 nbsp Protesters in Minneapolis on 26 May 2020 the day after the murder of George FloydIn May 2020 the issue of police brutality saw a surge in public response following the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis Related protests occurred nationwide and internationally beginning in Minneapolis Minnesota on May 26 2020 In 2016 Tony Timpa was killed in the same way in Dallas These protests were attended by thousands of people across the United States and had a worldwide impact on the outlook of police brutality 88 SayHerName movement Edit Main article SayHerName The campaign SayHerName was created in December 2014 by Kimberle Crenshaw This movement was brought about to raise awareness for the victims of police brutality that were black women 89 90 The SayHerName movement is a social movement inside the Black Lives Matter movement As Crenshaw told NPR Say Her Name is trying to raise awareness by insisting that we say their names because if we can say their names we can know more about their stories 90 The name of Breonna Taylor was part of the Say Her Name movement Taylor was killed by police in Louisville Kentucky in March 2020 Police officers forced entry into her apartment and Taylor was shot six times after her boyfriend Kenneth Walker shot officer Jonathan Mattingly Breonna Taylor s death lead to worldwide protests and outrage 91 90 Investigation EditIn the United States investigation of cases of police brutality has often been left to internal police commissions and or district attorneys DAs Internal police commissions have often been criticized for a lack of accountability and for bias favoring officers as they frequently declare upon review that the officer s acted within the department s rules or according to their training For instance an April 2007 study of the Chicago Police Department found that out of more than 10 000 police abuse complaints filed between 2002 and 2003 only 19 0 19 resulted in meaningful disciplinary action The study charges that the police department s oversight body allows officers with criminal tendencies to operate with impunity and argues that the Chicago Police Department should not be allowed to police itself 92 Investigations can be conducted by civilian complaint review board CCRB which act as an independent agency that can investigate conduct hearings and make recommendations in response to complaints of police brutality 93 However only 19 of large municipal police forces have a CCRB such as the Civilian Complaint Review Board New York City Civilian Office of Police Accountability Chicago Citizen Police Review Board Pittsburgh and Police Review Commission Berkeley 94 Law enforcement jurisdictions that have a CCRB have an excessive force complaint rate against their officers of 11 9 verses 6 6 complaint rate for those without a CCRB Of those forces without a CCRB only 8 of the complaints were sustained 95 Thus for the year 2002 the rate at which police brutality complaints were sustained was 0 53 for the larger police municipalities nationwide The ability of district attorneys to investigate police brutality has also been called into question as DAs depend on help from police departments to bring cases to trial It was only in the 1990s that serious efforts began to transcend the difficulties of dealing with systemic patterns of police misconduct nbsp Logo on T shirts sold at Daytona Beach Police Department headquarters in Florida cited in a lawsuit against the DBPD alleging police brutality is said to show the DBPD condones violence 96 97 Beyond police departments and DAs mechanisms of government oversight have gradually evolved The Rodney King case triggered the creation of the Independent Commission on the Los Angeles Police Department informally known as the Christopher Commission in 1991 The commission mandated to investigate the practices of the LAPD uncovered disturbing patterns of misconduct and abuse but the reforms it recommended were put on hold Meanwhile media reports revealed a frustration in dealing with systemic abuse in other jurisdictions as well such as New York and Pittsburgh Selwyn Raab of The New York Times wrote about how the Blue Code of Silence among police officers helped to conceal even the most outrageous examples of misconduct 98 Within this climate the police misconduct provision of the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994 was created which authorized the Attorney General to file lawsuits seeking court orders to reform police departments engaging in a pattern or practice of violating citizens federal rights 99 As of January 31 2003 the Department of Justice had used this provision to negotiate reforms in twelve jurisdictions across the U S Pittsburgh Bureau of Police Steubenville Police Department New Jersey State Police Los Angeles Police Department District of Columbia Metropolitan Police Department Highland Park Illinois Police Department Cincinnati Police Department Columbus Police Department Buffalo Police Department Mount Prospect Illinois Police Department Seattle Police Department and the Montgomery County Maryland Police Department 100 Data obtained by the Associated Press in 2016 showed a racial disparity in officers use of stun guns 101 On 15 May 2020 Amnesty International suggested that American authorities should avoid repressive measures that unduly restrict human rights in the name of protecting people from COVID 19 The videos verified by researchers and Amnesty s Crisis Evidence Lab claimed the use of detention as a first resort excessive and unnecessary use of force in the enforcement of COVID 19 lockdowns and the imposition of mandatory quarantines in inhumane conditions 102 On 22 June 2020 the University of Chicago reported that the police departments in the 20 largest American cities were failing to meet even the most basic international human rights standards governing the use of lethal force The study revealed that America s biggest police forces lack legality as they are not answerable to human rights compliant laws authorizing the use of lethal force 103 Causes EditNumerous doctrines such as federalism separation of powers causation deference discretion and burden of proof have been cited as partial explanations for the judiciaries fragmented pursuit of police misconduct However there is also evidence that courts cannot or choose not to see systemic patterns in police brutality 104 Other factors that have been cited as encouraging police brutality include institutionalized systems of police training management and culture a criminal justice system that discourages prosecutors from pursuing police misconduct vigorously a political system that responds more readily to police than to the residents of inner city and minority communities and a political culture that fears crime and values tough policing more than it values due process for all its citizens 105 Around 1998 it was believed that without substantial social change the control of police deviance was improbable at best 106 Legal protections Edit Police officers often still hold significant advantages in legal proceedings and in courts Records of officer performance and misconduct are sometimes hidden from public view through laws such as 50 a in New York repealed in 2020 107 108 The law of qualified immunity often shields police officers from prosecution since it only permits lawsuits against government officials when they have violated a clearly established constitutional or statutory right 109 When cases of police are investigated for crimes the collection of evidence is typically conducted by police officers including witness statements and police may have been the only witnesses Prosecutors tend to have a close working relationship with police officers which creates another conflict of interest and they are often reluctant to aggressively pursue cases against law enforcement 2 Furthermore courts tend to sympathize with police officers over civilians who are often viewed as the good party in the case 110 In 2015 The Washington Post reported that 54 officers had been charged with fatally shooting someone while on duty over the preceding decade In the 35 cases that had been resolved a total of 21 officers were acquitted or their charges were dropped 111 Police unions Edit Main article Police unions in the United States There is a direction on or around correlation between rates of police union membership and number of people killed by police 112 Collective bargaining rights introduced by police unions from the 1950s onward which are negotiated largely in secret led to a substantial increase of police killings and other abuses especially towards people from racial minorities 113 114 Unions have negotiated labor contracts that stop law enforcement agencies firing officers after egregious acts of misconduct 115 A University of Oxford study of the 100 largest US cities found that increased protections for officers directly correlated with increased levels of violence and other abuses against citizens by police officers 114 A study by the University of Chicago found that after deputies gained collective bargaining rights in Florida sheriff s offices incidents of violent misconduct increased by around 40 116 113 117 Researchers at the University of Victoria also found a 40 increase of killing when collective bargaining rights we enacted with the overwhelming majority of people being killed being non white the authors of the study described unions as protection of the right to discriminate 112 A systemic pattern of serious violations of the U S Constitution and federal law was found by a Justice Department investigation of Baltimore s police department 114 A Minneapolis councilperson described the Minneapolis Police Union as a protection racket 118 Blue wall of silence Edit Main article Blue wall of silence Police departments in the United States typically follow an unofficial cultural code known as the blue wall of silence This can also be referred to as the curtain of silence cocoon of silence blue code or blue shield According to this rule police officers do not report misconduct or abuse committed by other officers and they will not step in when their colleagues are engaging in illegal or abusive behavior This is because police officers typically consider themselves as part of a larger brotherhood or family among other officers 119 120 121 122 However when neglected officers are influenced to further speak out against the police officer that made the offense On the other hand if an officer does decide to speak out against another police officer that same police officer may be subjected to harassment and in some cases be ostracized 123 The Blue Wall of Silence is ultimately held together by fear of exile and when the police force is often treated as a brotherhood speaking against brothers gives a perceived reality of betrayal and infidelity This perception often steers officers away from breaking The Wall leading into a spiral that ends in the wall remaining amidst 124 123 Racial profiling Edit Main articles Racial profiling in the United States and Race and crime in the United States Police brutality can be associated with racial profiling Differences in race religion politics ability or socioeconomic status sometimes exist between police and the citizenry 125 For example in 2016 about 27 of sworn in police officers were people of color 126 The leadership of police department and police unions tend to be primarily white as well 127 Meanwhile police officers often work in non white communities 128 Portions of the population may perceive the police to be oppressors 125 In addition there is a perception that victims of police brutality often belong to relatively powerless groups such as racial or cultural minorities the disabled and the poor 72 Beginning in the 1960s police departments began to offer cultural sensitivity and diversity trainings 129 However these trainings are generally found to be ineffective and removed from the everyday reality of policing 2 Since the 1970s police departments have increasingly hired more non white officers following a court order to diversify police departments 128 The percentage of non white officers doubled 14 to 27 between 1987 and 2016 126 However according to studies there is no evidence that non white officers are less aggressive to non white civilians 126 Furthermore there is no correlation between non white officers and lower rates of police brutality or community satisfaction with policing For example police forces in New York and Philadelphia have comparatively diverse police forces but they have been criticized for their aggressive tactics and racial profiling This is explained by the fact that police department priorities are set by politicians 2 and the larger systematic issues of police culture and racism are still prevalent 126 Militarization of police Edit Main article Militarization of police Police brutality is often linked to the warrior mentality and militarization of police departments 2 Under this system new recruits enter police academies where they may be instructed in a manner similar to paramilitary training 130 or what is called a warrior training Some police academies even employ independent training companies such as Close Quarters Battle which has trained the United States Marine Corps Navy Seals and the special forces of other countries 2 These trainings focus on fear and defensive tactics rather than community interaction and outreach The recruits will focus on learning how to kill and aggressively manage crisis situations as well as engaging in drill formations and standing at attention 130 Recruits will learn that any situation including seemingly routine ones such as traffic stops can turn deadly and they receive minimal training in how to manage complex social situations 2 As noted by Rosa Brooks Many police recruits enter the academy as idealists but this kind of training turns them into cynics 130 Once they are trained and working police often think of crime as a war in which they are warriors and some people are their enemies 131 2 The police are provided with military equipment such as tanks and some work in militarized units such as Special Weapons and Tactics SWAT teams Their equipment partially comes from the Department of Defense due to the 1033 program Established in 1990 by President George H W Bush the program allows the DoD to give law enforcement their excess equipment local authorities only pay for shipping costs with an estimated 7 4 billion of property transferred since the program began 132 Furthermore an estimated 19 of police officers are military veterans 133 documenting a revolving door between the military and the police a phenomenon also found among FBI agents 134 Internal police records provided by the Boston and Miami departments indicate that officers with military experience generate more civilian complaints of excessive force 135 Broken windows theory Edit Main article Broken windows theory Since the 1980s police departments have adopted the broken windows theory as advocated by criminologists like George L Kelling and James Q Wilson This theory posits that signs of disorder or decay in neighborhoods such as broken windows graffiti loitering drug use prostitution etc create an impression that the area is neglected thereby leading to further chaos and crime Therefore if police departments directly respond to smaller neighborhood issues they can help prevent larger issues 136 137 138 By the 1990s police departments had increasingly adopted this philosophy and they adopted policing methods inspired by it such as stop and frisk in New York City adopted in 2001 136 Police departments were empowered to intervene in civilian life and act as moral authorities Meanwhile the problems associated with poor living standards were blamed on civilians rather than political or economic forces Consequently police were given the ability to increase arrests aggressive policing and harassment of civilians which further contributed to police brutality and racial profiling 2 Threat hypothesis Edit Academic theories such as the threat hypothesis and the community violence hypothesis have been used to explain police brutality The threat hypothesis implies that police use force in direct response to a perceived threat from racial and or economic groups viewed as threatening to the existing social order 139 According to the community violence hypothesis police use force in direct response to levels of violence in the community 139 This theory explains that force is used to control groups that threaten the community or police themselves with violence This theory is applied mostly to shield non minorities from competition fear and perceived inconveniences This is usually exercised on a minority usually of African descent without evidence or reasonable doubt The strain minorities feel weaken their mental health and discourages them 140 This ultimately caters to a white community as they no longer must worry about an African potentially winning over their economic position 141 Additionally Threat Hypothesis also enables a safer environment for whites as whites generally don t feel safe when around people of color Usually when around people of color whites tend to police them This makes the environment unsafe for nonwhites 142 This style of policing is a less grotesque way of wrongly punishing people of color the far more intense example would be the act of lynching which would display a person of color be murdered and tortured in front of an audience 143 Police dogs Edit A 2020 investigation coordinated by the Marshall Project found evidence of widespread deployment of police dogs in the U S as disproportionate force and disproportionately against people of color A series of 13 linked reports found more than 150 cases from 2015 to 2020 of K 9 officers improperly using dogs as weapons to catch bite and injure people 144 The rate of police K 9 bites in Baton Rouge Louisiana a majority Black city of 220 000 residents averages more than double that of the next ranked city Indianapolis and nearly one third of the police dog bites are inflicted on teenage men most of whom are Black Medical researchers found that police dog attacks are more like shark attacks than nips from a family pet due to the aggressive training police dogs undergo Many people bitten were not violent and were not suspected of crimes Police officers are often shielded from liability and federal civil rights laws don t typically cover bystanders who are bitten by mistake Even when victims can bring cases lawyers say they struggle because jurors tend to love police dogs 145 Solutions EditBody cameras Edit Main article Body worn video police equipment Many policies have been offered for how to prevent police brutality One proposed solution is body worn cameras The theory of using body cameras is that police officers will be less likely to commit misconduct if they understand that their actions are being recorded 146 The United States Department of Justice under Obama s administration supplied 20 million for body cameras to be implemented in police departments 147 During a case study attempting to test the effects that body cameras had on police actions researchers found evidence that suggested that police used less force with civilians when they had body cameras 146 Police are supposed to have the cameras on from the time they receive a call of an incident to when the entire encounter is over 148 However there is controversy regarding police using the equipment properly 149 The issue regarding an officer s ability to turn on and off the record button is if the police officer is trustworthy In 2017 Baltimore Police Officer Richard A Pinheiro Jr was caught planting evidence The officer did not realize 30 seconds of footage was available even before switching the camera on 150 To solve this problem it has been proposed to record police officers entire shift and not allowing access for police officers to turn on and off the record button This can cause technical and cost issues due to the large amount of data the camera would accumulate for which various solutions have been proposed 151 152 153 154 Another possible issue that can occur is the public s inability to access the body camera footage 155 156 157 According to a survey done by Vocativ in 2014 41 cities use body cams on some of their officers 25 have plans to implement body cams and 30 cities do not use or plan to use cams at this time 149 There are other issues that can occur from the use of body cameras as well This includes downloading and maintenance of the data which can be expensive There is also some worry that if video testimony becomes more relied upon in court cases not having video evidence from body cameras would decrease the likelihood that the court system believes credible testimony from police officers and witnesses 146 Civilian review boards Edit Main article Civilian police oversight agency Civilian review boards have been proposed as another solution to decreasing police brutality Benefits of civilian review boards can include making sure police are doing their jobs and increasing the relationship the police have with the public 158 Civilian review boards have gotten criticism though They can be staffed with police who can weaken the effectiveness of the boards Some boards do not have the authority to order investigations into police departments They can also lack the funding to be an effective tool 158 The origins of the Civilian Review Boards date back as far as 1950 when 18 organizations formed the Permanent Coordination Committee on Police and Minority Groups to lobby the city to deal with police misconduct in general 159 Due to the political climate of the time the Civilians Boards were used as a false solution to help the public feel as if they were heard Unbeknownst to the public the Civilian Review Boards would ultimately house Officers among its staff decreasing the effectiveness 159 Lawsuits and qualified immunity Edit See also Qualified immunity Excessive use of force is a tort and police officers may be held liable for damages should they take unconstitutional actions 160 The ability to sue in federal court was first introduced as a remedy for police brutality and misconduct in 1871 during the Reconstruction era as the Third Enforcement Act The act allowed plaintiffs to sue directly in federal courts which were important as it allowed plaintiffs to bypass state courts during the Jim Crow era The theory behind this solution to police brutality is that by taking the civil action to a federal court level the case will be heard fairly and the financial judgments are intended to have a deterrent effect on future police misconduct in that department 161 Since 1967 this remedy has been restricted by Supreme Court precedents through qualified immunity which grants police officers immunity from lawsuits unless their actions violated clearly established law 162 In practice most jurisdictions rely on court precedent to define clearly established law so to be successful plaintiffs often must show that a previous court case found the particular act at hand unlawful 163 45 4 For example the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals granted immunity to an officer who shot a 14 year old who dropped a BB gun as he raised his hands because unlike a 2011 case where an officer was held liable for shooting a man who lowered a shotgun the boy had pulled the BB gun from his waistband 164 165 This is often a stringent requirement and in a majority of cases since 2005 police officer have been granted immunity for their actions 164 Lawsuits are sometimes successful however For example in a 2001 settlement New York City was required to pay a plaintiff 7 125 million in damages and the Patrolmen s Benevolent Association was required to pay 1 625 million At that time it was the most money the city had ever paid to settle a police brutality lawsuit and is considered the first time that a police union has paid a claim to settle a brutality suit 166 Redirecting funds to other departments defund the police Edit Main article Defund the police nbsp Marchers holding Defund The Police during George Floyd protests June 5 2020After the murder of George Floyd there have been widespread calls to defund the police 167 168 The idea behind this is that money is diverted from policing to the areas needed to prevent crime for example housing employment welfare etc 167 There have been calls for this since society has seen a lack of reform in policing around police brutality and discrimination Police abolition Edit The police abolition movement is a political movement that advocates replacing policing with other systems of public safety 169 Police abolitionists believe that policing as a system is inherently flawed and cannot be reformed a view that rejects the ideology of police reformists 170 171 While reformists seek to address the ways in which policing occurs abolitionists seek to transform policing altogether through a process of disbanding disempowering and disarming the police 172 Abolitionists argue that the institution of policing is deeply rooted in a history of white supremacy and settler colonialism and that it is inseparable from a pre existing racial capitalist order and thus believe a reformist approach to policing will always fail 173 174 175 170 Police abolition is a process that requires communities to create alternatives to policing This process involves the deconstruction of the preconceived understandings of policing and resisting co option by reformists It also involves engaging in and supporting practices that reduce police power and legitimacy such as defunding the police 172 176 177 New York anti restraint law Edit nbsp Protesters holding We Can t Breathe during Eric Garner protests December 7 2014On June 8 2020 both houses of the New York state assembly passed the Eric Garner Anti Chokehold Act which makes it so any police officer in the state of New York who injures or kills somebody through the use of a chokehold or similar restraint can be charged with a Class C felony punishable by up to 15 years in prison 178 New York Governor Andrew Cuomo signed the long overdue police reforms into law on June 12 2020 179 178 Effects EditThis section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section may need to be cleaned up It has been merged from Police brutality Effects of police brutality in the United States This section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed December 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message The neutrality of this section is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Police brutality is the misuse of power by the police force to intentionally harm individuals citation needed The excessive force imposed by police officers has increased 180 over the past decade and caused social misinterpretations of the role that police officers play in the community In 2015 the percentage of people who have confidence in the police hit its lowest since 1993 at 52 percent 181 Of this 52 percent Democrats saw the biggest drop in confidence Democrats confidence in police dropped to 42 from 2017 to 2018 compared with 2012 2013 a larger change than for any other subgroup Over the same period Independents 51 and Republicans 69 confidence in the police has not changed 181 Firearms usage Edit The Supreme Court Decision of Tennessee v Garner made it possible to shoot a fleeing suspect only if they may cause harm to innocent people to prevent officers from shooting every suspect that tries to escape Stereotypes Edit Lorie Fridell Associate Professor of Criminology at University of South Florida states that racial profiling was the number one issue facing police in the 1990s which led her to two conclusions bias in policing was not just a few officers in a few departments and overwhelmingly the police in this country are well intentioned According to a Department of Justice report Officers like the rest of us have an implicit bias linking blacks to crime So the black crime implicit bias might be implicated in some of the use of deadly force against African Americans in our country 182 A 2014 experiment conducted on white undergraduate female students showed that there was a higher degree of fear of racial minorities The paper concluded that people with a higher fear of racial minorities and dehumanization had a lower threshold for shooting Black relative to White and East Asian targets 183 nbsp Protest march in response to the Jamar Clark shooting Minneapolis MinnesotaWhile the Justice Department reported that Cleveland police officers used excessive deadly force including shootings and head strikes with impact weapons unnecessary excessive and retaliatory force including Tasers chemical sprays and their fists on the victim there was no real repercussions from their actions 184 Black Americans and the US police Edit In a report released concerning the shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson Missouri the Justice Department admitted to the Ferguson s police department s pattern of racial bias The department argued that it is typically an effort to ticket as many low income black residents as possible in an attempt to raise local budget revenue through fines and court fees Statistics Edit Data released by the US Bureau of Justice Statistics 2011 showed that from 2003 to 2009 at least 4 813 people died while being arrested by local police Of the deaths classified as law enforcement homicides there were 2 876 deaths of those 1 643 or 57 1 of the deaths were people of color 185 186 According to the police violence tracking website fatalencounters org showed the records of over 29 000 people were killed in police interactions across the US since 2000 187 In 2016 police killed 574 White Americans 266 African Americans 183 Hispanics 24 Native Americans and 21 Asians However for every million in population police killed 10 13 Native Americans 6 66 African Americans 3 23 Hispanics 2 9 White Americans and 1 17 Asians 73 According to the 2020 Police Violence Report 1 126 people were killed by police of which in 16 cases police officers were charged with a crime 620 of the deaths began with police officers responding to reports of non violent offenses or no crime 81 people killed by the police were unarmed 188 Sam Sinyangwe founder of the Mapping Police Violence project stated in 2015 that black people are three times more likely to be killed by police in the United States than white people More unarmed black people were killed by police than unarmed white people last year even though only 14 of the population are black people 182 According to the Mapping Police Violence project in 2019 there were only 27 days where police in the United States didn t kill someone 189 Critics of police brutality also note that sometimes this abuse of force or power can extend to police officer civilian life as well For example critics note that women in around 40 of police officer families have experienced domestic violence 190 and that police officers are convicted of misdemeanors and felonies at a rate of more than six times higher than concealed carry weapon CCW permit holders 191 Public reaction Edit nbsp Protest march in response to the Philando Castile shooting St Paul Minnesota July 7 2016 nbsp Minneapolis high school students protesting the shooting of Michael Brown on the Hennepin Avenue BridgeA 2001 publication noted that local media rarely reported scandals involving out of town police unless events made it onto a network videotape 192 According to a 2002 analysis there is often a dramatic increase in unfavorable attitudes toward the police in the wake of highly publicized events such as the Rampart scandal in the late 1990s and the killings of Amadou Diallo February 1999 and Patrick Dorismond March 2000 in New York City 193 A 1997 study found that when viewers are shown footage of police arrests they may be more likely to perceive the police conduct as brutal if the arresting officers are Caucasian 194 Public opinion polls following the 1991 beating of Rodney King in Los Angeles and the 1992 killing of Malice Green in Detroit indicate that the incidents appear to have had their greatest effect on specific perceptions of the way local police treat black people and markedly less effect on broader perceptions of the extent of discrimination against them 195 To draw attention to the issue of police brutality in America multiple basketball players for the NBA including Kyrie Irving and LeBron James wore shirts labeled I Can t Breathe referring to the death of Eric Garner at the hands of the New York City Police Department on July 17 2014 196 Concerned African Americans also started a movement referred to as Black Lives Matter to try to help people understand how police are affecting African American lives initially prompted by the 2013 acquittal of George Zimmerman of the 2012 killing of Trayvon Martin in Sanford Florida and further sparked by the shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson Missouri on August 9 2014 197 198 In 2016 Colin Kaepernick a quarterback then playing for the San Francisco 49ers started a protest movement by refusing to stand for the national anthem at the start of games 199 200 receiving widespread support and widespread condemnation including from then President Donald Trump 201 In May and June 2020 support for the Black Lives Matter movement surged among Americans as a result of the protests and unrest that broke out across the United States following the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis A tracking poll by Civiqs found that for the first time ever more white Americans supported the Black Lives Matter movement than opposed it 202 Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden condemned police violence against African American communities and called for racial justice while speaking at George Floyd s funeral service 203 204 While many celebrities have joined in on the Black Lives Matter campaign many of the initiatives occurring in communities across the country are led by local members of the Black Lives Matter Global Network The purpose of this network is to demand change at the local level and stop unfair punishment or brutality towards Black communities 205 Legal and institutional controls EditResponsibility for investigating police misconduct in the United States has mainly fallen on local and state governments The federal government does investigate misconduct but only does so when local and state governments fail to look into cases of misconduct 206 Laws intended to protect against police abuse of authority include the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution which prohibits unreasonable searches and seizures the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution which protects individuals against self incrimination and being deprived of life liberty or property without due process the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution which bans cruel and unusual punishments the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution which includes the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses the Civil Rights Act of 1871 and the Federal Tort Claims Act The Civil Rights Act has evolved into a key U S law in brutality cases However 42 U S C 1983 has been assessed as ultimately ineffective in deterring police brutality 207 The federal government can place charges on police officers who commit police misconduct These prosecutions do not often occur as the federal government tends to defer to local and state governments for prosecution 206 The federal government also has the ability to investigate police departments if they are committing unlawful actions When an investigation reveals violations by a police department the Department of Justice can use 14141 208 to file a lawsuit Like other tools at their disposal the federal government also rarely uses this statute 206 In a 1996 law journal article it was argued that Judges often give police convicted of brutality light sentences on the grounds that they have already been punished by damage to their careers 209 A 1999 article attributed much of this difficulty in combating police brutality to the overwhelming power of the stories mainstream American culture tells about the encounters leading to police violence 210 In 1978 surveys of police officers found that police brutality along with sleeping on duty was viewed as one of the most common and least likely to be reported forms of police deviance other than corruption 211 In Tennessee v Garner 1985 the Supreme Court ruled that the Fourth Amendment prevents police from using deadly force on a fleeing suspect unless the police have good reason to believe that the suspect is a danger to others 212 The Supreme Court in Graham v Connor 1989 stated that the reasonableness of a police officer using force should be based on what the officer s viewpoint was when the crime occurred Reasonableness should also factor in things like the suspect s threat level and if attempts were made to avoid being arrested 213 In 1967 the U S Supreme Court introduced the legal doctrine of qualified immunity originally with the rationale of protecting law enforcement officials from frivolous lawsuits and financial liability in cases where they acted in good faith in an unclear legal situation 214 18 Starting in around 2005 courts increasingly applied this doctrine to cases involving the use of excessive force eventually leading to widespread criticism that it has become a nearly failsafe tool to let police brutality go unpunished and deny victims their constitutional rights as summarized in a 2020 Reuters report 18 On May 25 2022 President Joe Biden signed an executive order that would ban chokeholds and carotid restraints adopt body camera policies limit the use of no knock warrants to certain circumstances and adopt updated use of force standards that encourage de escalation for all federal law enforcement agents 215 216 In art EditIn July 2019 the Glimmerglass Festival in Cooperstown New York premiered Jeanine Tesori and Tazewell Thompson s opera Blue about African American teenagers as an endangered species often falling victim to police brutality 217 See also EditBlacks in Law Enforcement of America Death in custody United States Gypsy cop Henry A Wallace Police Crime Public Database Human rights in the United States Lists of killings by law enforcement officers in the United States Moral insanity Pain compliance Peelian principles Photography Is Not a Crime Pitchess motion Police use of deadly force in the United States Proactive policing Psychopathy Rough ride police brutality Use of torture by police in the United StatesReferences Edit March 18 2015 The uncounted why the US can t keep track of people killed by police 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Joanna 2023 Shielded How the Police Became Untouchable New York Viking ISBN 9780593299364 OCLC 1315739343 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Police brutality in the United States The Counted Tracking people killed by police in the United States The Guardian PuppycideDB The first nationwide database tracking police shootings of animals Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Police brutality in the United States amp oldid 1179923203, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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