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Wikipedia

Police misconduct

Police misconduct is inappropriate conduct and illegal actions taken by police officers in connection with their official duties. Types of misconduct include among others: sexual offences, coerced false confession, intimidation, false arrest, false imprisonment, falsification of evidence, spoliation of evidence, police perjury, witness tampering, police brutality, police corruption, racial profiling, unwarranted surveillance, unwarranted searches, and unwarranted seizure of property.

Types of police misconduct edit

Types of police misconduct include:

  • Bribing or lobbying legislators to pass or maintain laws that give police excessive power or status
  • Similarly, bribing or lobbying city council members to pass or maintain municipal laws that make victimless acts ticket-able (e.g. bicycling on the sidewalk), so as to get more money
  • Selective enforcement ("throwing the book at" people who one dislikes; this is often related to racial discrimination)
  • Sexual misconduct[1]
  • Off-duty misconduct[2]
  • Killing of dogs unjustly[3]
  • Noble cause corruption, where the officer believes the good outcomes justify bad behavior[4]
  • Using badge or other ID to gain entry into concerts, to get discounts, etc.[how?]
  • Influence of drugs or alcohol while on duty
  • Violations by officers of police procedural policies
  • Abusive police procedures

Police officers often share what is known in the United States as a "blue code of silence" which means that they do not turn each other in for misconduct. While some officers have called this code a myth,[5] a 2005 survey found evidence that it exists.[6] A 2019 study in the journal Nature found that misconduct by one police officer substantially increased the likelihood that peer officers would also engage in misconduct.[7][8] In addition to the blue code of silence, police misconduct also can lead to a miscarriage of justice and sometimes the obstruction of justice. At least 85,000 officers in the US have been investigated for misconduct, and some are constantly under investigation; nearly 2,500 have been investigated on 10 or more charges.[9]

In an effort to control police misconduct, there is an accelerating trend for civilian agencies to engage directly in investigations and to have greater inputs into disciplinary decisions. Additionally, individuals and groups are now filming police activities in an effort to make them accountable for their actions. With the proliferation of smart devices capable of high-quality video recording, instances of police misconduct and abuse are gaining attention on social media platforms and video-hosting sites such as YouTube. To protect their interests, some officers have resorted to verbal intimidation as well as physical violence against civilians attempting to record their misdeeds. In other circumstances, police will illegally seize, destroy or delete evidence recorded by civilians, in spite of laws that make it a crime to destroy evidence of a crime being committed.[10][11]

Contributors and prediction edit

Police misconduct is sometimes associated with conscious or unconscious discrimination. Misconduct has been shown to be related to personality and correlated to education, but it can also be significantly affected by the culture of the police agency.[12] Education is negatively correlated to misconduct, with better-educated officers receiving fewer complaints on average.[13]

Some analyses have found that changes in structural disadvantage, population mobility, and immigrant population have been associated with changes in police misconduct. Social disorganization may create a context for police misconduct because residents may not have in place the social networks necessary to organize against police malpractice.[14] The fact that most police officers enjoy broad discretion and minimal supervision has been cited as increasing opportunities for police misconduct.[15]

Video and audio recording edit

Many police cars are now equipped with recording systems, which can deter, document or rebut police misconduct during traffic stops. Usually, the recordings have rebutted claims of police misconduct according to a 2004 study by the International Association of Chiefs of Police and Community Oriented Policing Service;[16] future innovations in recording equipment could allow an officer's entire workday to be recorded.[16] Some transparency advocates believe that such cameras should be installed in all police cruisers to ensure accountability.[17] Some police departments have experimented with Taser cameras that automatically begin recording when the Taser is deployed.[18] The Cato Institute recommends that police record all no-knock raids.[19] In recent times, police departments have been trying to implement the body camera as a step to fixing misconduct. The police departments in Pittsburgh have been trying body cameras on their officers to see both the positive and negative aspects of using body cameras.[20]

Recording by witnesses has made a significant impact on the notability and handling of police incidence[according to whom?], such as the Rodney King beating.

Advantages and Disadvantages of Body Worn Cameras - Police Misconduct edit

Although body worn cameras(BWCs) can record several situations involving law enforcement misbehavior, the key question is whether they're able to also prevent it. In an effort to enhance interactions between the police and the community, several police departments are beginning to use BWCs. Which agencies are implementing them and which police agencies are not? In this article, the authors highlight how not all police departments around the nation are utilizing video recording technology. Law enforcement agencies who do not believe the new technology is necessary, who indicate a lack of support for BWC adoption from the agency's leadership and from patrol personnel, and who have privacy and cost-related concerns, report resistance to the use of BWCs. Police departments that registered a higher percentage of complaints for the excessive use of physical force are significantly more likely to be against the adoption of BWCs, even though the authors' discussion of the perceived lack of public support for the adoption of BWCs does not distinguish between agencies that intend to acquire BWCs and agencies that do not. Police agencies who have already purchased other types of recording technology have a substantially higher level of support for the use of BWCs. Results showed that law enforcement agencies located in US states with strong police unions are more likely to show resistance to the adoption of BWCs soon, even though recent state level legislative changes related to BWCs do not have a significant impact on BWC adoption decisions at the organization level.[21]

Studies on BWC toward police misconduct edit

Some studies suggest that body-worn cameras may offer benefits while others show either no impact or possible negative effects when it comes to police misbehavior and many police agencies choosing whether to use BWCs in hopes of reducing police misconduct or strengthen the police and community ties.[22] As an example, some studies have examined the claimed benefits of BWCs, including the ability to reduce citizen complaints and police use of force.[23] Early research claimed that using BWCs lowered both outcomes significantly, but several subsequent investigations have failed to find similar results.[24] for example, one study based on data from a randomized controlled trial conducted by the Spokane (WA) Police Department in which BWCs were issued to about 82 patrol officers in May and the remaining officers in November of the same year.  This research evaluates the influence of BWCs on use of force, complaints against police, and officer injuries using more than three years' worth of official department data, both before and after the deployment of BWCs.[25]

Another study examines how BWCs are marketed as a technological improvement that will result in more pleasant interactions between police and residents.[26] There have been attempts to explain how BWCs impact various policing outcomes, but little research has been done on how BWCs influence assaults on police. In this current study is limited to a few jurisdictions and has minimal relevance to a broader spectrum of police organizations. This study explores the relationship between BWCs and police victimization by focusing on total assaults and attacks with guns against police officers using data from a sample of 516 police organizations. The data show that BWC usage is negatively associated with police victimization.[26] The study concludes that BWCs can help prevent the occurrence of both moderate and severe violence against police in a variety of circumstances and among a wide spectrum of law enforcement organizations.[26]

Although there are many studies on why implementing BWCs in the hope of reducing police misconduct and the use of force by law enforcement toward citizens, there are many studies that also show the challenges that come with implementing BWCs. Techno-fixes by themselves will not resolve underlying issues of fractured community–police relations, including ongoing issues of racial and ethnic antagonism and colonialism, and may even exacerbate these tensions.[27] True reform requires establishing bonds of trust between communities and police that acknowledge the importance of procedural treatment, which may be supported by but are not dependent on BWCs.[28]

Mobile devices edit

As digital recording technology usage has increased, especially using cell phones, there have been more cases of civilians capturing video of alleged police misconduct.[10][29] In response, members of law enforcement have begun using eavesdropping and wiretapping laws to charge civilians who record police without their knowledge. Some police organizations such as the Fraternal Order of Police support the prosecutions.[30] In Illinois, from 1994 to 2014, recording police without consent was a class 1 felony that could carry a prison term of 15 years.[31] In a May 2012 ruling, the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals ruled 2-1 that the statute "likely violates the First Amendment's free-speech and free-press guarantees".[32] On 30 December 2014, then-Governor Pat Quinn signed into law an amendment to the Statute, PA 98–1142, which decriminalized the recording of law enforcement officers in the performance of their duties in public places or in circumstances in which the officers have no reasonable expectation of privacy.[33]

Most charges involving recording police are dropped or dismissed as courts have ruled on-duty police officers in public have no reasonable expectation of privacy.[10] However, police "can use vaguer charges, such as interfering with a police officer, refusing to obey a lawful order, obstructing an arrest or police action, or disorderly conduct". Perjury put along with this is lying under oath and giving false charges.[30] Arrests for these charges are more common, as are incidents of police illegally confiscating cameras, deleting evidence or misinforming citizens they cannot film. This video evidence has played a key role in raising public awareness of police misconduct during and after an incident such as the BART Police shooting of Oscar Grant, Death of Ian Tomlinson, Robert Dziekański death.[34]

Noted cases edit

 
Mexico City's Police Chief, Arturo Durazo Moreno, was arrested in 1984.

Australia edit

In 1987, the Fitzgerald Inquiry was launched in response to allegations of misconduct within the Queensland Police Service, before later being expanded to investigate allegations of corruption within the Queensland Government. At the conclusion of the inquiry, several senior police figures and government ministers were charged and jailed for various corruption offences. The inquiry led to the resignation of then Queensland Premier Joh Bjelke-Petersen, who was later charged with perjury before the case was abandoned due to a hung jury.[35]

In the mid-1990s, a Royal Commission was established to investigate allegations of corruption and misconduct within the New South Wales Police Service (later changed to New South Wales Police Force). The commission found that there was “systematic and entrenched” corruption within the organization, with adverse findings being made against 284 officers, seven of whom were jailed for various offences.[36]

In 2001, New South Wales Police were given the power to deploy drug detection dogs at certain public locations across the state – namely at major events, train stations and licensed venues.[37] More recently, the practice has been criticized due to reports of officers routinely using indications from drug detection dogs as a justification for conducting strip searches, particularly at major public events such as music festivals (see New South Wales Police Force Strip Search Scandal).[38][39] In 2018, an inquiry was launched by the state’s police watchdog, who found that in several cases, officers had acted unlawfully.[40] In 2022, a class action pertaining to strip searches conducted at music festivals from July 2016 onward was filed in the state’s Supreme Court.[41]

Bahrain edit

During Bahraini uprising of 2011, the police forces of Bahrain were known for their heavy handedness. Many protesters and even medical staff who attended to the injured, were arrested.[42]

Brazil edit

Brazil has a historical problem and police violence incluing summary executions. Around 6,175 people were killed by police in 2018 and 6,416 in 2020, totaling 37,029 deaths since 2013.[43][44]

 
Police approach civil population in the brazilian Federal District.

Police violence is one of the most internationally recognized human rights abuses in Brazil. The problem of urban violence focuses on the perpetual struggle between police and residents of high crime favelas such as the areas portrayed in the film City of God and mainly Elite Squad.

Police response in many parts of Brazil is extremely violent, including summary execution and torture of suspects. According to Global Justice, in 2003, the police killed 1,195 people in the State of Rio de Janeiro alone. In the same year 45 police officers were killed. It is often reacted to by local communities and trafficking groups with demonstrations and violent resistance, causing escalation and multiplying victims.[citation needed] Unofficial estimates show there are over 3,000 deaths annually from police violence in Brazil, according to Human Rights Watch. There are constant complaints of racism, abuses, torture, executions and disappearances. Not all states record police killings or keep accurate statistics.[citation needed]

Reports of killings by Rio de Janeiro police decreased during the year under a new state security strategy. Statistics released by the Rio de Janeiro State Secretariat for Public Security showed 911 persons killed as a result of police confrontations from January through September, a 12 percent decrease over the same period in 2007. The Rio de Janeiro Institute for Public Security reported that police killed an average of four persons per day during 2007. According to a UN report released in September, police clashes resulted in 1,260 civilian deaths in Rio de Janeiro State in 2007. Most of these killings occurred during "acts of resistance," the UN report commented. The São Paulo State Secretariat for Public Security reported that São Paulo state police (civil and military) killed 340 civilians in the state from January to September, compared with 315 during the same period in 2007. Cases involving extrajudicial executions were either under police investigation or before the state courts; observers believed that it could take years to resolve such cases.[citation needed]

There were no reports of politically motivated disappearances. However, the Center of Studies of Security and Citizenship estimated that in 2006 approximately 1,940 persons "disappeared"; the center believed many were killed by police. There were no developments in the disappearance cases that occurred during the 1964-85 military dictatorship, and 400 cases remained for the Amnesty Commission to analyze. There were also no developments regarding the 2007 Chamber of Deputies' Human Rights Committee request that the government seize documents to determine the circumstances of military regime political prisoner deaths and the locations of their remains.[45]

Canada edit

In October 2007, there was an incident at Vancouver International Airport involving new Polish immigrant Robert Dziekański. Dziekański was tasered five times during the arrest, became unresponsive and died.[46] The incident was video recorded by a civilian who turned it over to police, then sued to get it back for release to news outlets.[11] The official inquiry found the RCMP were not justified deploying the taser and that the officers deliberately misrepresented their actions to investigators.[47] The incident affected taser use in Canada and relations with Poland.[48][49]

During the 2010 G-20 Toronto summit protests, police enacted regulations the Ombudsman found contributed to "massive violations of civil rights".[50] One regulation made the security zone public works and police interpreted this to permit them to arrest anyone not providing identification within five-metres of the temporary fence.[51] There were 1,118 arrests with 800 released without charge,[52][53] Police Chief Blair conceded later no five-metre rule existed in law[54] and Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty was criticized for allowing this misinterpretation.[55] In September 2011, officers who removed their name tags during the G-20 protests were refused promotion.[56]

Security officers in Metrotown, Burnaby mall demanded pictures taken of an arrest be deleted from a teen's camera. This led to a verbal confrontation and the RCMP handcuffing the teen and cutting off his backpack to search it. While the mall supports its officers actions according to the teen's lawyer: "private mall security guards and police have no right to try to seize someone's camera or demand that photos be deleted – even on private property."[57]

China edit

The collusion between local gangs and police officers is a serious problem in many Chinese cities.[58] Local gang bosses make use of personal networks to bribe police officers, and police officers seek corrupt benefits by safeguarding their illegal businesses.[59][60] A widely publicized case is the Wen Qiang Case.[61] Wen Qiang a deputy police chief, along with family members, were arrested as part of a massive crackdown on corruption of the People's Armed Police and organized crime in Chongqing in late 2009. His crimes included bribes, rape and failing to account for assets. Wen was executed in July 2010.[62] The trials highlighted the continued use of torture by police to obtain confessions,[63] despite laws implemented in June 2010 excluding tortured confessions from being used in trials.[64]

Egypt edit

A high profile rape case was reported in Egypt by a woman in 2014, who as of 8 February 2021 still seeks justice. In addition, the key witness who offered to help his friend, Seif Bedour, was subjected to torture while in pretrial custody. Bedour has been put through extreme forms of police misconduct and reportedly subjected to virginity tests via forced anal examination and drug tests. His family has been subjected to public humiliation and trauma following his misconduct in the custody. Meanwhile, the lack of adequate investigation into the 2014 Fairmont Hotel rape case has caused an unusual delay in serving justice to the victim.[65][66]

France edit

Recent social movements ("Gilets jaunes", 2019-2020 strikes against the pension system reform[67]) brought to light a certain culture of violence ingrained within French police, particularly CRS.[68][69] Although French President Emmanuel Macron denied police brutality and the use of this term,[70] he acknowledged that there have been some "individual errors" that shouldn't tarnish the police corps as a whole.

A French newspaper has tracked various serious injuries that occurred during the yellow vests movement.[71] The death of a French deliveryman from a heart attack in January 2020 in Paris, after police restraining him in a prone position following a traffic stop, prompted a debate in France over controversial restraint techniques used by police.[72]

Police interventions are mostly to prevent violent actions from members of radical and anarchists groups ("black blocs"),[73] but an important number of bystanders, journalists,[74] and firefighters[75] have also been targeted by the police.

United Nations High Commissioner on Human rights Michelle Bachelet compared the use of force in France to that seen in protests in Sudan and Haiti; in March 2019, the UN opened a formal inquiry into the use of police violence against France.[76][77]

The right to film police was made known when the "Sécurité Globale" (Global security) law was put under review by the French Parliament.

Hong Kong edit

India edit

It is believed[by whom?] that corruption among the Indian Police Service is pervasive and goes up to the top brass.[78] Reform has been made difficult with honest officers pressured by powerful local officials and suffer punitive transfers and threats while corrupt officers receive promotions. An example is the transfer of Kiran Bedi for giving a parking ticket to the Prime Ministers car.[79] A number of officers face charges in Central Bureau of Investigation cases and disciplinary proceedings but it is alleged[by whom?] that no notable action under the penal provisions is taken. With citizens who are not aware of laws of India, police of Andhra pradesh can shout, swear and be verbally abusive. They are also corrupted by organized crime groups called "factionalists" in Rayalaseema.[citation needed][80] Some of the past scandals include murder,[81] sexual harassment,[82] sex-on-tape scandal,[83] dowry harassment,[84] fraud[85] and fake killing encounter.[86]

Iran edit

After the 1979 revolution, the police have become more corrupt. A British-Australian doctor, Dr Kylie Moore-Gilbert endured months of torture after she was arrested by Iranian police. [87]

Norway edit

Police misconduct has become an issue of high media attention in Norway. The death of Eugene Ejike Obiora, a naturalized Norwegian of Nigerian origin in September 2006 stirred an uproar that as of September 2007 has caused the authorities to announce significant changes to the way charges of police brutality and other forms of police misconduct, including corruption, involving the Norwegian police will be handled in the future. As a consequence of the Obiora case, training at the Norwegian Police Academy has undergone changes and national police director Ingelin Killengreen has instigated a thorough review of police methods in general.[88]

One officer employed in Oslo Police District was sentenced in 2006 to two years in prison for human trafficking, embezzlement of money and weapons, as well as theft of emergency passports.[89] Two cases were from Follo Police District.[90] One officer was accused of having felt up a number of women during interrogations. He was acquitted on almost all charges by the regional court. Another officer had been accused of abuse of power during an arrest. The Supreme Court of Norway ordered the case to be retried in the regional court after the acquittal was appealed. Another case involves a female officer from Telemark Police District who was issued a fine of 10.000 kroner and the loss of her employment for a period of five years for embezzlement and breach of confidentiality, among other issues.[91]

A prominent case of intentional[according to whom?] miscarriage of justice was against Fritz Moen.[92] In the case, several officers appear to have manipulated timelines, threatened the accused and witnesses, and made false statements to close the case.[citation needed]

According to a 2012 official report, 18 police officers have lost their jobs as result of misconduct since 2005.[93]

On May 21, 2013, the owner of Circus Bazaar Magazine recorded on video [94] two Norwegian plain-clothed police hold a handcuffed African migrant man on the ground and force multiple police batons his mouth under suspicion of concealing drugs.[95] The man was then driven a significant distance outside the capital city of Oslo and left in an unknown location.[96] The recording of the initial incident resulted in extensive investigations by multiple authorities in Norway, including Police internal affairs and the Norwegian Anti Discrimination Ombud.[97] Although the police officers concerned were not charged, the investigations led to Oslo Police District being fined 80,000 Norwegian Kroner and receiving an organizational charge of "Gross misconduct".[98]

The event also resulted in significant media attention, with the Director of the Department of Public and International Law at the University of Oslo, Aslak Syse stating that "It may appear as if both the law against degrading and inhumane treatment (UCHR art. 3), and the law against the violation of a person's privacy, have been violated."[94] A Norwegian news agency also attracted significant attention by controversially running the headline "Even shit-bags should be treated decently by police". The headline was derived from a quote on the incident by the former head of Norwegian Police Security Service (PST) Ellen Holager Andenæs.[99]

The incident also led to the production of the documentary film The Serpent in Paradise.[100]

Poland edit

The Ministry of Public Security (MBP) was a Polish communist secret police service operating from 1945 to 1954 under Jakub Berman. The MBP carried out brutal pacification of civilians, mass arrests, makeshift executions such as the Mokotów Prison murder and 1946 public execution in Dębica, and secret assassinations.[101]

Individual law enforcement officers noted for torture and terror include Anatol Fejgin (1909–2002) and his deputy Józef Światło (1915–1994), in charge of the MBP's notorious Special Bureau; Salomon Morel (1919–2007), commander of the Zgoda labour camp; Stanisław Radkiewicz (1903–1987), head of the MBP's Department of Security (UB) 1944–1954; and Józef Różański (1907–1981), colonel in the MBP.

After the fall of communism the instances of police brutality are still noted in relation to policing sports matches, mostly football; the 1998 Słupsk riots and 2015 Knurów riots were the result of the killing a fan by the police each time.

Russia edit

Police corruption and brutality is rampant in Russia as it is common for officers to be hired as private security on the side by businessmen and Russian mafia.[102] This leads to conflicts of interest as business and political rivals are jailed with selective enforcement of laws and trumped-up charges, or kidnapped for ransom. These tactics are believed to have been used against billionaire Mikhail Khodorkovsky to "weaken an outspoken political opponent, to intimidate other wealthy individuals and to regain control of strategic economic assets".[103] Meanwhile, bureaucrats who are found guilty of significant crimes get away with light sentences.[102] Intimidation and violence against journalists and whistle blowers is high as Russia remains one of the worst countries at solving their murders.[104] It is widely believed the Federal Security Service (successor to the KGB) remain in control using the police as foot soldiers, and are unaccountable with connections to organized crime and the Russian leadership.[102]

South Africa edit

At least 25 people were killed after South African police opened fire on a crowd of about 3,000 striking miners, in Rustenburg, 100 km northwest of Johannesburg, on 16 August 2012. The police were armed with automatic rifles and pistols. Workers at a platinum mine were asking for better wages.[105][106]

Saudi Arabia edit

Jamal Khashoggi was a critic of Saudi Arabia who was tortured and murdered by Saudi law enforcement officials. He was invited to the Saudi embassy in Turkey and was kidnapped there.[107] In 2011, Saudi Arabia also sent law enforcement to next door Bahrain to put down protesters.[42]

United Arab Emirates edit

Police in the UAE have abused those in their custody and sometimes this abuse has led to death. The Abu Dhabi Police allegedly assisted Sheikh Issa bin Zayed Al Nahyan in a 2009 torture incident.[108] The Police are also alleged to have used excessive force on critics and protesters.[109]

United Kingdom edit

Police misconduct/negligence in the UK has been altered numerous times due to the influx in claims in negligence against the police. The case of Hill v Chief Constable of West Yorkshire initially provided that police could not be liable in negligence since when investigating crime, the police owe no duty of care in tort to individual citizens. This was widely adopted by the courts, but there was backlash since it granted the police 'blanket immunity' essentially meaning they could not be liable in claims of negligence.[110] This was demonstrated in the cases of Hill v Chief Constable of West Yorkshire, Van Colle v Chief Constable of Hertfordshire and Smith v Chief Constable of South Wales Police.

This was later overruled in the case of Robinson v Chief constable of West Yorkshire in which the courts held the police could be liable for harm caused to a claimant as a result of their direct actions. It was still acknowledged that similar to the general public, they do not have a duty of care to warn, protect or rescue an individual from harm caused by a third party of external factor.[110]

United States edit

The Chicago Police Department in August 1968 initiated a "police riot" according to the Walker Report which gathered testimony on the violence surrounding the 1968 Democratic National Convention and Anti-Vietnam War protests.[111] Years later, the Chicago Police Department would deal with even more scandal involving the now infamous crooked cop Lt. Jon Burge and the torture cases that came out of his district. The New York Police Department (NYPD) had a prominent case of two detectives working for the Mafia during the 1980s. The Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) in the late 1990s had a large incident of misconduct with the Rampart scandal implicating 70 officers of an anti-gang unit called C.R.A.S.H. This resulted in a US$70 million in lawsuit settlement payouts, dissolving of the unit and the LAPD entering into a consent decree with the U.S. Department of Justice on comprehensive reforms.[112][113][114]

During the 1990s the New Orleans Police Department (NOPD) also came under the scrutiny of the Justice Department when a series of crimes, including murders, by officers prompted attempts at reform by then Police Chief Richard Pennington. In the wake of Hurricane Katrina there was a spike in allegations of misconduct and in March 2011 the Justice Department published a 158-page report that found "systemic violations of civil rights" by a NOPD that routinely failed to discipline officers involved.[115] Six cases stemming from Katrina have been investigated and followed closely by ProPublica,[116] one being the Danziger Bridge shootings that resulted in two civilian deaths and four wounded. In August 2011, four officers were convicted of unlawfully firing on citizens then trying to cover it up with the assistance of a fifth investigating officer.[117]

In a number of jurisdictions, police officers have been accused of ticket fixing.[118]

Police lying under oath, particularly in drug crimes, is allegedly commonplace in certain areas; some federal grant programs such as Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant Program are tied to numbers, and police officers may also feel pressured to prove their productivity.[119]

The New York State Police Troop C scandal involved the fabrication of evidence used to convict suspects in New York by the New York State Police.[120]

Police Misconduct in Chicago's Police Department (CPD) edit

Investigations have found that there is little to no accountability within the CPD. The department has neglected to investigate a majority of case complaints regarding police brutality. Investigations that were made were carried out poorly. Civilian and officer witnesses are often not interviewed, investigators ignored the potential for witness coaching and inappropriate coordination of testimony. Questioning of officers often aim to elicit favorable statements from them, often ignoring inconsistencies and unreasonable explanations when recounting events.[121]

Cost of police misconduct edit

United States edit

 
Misconduct Payouts by the 10 U.S. Cities with the Largest Police Departments

The United States has lost millions to police misconduct:

City Years of Cost Total Cost
Baltimore 2010-2014 $12 million[122]
Boston 2005-2015 $36 million[123]
Chicago 2004-2014 $521 million[124]
Cleveland 2004-2014 $8.2 million[123]
Dallas 2011-2014 $6.5 million[123]
Minneapolis 2011-2014 $9.3 million[123]
New York City 2006-2011 $348 million[124]
Phoenix 2010-2014 $5.6 million[123]
Philadelphia 2010-2014 $54.3 million[123]
Los Angeles 2002-2011 $101 million[124]
Oakland 1990-2014 $74 million[124]
Washington, D.C. 2010-2014 $30.5 million[123]

In 2015, the Wall Street Journal reported that during a five-year period the 10 United States cities with the largest police departments had spent over $1.4 billion on police misconduct settlements.[125] In between the years of 2010 and 2014 the total annual cost of police misconduct settlements increased, declining only in 2012, and then followed by the highest total in 2014 of $248.7 million.[125]

Largest police misconduct settlements edit

With the rise of body worn cameras by police departments, settlements have also increased in both the size of the settlement and frequency of settlements. In 2015, Eric Garner's family settled with New York City, and was awarded $5.9 million in a wrongful death suit at the hands of a New York City Police Department (NYPD) officer.[126] While Garner's case was more recent, and perhaps more known to the general public, it was not New York City's most expensive individual settlement due to police misconduct. Abner Louima was abused by NYPD personnel while in custody in 1997 and settled in 2001 with the city of New York for $8.75 million.[127]

Perhaps the most costly individual settlement ever due to police misconduct occurred in Chicago when Christina Eilman suffered from a bipolar episode at Midway Airport and was arrested. Eilman was then released in a high-crime neighborhood at night in Chicago without any assistance or follow-up on her well-being. Eilman fell from a 7th-story window after being raped and suffered permanent brain damage. Eilman received $22.5 million in a settlement with the city of Chicago.[127]

The most expensive group police misconduct settlement case in New York, and possibly the most expensive group police misconduct settlement case ever, was awarded to the Central Park Five. These five men were victims to police torture that eventually resulted in false confessions and convictions. These men settled for $41 million.[127]

Other notable police misconduct settlements edit

Jon Burge, a former Chicago Police Department Commander is estimated to have cost Chicago, the state of Illinois, and the county of Cook $132 million in over 20 different cases.[128] Burge was known to torture, beat, electrically shock, suffocate, and play games of Russian roulette to force confessions.[128] As part of a reparations package to victims of Burge and his team, Chicago opened the Chicago Torture Justice Center in Englewood to provide services such as counseling to those who have been victim of police misconduct.[129]

In 2000, Prince Jones, a student at Howard University, was followed by an unmarked police car; fearing for his safety he exited the car to confront the man following him who proceeded to flash a gun. Jones entered his car and put his truck into reverse, hitting the officer twice. The officer fired 16 shots into Jones' car, killing him.[130] This incident received national news coverage and was featured in Ta-Nehisi Coates' book Between the World and Me.[131] Jones' family received a settlement from Prince Georges county of $3.7 million.[132]

Settling for Misconduct edit

The Chicago Reporter created a database titled "Settling for Misconduct" to track civil suits against the Chicago Police Department (CPD) with the intent of bringing awareness to the fact that a lawsuit against CPD is settled, on average, every other day.[133] The website lists cases such as the murder of Laquan McDonald by Jason Van Dyke which gained national attention and resulted in a $5 million settlement for McDonald's family.[134] The database also shows less-known cases such as an older settlement for $100,000 in which Jason Van Dyke was named for excessive force.[135] The database even includes a false arrest settlement for $1.00 against CPD officer Luis Luarenzana.[136]

Canada edit

Canada has also lost millions of dollars to police misconduct settlements. Toronto, in particular, has paid $27 million in settlements for actions of police dogs, use of force, false arrests, and car chases.[137] The biggest settlement was for $2 million when a taxi driver, Ali Adaba Ghomi, was hit by a car fleeing from police and was taken to the hospital in critical condition.[137] In October 2007 members of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) tased Robert Dziekanski, ultimately killing him.[138] The settlement in Dziekanski's case was confidential, although it was revealed that the RCMP in addition to the cost of the settlement also donated $20,000 for a scholarship.[138]

South Africa edit

In 2011, Nathi Mthethwa, the South African Police Minister disclosed that across the country more than R106m ($7,153,276) was paid in police misconduct settlements due to actions of the South African Police Service (SAPS) in the 2010-2011 fiscal year.[139] According to financial statements of SAPS, the financial balance of civil claims against the South African Police at the conclusion of the 2012 fiscal year totaled R14.8 billion ($998,651,608).[140] In one of the more notable cases, Mido Macia was dragged by a police van, and assaulted by police in 2013 in Daveyton, South Africa, the event was caught on camera, and Macia later died while in the custody of police. On 21 November 2018, his family received R6.5m ($439,110.75) in a lawsuit settlement.[141]

Russia edit

The cost of police misconduct in Russia comes in the form of bribery. In 2015, Russia Police reported the average amount per bribe had reached 654,000 rubles (US$9,105.18).[142] Russia has attempted to crack down on the situation, in 2015, between January and September, Russian President Vladimir Putin reported that 8,800 people were convicted of corruption.[142] On a 5,000 kilometer route, truck drivers can expect to pay anywhere from 50,000 ($786) to 70,000 rubles ($1,101.45) on bribes to police officers.[142]

Oversight edit

Hong Kong and New York City edit

The Hong Kong and New York City police departments, both of which have had issues with police misconduct and corruption, have approached the problem in different ways. For corruption, Hong Kong created an external agency which investigates corruption, while New York reviews corruption through an internal department, although the information is reported to a monitoring commission. New York also uses "integrity checks" in which an officer's integrity is tested through an opportunity for corruption. For misconduct, Hong Kong reviews complaints internally with a monitoring commission while New York has created the New York City Civilian Complaint Review Board (NYCCCRB) which investigates and makes a formal recommendation to the commissioner.[143] The disciplinary records of police in New York State are confidential.

Norway edit

The Special Unit for Police Affairs (SUPA) was established on 1 January 2005. In 2006 the unit received 904 complaints, of which 101 led to indictment. Of these 26 ended with the issuance of a fine, 8 cases criminal charges were brought, 64 went to trial, and 3 cases were given "påtaleunnlatelse" (no charges despite misconduct likely took place). Four police officers alone were responsible for 63 of the 101 cases. In September 2007, Jan Egil Presthus, Director of SUPA, stated to the Oslo newspaper Dagsavisen that investigations of police conduct involving death are going to be posted on the Internet. He states that total openness will strengthen the publics confidence in the unit's integrity and impartiality.[citation needed] This came following Dagsavisen in June 2007 publishing an overview of police cases with a deadly outcome. The article showed that in the ten most serious cases after the establishment of the SUPA all charges against the police were eventually dropped.[citation needed]

A media discourse focusing on deaths incurred during police arrests and transports continued in Norway throughout 2007, and Presthus counts this as one factor triggering the initiative to publish ongoing investigations on the Internet.[citation needed] The cases will be presented on the web pages of SUPA, in a way that preserves the anonymity of officers and other parties involved where deemed necessary.[144]

United States edit

In the United States, access to police disciplinary records vary from state to state.[145] The Murder of George Floyd encouraged some US states to make police disciplinary records public.[146] The U.S. government does not regularly collect data on police misconduct. One attempt to track misconduct is the Cato Institute's National Police Misconduct Reporting Project, which estimates misconduct rates using newspaper reports.[147] The project's data suggest that police are more likely than the average person to commit a number of crimes including assault, sexual assault, and murder, but less likely to commit robbery.[148] The NPMSRP projects that roughly 1 in 4.7 officers will be implicated in an act of misconduct during the course of their career.[149] In the United States, the exclusionary rule means that evidence gathered through misconduct is sometimes inadmissible in court.

The Black Panther Party sought to oppose police brutality through neighborhood patrols. Police officers were often followed by armed Black Panthers, who at times came to aid African-Americans who were victims of brutality and racial prejudice. Groups like Copwatch continue to use the patrol method in communities, often using video cameras to document them.[150]

In a 2004 United States survey of the public's opinions on accountability in reforming police, most members of the public wanted an "early warning system" that flags officers who have received many complaints, video cameras on police cars, detailed records of police stops, and citizen review boards.[151] Citizen review of police has been an issue, with law enforcement concerned that citizens reviewing their actions do not understand the procedures they operate by and the citizen review board advocates arguing that the law enforcement "code of silence" requires that they have input into the disciplinary action. As of 2003, three-fourths of the United States' largest cities had citizen review boards.[152] Early warning systems are procedures designed to identify and address issues of problem officers, as around 10% of officers are theorized to cause 90% of the problems. Early warning systems were recommended by the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights in 1981, and by 1999 an estimated 27% of police agencies serving populations of over 50,000 people had implemented these programs. The systems collect data such as complaints, which triggers an intervention at a certain point. After the intervention, the officer is monitored as a follow-up.[12]

It had been argued that civil liability could create new deterrents to police misconduct.[153] Following major liability settlements in the Breonna Taylor and George Floyd cases insurance companies began to significantly raise rates for liability insurance. Insurance companies also began to inquire about the practices of the law enforcement agencies requesting insurance and requiring modification of their practices as a condition of obtaining coverage.[154] Police commissioners and citizen review boards have been cited as institutions that can help reduce police misconduct.[155] There is some variation as to how much access the civilian reviewers are given to internal police documents and personnel files.[156] Decertification of police has been cited as another possible remedy.[157] Surveys suggest that officers are aware of the detrimental impacts of police misconduct and hold strong opinions as to what strategies are preferable.[158] The exclusionary rule has been one classic deterrent to obtaining evidence through police misconduct, but it is proposed that it be replaced with restitution to victims of misconduct.[159]

United Kingdom edit

England and Wales edit

The Police Complaints Board was founded in 1977 to oversee the handling of complaints. This was succeeded by the Police Complaints Authority and the Independent Police Complaints Commission. The current police misconduct authority is the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC), which was created in 2018. The IOPC investigate only the most serious matters, with the majority of complaints and misconduct cases handled internally by the respective force.[160] In the 2018/19 financial year, 31,097 complaint cases were recorded by police forces in England and Wales.[161]

Northern Ireland edit

Complaints about the Police Service of Northern Ireland are handled by the Police Ombudsman for Northern Ireland.[162]

Scotland edit

The Scottish Police Investigations and Review Commissioner oversees complaints about Police Scotland.[163]

See also edit

Individuals edit

Whistleblowers
Accused

Incidents edit

Organizations edit

References edit

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  162. ^ "About us". Police Ombudsman for Northern Ireland.
  163. ^ "About us". Police Investigations and Review Commissioner.

Further reading edit

  • Balko, Radley (2006). Overkill: The Rise of Paramilitary Police Raids in America. Cato Institute.
  • Chevigny, Paul (1998). Edge of the Knife: Police Violence in the Americas. The New Press. ISBN 978-1-56584-183-3.
  • Cea, Robert (2005). The No Lights, No Sirens: The Corruption and Redemption of an Inner City Cop. Harper Collins. ISBN 978-0-06-058712-3.
  • Copperfield, David (2006). Wasting Police Time: The Crazy World of the War on Crime. Monday Books. ISBN 978-0-9552854-1-7.
  • Palmiotto, Michael J. (2001). Police Misconduct: A Reader for the 21st Century. Prentice Hall. ISBN 978-0-13-025604-1.
  • Krupanski, Marc (2012). Policing the Police: Civilian Video Monitoring of Police Activity. The Global Journal.
  • Wang, Peng (2017). The Chinese Mafia: Organized Crime, Corruption, and Extra-Legal Protection. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

External links edit

  • Police brutality archive worldwide evidence
  • CBC - The Secret Policeman - with link to article by Mark Daly
  • - Daily News on Police Misconduct in United Kingdom
  • Fatal Encounters - Database of killings by police in the United States

police, misconduct, inappropriate, conduct, illegal, actions, taken, police, officers, connection, with, their, official, duties, types, misconduct, include, among, others, sexual, offences, coerced, false, confession, intimidation, false, arrest, false, impri. Police misconduct is inappropriate conduct and illegal actions taken by police officers in connection with their official duties Types of misconduct include among others sexual offences coerced false confession intimidation false arrest false imprisonment falsification of evidence spoliation of evidence police perjury witness tampering police brutality police corruption racial profiling unwarranted surveillance unwarranted searches and unwarranted seizure of property Contents 1 Types of police misconduct 2 Contributors and prediction 3 Video and audio recording 3 1 Advantages and Disadvantages of Body Worn Cameras Police Misconduct 3 2 Studies on BWC toward police misconduct 3 3 Mobile devices 4 Noted cases 4 1 Australia 4 2 Bahrain 4 3 Brazil 4 4 Canada 4 5 China 4 6 Egypt 4 7 France 4 8 Hong Kong 4 9 India 4 10 Iran 4 11 Norway 4 12 Poland 4 13 Russia 4 14 South Africa 4 15 Saudi Arabia 4 16 United Arab Emirates 4 17 United Kingdom 4 18 United States 4 18 1 Police Misconduct in Chicago s Police Department CPD 5 Cost of police misconduct 5 1 United States 5 1 1 Largest police misconduct settlements 5 1 2 Other notable police misconduct settlements 5 1 3 Settling for Misconduct 5 2 Canada 5 3 South Africa 5 4 Russia 6 Oversight 6 1 Hong Kong and New York City 6 2 Norway 6 3 United States 6 4 United Kingdom 6 4 1 England and Wales 6 4 2 Northern Ireland 6 4 3 Scotland 7 See also 7 1 Individuals 7 2 Incidents 7 3 Organizations 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksTypes of police misconduct editTypes of police misconduct include Bribing or lobbying legislators to pass or maintain laws that give police excessive power or status Similarly bribing or lobbying city council members to pass or maintain municipal laws that make victimless acts ticket able e g bicycling on the sidewalk so as to get more money Selective enforcement throwing the book at people who one dislikes this is often related to racial discrimination Sexual misconduct 1 Off duty misconduct 2 Killing of dogs unjustly 3 Noble cause corruption where the officer believes the good outcomes justify bad behavior 4 Using badge or other ID to gain entry into concerts to get discounts etc how Influence of drugs or alcohol while on duty Violations by officers of police procedural policies Abusive police proceduresPolice officers often share what is known in the United States as a blue code of silence which means that they do not turn each other in for misconduct While some officers have called this code a myth 5 a 2005 survey found evidence that it exists 6 A 2019 study in the journal Nature found that misconduct by one police officer substantially increased the likelihood that peer officers would also engage in misconduct 7 8 In addition to the blue code of silence police misconduct also can lead to a miscarriage of justice and sometimes the obstruction of justice At least 85 000 officers in the US have been investigated for misconduct and some are constantly under investigation nearly 2 500 have been investigated on 10 or more charges 9 In an effort to control police misconduct there is an accelerating trend for civilian agencies to engage directly in investigations and to have greater inputs into disciplinary decisions Additionally individuals and groups are now filming police activities in an effort to make them accountable for their actions With the proliferation of smart devices capable of high quality video recording instances of police misconduct and abuse are gaining attention on social media platforms and video hosting sites such as YouTube To protect their interests some officers have resorted to verbal intimidation as well as physical violence against civilians attempting to record their misdeeds In other circumstances police will illegally seize destroy or delete evidence recorded by civilians in spite of laws that make it a crime to destroy evidence of a crime being committed 10 11 Contributors and prediction editPolice misconduct is sometimes associated with conscious or unconscious discrimination Misconduct has been shown to be related to personality and correlated to education but it can also be significantly affected by the culture of the police agency 12 Education is negatively correlated to misconduct with better educated officers receiving fewer complaints on average 13 Some analyses have found that changes in structural disadvantage population mobility and immigrant population have been associated with changes in police misconduct Social disorganization may create a context for police misconduct because residents may not have in place the social networks necessary to organize against police malpractice 14 The fact that most police officers enjoy broad discretion and minimal supervision has been cited as increasing opportunities for police misconduct 15 Video and audio recording editMany police cars are now equipped with recording systems which can deter document or rebut police misconduct during traffic stops Usually the recordings have rebutted claims of police misconduct according to a 2004 study by the International Association of Chiefs of Police and Community Oriented Policing Service 16 future innovations in recording equipment could allow an officer s entire workday to be recorded 16 Some transparency advocates believe that such cameras should be installed in all police cruisers to ensure accountability 17 Some police departments have experimented with Taser cameras that automatically begin recording when the Taser is deployed 18 The Cato Institute recommends that police record all no knock raids 19 In recent times police departments have been trying to implement the body camera as a step to fixing misconduct The police departments in Pittsburgh have been trying body cameras on their officers to see both the positive and negative aspects of using body cameras 20 Recording by witnesses has made a significant impact on the notability and handling of police incidence according to whom such as the Rodney King beating Advantages and Disadvantages of Body Worn Cameras Police Misconduct edit Although body worn cameras BWCs can record several situations involving law enforcement misbehavior the key question is whether they re able to also prevent it In an effort to enhance interactions between the police and the community several police departments are beginning to use BWCs Which agencies are implementing them and which police agencies are not In this article the authors highlight how not all police departments around the nation are utilizing video recording technology Law enforcement agencies who do not believe the new technology is necessary who indicate a lack of support for BWC adoption from the agency s leadership and from patrol personnel and who have privacy and cost related concerns report resistance to the use of BWCs Police departments that registered a higher percentage of complaints for the excessive use of physical force are significantly more likely to be against the adoption of BWCs even though the authors discussion of the perceived lack of public support for the adoption of BWCs does not distinguish between agencies that intend to acquire BWCs and agencies that do not Police agencies who have already purchased other types of recording technology have a substantially higher level of support for the use of BWCs Results showed that law enforcement agencies located in US states with strong police unions are more likely to show resistance to the adoption of BWCs soon even though recent state level legislative changes related to BWCs do not have a significant impact on BWC adoption decisions at the organization level 21 Studies on BWC toward police misconduct edit Some studies suggest that body worn cameras may offer benefits while others show either no impact or possible negative effects when it comes to police misbehavior and many police agencies choosing whether to use BWCs in hopes of reducing police misconduct or strengthen the police and community ties 22 As an example some studies have examined the claimed benefits of BWCs including the ability to reduce citizen complaints and police use of force 23 Early research claimed that using BWCs lowered both outcomes significantly but several subsequent investigations have failed to find similar results 24 for example one study based on data from a randomized controlled trial conducted by the Spokane WA Police Department in which BWCs were issued to about 82 patrol officers in May and the remaining officers in November of the same year This research evaluates the influence of BWCs on use of force complaints against police and officer injuries using more than three years worth of official department data both before and after the deployment of BWCs 25 Another study examines how BWCs are marketed as a technological improvement that will result in more pleasant interactions between police and residents 26 There have been attempts to explain how BWCs impact various policing outcomes but little research has been done on how BWCs influence assaults on police In this current study is limited to a few jurisdictions and has minimal relevance to a broader spectrum of police organizations This study explores the relationship between BWCs and police victimization by focusing on total assaults and attacks with guns against police officers using data from a sample of 516 police organizations The data show that BWC usage is negatively associated with police victimization 26 The study concludes that BWCs can help prevent the occurrence of both moderate and severe violence against police in a variety of circumstances and among a wide spectrum of law enforcement organizations 26 Although there are many studies on why implementing BWCs in the hope of reducing police misconduct and the use of force by law enforcement toward citizens there are many studies that also show the challenges that come with implementing BWCs Techno fixes by themselves will not resolve underlying issues of fractured community police relations including ongoing issues of racial and ethnic antagonism and colonialism and may even exacerbate these tensions 27 True reform requires establishing bonds of trust between communities and police that acknowledge the importance of procedural treatment which may be supported by but are not dependent on BWCs 28 Mobile devices edit As digital recording technology usage has increased especially using cell phones there have been more cases of civilians capturing video of alleged police misconduct 10 29 In response members of law enforcement have begun using eavesdropping and wiretapping laws to charge civilians who record police without their knowledge Some police organizations such as the Fraternal Order of Police support the prosecutions 30 In Illinois from 1994 to 2014 recording police without consent was a class 1 felony that could carry a prison term of 15 years 31 In a May 2012 ruling the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals ruled 2 1 that the statute likely violates the First Amendment s free speech and free press guarantees 32 On 30 December 2014 then Governor Pat Quinn signed into law an amendment to the Statute PA 98 1142 which decriminalized the recording of law enforcement officers in the performance of their duties in public places or in circumstances in which the officers have no reasonable expectation of privacy 33 Most charges involving recording police are dropped or dismissed as courts have ruled on duty police officers in public have no reasonable expectation of privacy 10 However police can use vaguer charges such as interfering with a police officer refusing to obey a lawful order obstructing an arrest or police action or disorderly conduct Perjury put along with this is lying under oath and giving false charges 30 Arrests for these charges are more common as are incidents of police illegally confiscating cameras deleting evidence or misinforming citizens they cannot film This video evidence has played a key role in raising public awareness of police misconduct during and after an incident such as the BART Police shooting of Oscar Grant Death of Ian Tomlinson Robert Dziekanski death 34 Noted cases edit nbsp Mexico City s Police Chief Arturo Durazo Moreno was arrested in 1984 Australia edit In 1987 the Fitzgerald Inquiry was launched in response to allegations of misconduct within the Queensland Police Service before later being expanded to investigate allegations of corruption within the Queensland Government At the conclusion of the inquiry several senior police figures and government ministers were charged and jailed for various corruption offences The inquiry led to the resignation of then Queensland Premier Joh Bjelke Petersen who was later charged with perjury before the case was abandoned due to a hung jury 35 In the mid 1990s a Royal Commission was established to investigate allegations of corruption and misconduct within the New South Wales Police Service later changed to New South Wales Police Force The commission found that there was systematic and entrenched corruption within the organization with adverse findings being made against 284 officers seven of whom were jailed for various offences 36 In 2001 New South Wales Police were given the power to deploy drug detection dogs at certain public locations across the state namely at major events train stations and licensed venues 37 More recently the practice has been criticized due to reports of officers routinely using indications from drug detection dogs as a justification for conducting strip searches particularly at major public events such as music festivals see New South Wales Police Force Strip Search Scandal 38 39 In 2018 an inquiry was launched by the state s police watchdog who found that in several cases officers had acted unlawfully 40 In 2022 a class action pertaining to strip searches conducted at music festivals from July 2016 onward was filed in the state s Supreme Court 41 Bahrain edit During Bahraini uprising of 2011 the police forces of Bahrain were known for their heavy handedness Many protesters and even medical staff who attended to the injured were arrested 42 Brazil edit For broader coverage of this topic see Law enforcement in Brazil Misconduct Further information Human rights in Brazil Brazil has a historical problem and police violence incluing summary executions Around 6 175 people were killed by police in 2018 and 6 416 in 2020 totaling 37 029 deaths since 2013 43 44 nbsp Police approach civil population in the brazilian Federal District Police violence is one of the most internationally recognized human rights abuses in Brazil The problem of urban violence focuses on the perpetual struggle between police and residents of high crime favelas such as the areas portrayed in the film City of God and mainly Elite Squad Police response in many parts of Brazil is extremely violent including summary execution and torture of suspects According to Global Justice in 2003 the police killed 1 195 people in the State of Rio de Janeiro alone In the same year 45 police officers were killed It is often reacted to by local communities and trafficking groups with demonstrations and violent resistance causing escalation and multiplying victims citation needed Unofficial estimates show there are over 3 000 deaths annually from police violence in Brazil according to Human Rights Watch There are constant complaints of racism abuses torture executions and disappearances Not all states record police killings or keep accurate statistics citation needed Reports of killings by Rio de Janeiro police decreased during the year under a new state security strategy Statistics released by the Rio de Janeiro State Secretariat for Public Security showed 911 persons killed as a result of police confrontations from January through September a 12 percent decrease over the same period in 2007 The Rio de Janeiro Institute for Public Security reported that police killed an average of four persons per day during 2007 According to a UN report released in September police clashes resulted in 1 260 civilian deaths in Rio de Janeiro State in 2007 Most of these killings occurred during acts of resistance the UN report commented The Sao Paulo State Secretariat for Public Security reported that Sao Paulo state police civil and military killed 340 civilians in the state from January to September compared with 315 during the same period in 2007 Cases involving extrajudicial executions were either under police investigation or before the state courts observers believed that it could take years to resolve such cases citation needed There were no reports of politically motivated disappearances However the Center of Studies of Security and Citizenship estimated that in 2006 approximately 1 940 persons disappeared the center believed many were killed by police There were no developments in the disappearance cases that occurred during the 1964 85 military dictatorship and 400 cases remained for the Amnesty Commission to analyze There were also no developments regarding the 2007 Chamber of Deputies Human Rights Committee request that the government seize documents to determine the circumstances of military regime political prisoner deaths and the locations of their remains 45 Canada edit In October 2007 there was an incident at Vancouver International Airport involving new Polish immigrant Robert Dziekanski Dziekanski was tasered five times during the arrest became unresponsive and died 46 The incident was video recorded by a civilian who turned it over to police then sued to get it back for release to news outlets 11 The official inquiry found the RCMP were not justified deploying the taser and that the officers deliberately misrepresented their actions to investigators 47 The incident affected taser use in Canada and relations with Poland 48 49 During the 2010 G 20 Toronto summit protests police enacted regulations the Ombudsman found contributed to massive violations of civil rights 50 One regulation made the security zone public works and police interpreted this to permit them to arrest anyone not providing identification within five metres of the temporary fence 51 There were 1 118 arrests with 800 released without charge 52 53 Police Chief Blair conceded later no five metre rule existed in law 54 and Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty was criticized for allowing this misinterpretation 55 In September 2011 officers who removed their name tags during the G 20 protests were refused promotion 56 Security officers in Metrotown Burnaby mall demanded pictures taken of an arrest be deleted from a teen s camera This led to a verbal confrontation and the RCMP handcuffing the teen and cutting off his backpack to search it While the mall supports its officers actions according to the teen s lawyer private mall security guards and police have no right to try to seize someone s camera or demand that photos be deleted even on private property 57 China edit The collusion between local gangs and police officers is a serious problem in many Chinese cities 58 Local gang bosses make use of personal networks to bribe police officers and police officers seek corrupt benefits by safeguarding their illegal businesses 59 60 A widely publicized case is the Wen Qiang Case 61 Wen Qiang a deputy police chief along with family members were arrested as part of a massive crackdown on corruption of the People s Armed Police and organized crime in Chongqing in late 2009 His crimes included bribes rape and failing to account for assets Wen was executed in July 2010 62 The trials highlighted the continued use of torture by police to obtain confessions 63 despite laws implemented in June 2010 excluding tortured confessions from being used in trials 64 Egypt edit A high profile rape case was reported in Egypt by a woman in 2014 who as of 8 February 2021 still seeks justice In addition the key witness who offered to help his friend Seif Bedour was subjected to torture while in pretrial custody Bedour has been put through extreme forms of police misconduct and reportedly subjected to virginity tests via forced anal examination and drug tests His family has been subjected to public humiliation and trauma following his misconduct in the custody Meanwhile the lack of adequate investigation into the 2014 Fairmont Hotel rape case has caused an unusual delay in serving justice to the victim 65 66 France edit Recent social movements Gilets jaunes 2019 2020 strikes against the pension system reform 67 brought to light a certain culture of violence ingrained within French police particularly CRS 68 69 Although French President Emmanuel Macron denied police brutality and the use of this term 70 he acknowledged that there have been some individual errors that shouldn t tarnish the police corps as a whole A French newspaper has tracked various serious injuries that occurred during the yellow vests movement 71 The death of a French deliveryman from a heart attack in January 2020 in Paris after police restraining him in a prone position following a traffic stop prompted a debate in France over controversial restraint techniques used by police 72 Police interventions are mostly to prevent violent actions from members of radical and anarchists groups black blocs 73 but an important number of bystanders journalists 74 and firefighters 75 have also been targeted by the police United Nations High Commissioner on Human rights Michelle Bachelet compared the use of force in France to that seen in protests in Sudan and Haiti in March 2019 the UN opened a formal inquiry into the use of police violence against France 76 77 The right to film police was made known when the Securite Globale Global security law was put under review by the French Parliament Hong Kong edit For broader coverage of this topic see Controversies of the Hong Kong Police Force Further information Police misconduct allegations during the 2019 20 Hong Kong protests India edit It is believed by whom that corruption among the Indian Police Service is pervasive and goes up to the top brass 78 Reform has been made difficult with honest officers pressured by powerful local officials and suffer punitive transfers and threats while corrupt officers receive promotions An example is the transfer of Kiran Bedi for giving a parking ticket to the Prime Ministers car 79 A number of officers face charges in Central Bureau of Investigation cases and disciplinary proceedings but it is alleged by whom that no notable action under the penal provisions is taken With citizens who are not aware of laws of India police of Andhra pradesh can shout swear and be verbally abusive They are also corrupted by organized crime groups called factionalists in Rayalaseema citation needed 80 Some of the past scandals include murder 81 sexual harassment 82 sex on tape scandal 83 dowry harassment 84 fraud 85 and fake killing encounter 86 Iran edit After the 1979 revolution the police have become more corrupt A British Australian doctor Dr Kylie Moore Gilbert endured months of torture after she was arrested by Iranian police 87 Norway edit Police misconduct has become an issue of high media attention in Norway The death of Eugene Ejike Obiora a naturalized Norwegian of Nigerian origin in September 2006 stirred an uproar that as of September 2007 update has caused the authorities to announce significant changes to the way charges of police brutality and other forms of police misconduct including corruption involving the Norwegian police will be handled in the future As a consequence of the Obiora case training at the Norwegian Police Academy has undergone changes and national police director Ingelin Killengreen has instigated a thorough review of police methods in general 88 One officer employed in Oslo Police District was sentenced in 2006 to two years in prison for human trafficking embezzlement of money and weapons as well as theft of emergency passports 89 Two cases were from Follo Police District 90 One officer was accused of having felt up a number of women during interrogations He was acquitted on almost all charges by the regional court Another officer had been accused of abuse of power during an arrest The Supreme Court of Norway ordered the case to be retried in the regional court after the acquittal was appealed Another case involves a female officer from Telemark Police District who was issued a fine of 10 000 kroner and the loss of her employment for a period of five years for embezzlement and breach of confidentiality among other issues 91 A prominent case of intentional according to whom miscarriage of justice was against Fritz Moen 92 In the case several officers appear to have manipulated timelines threatened the accused and witnesses and made false statements to close the case citation needed According to a 2012 official report 18 police officers have lost their jobs as result of misconduct since 2005 93 On May 21 2013 the owner of Circus Bazaar Magazine recorded on video 94 two Norwegian plain clothed police hold a handcuffed African migrant man on the ground and force multiple police batons his mouth under suspicion of concealing drugs 95 The man was then driven a significant distance outside the capital city of Oslo and left in an unknown location 96 The recording of the initial incident resulted in extensive investigations by multiple authorities in Norway including Police internal affairs and the Norwegian Anti Discrimination Ombud 97 Although the police officers concerned were not charged the investigations led to Oslo Police District being fined 80 000 Norwegian Kroner and receiving an organizational charge of Gross misconduct 98 The event also resulted in significant media attention with the Director of the Department of Public and International Law at the University of Oslo Aslak Syse stating that It may appear as if both the law against degrading and inhumane treatment UCHR art 3 and the law against the violation of a person s privacy have been violated 94 A Norwegian news agency also attracted significant attention by controversially running the headline Even shit bags should be treated decently by police The headline was derived from a quote on the incident by the former head of Norwegian Police Security Service PST Ellen Holager Andenaes 99 The incident also led to the production of the documentary film The Serpent in Paradise 100 Poland edit The Ministry of Public Security MBP was a Polish communist secret police service operating from 1945 to 1954 under Jakub Berman The MBP carried out brutal pacification of civilians mass arrests makeshift executions such as the Mokotow Prison murder and 1946 public execution in Debica and secret assassinations 101 Individual law enforcement officers noted for torture and terror include Anatol Fejgin 1909 2002 and his deputy Jozef Swiatlo 1915 1994 in charge of the MBP s notorious Special Bureau Salomon Morel 1919 2007 commander of the Zgoda labour camp Stanislaw Radkiewicz 1903 1987 head of the MBP s Department of Security UB 1944 1954 and Jozef Rozanski 1907 1981 colonel in the MBP After the fall of communism the instances of police brutality are still noted in relation to policing sports matches mostly football the 1998 Slupsk riots and 2015 Knurow riots were the result of the killing a fan by the police each time Russia edit Police corruption and brutality is rampant in Russia as it is common for officers to be hired as private security on the side by businessmen and Russian mafia 102 This leads to conflicts of interest as business and political rivals are jailed with selective enforcement of laws and trumped up charges or kidnapped for ransom These tactics are believed to have been used against billionaire Mikhail Khodorkovsky to weaken an outspoken political opponent to intimidate other wealthy individuals and to regain control of strategic economic assets 103 Meanwhile bureaucrats who are found guilty of significant crimes get away with light sentences 102 Intimidation and violence against journalists and whistle blowers is high as Russia remains one of the worst countries at solving their murders 104 It is widely believed the Federal Security Service successor to the KGB remain in control using the police as foot soldiers and are unaccountable with connections to organized crime and the Russian leadership 102 South Africa edit At least 25 people were killed after South African police opened fire on a crowd of about 3 000 striking miners in Rustenburg 100 km northwest of Johannesburg on 16 August 2012 The police were armed with automatic rifles and pistols Workers at a platinum mine were asking for better wages 105 106 Saudi Arabia edit Jamal Khashoggi was a critic of Saudi Arabia who was tortured and murdered by Saudi law enforcement officials He was invited to the Saudi embassy in Turkey and was kidnapped there 107 In 2011 Saudi Arabia also sent law enforcement to next door Bahrain to put down protesters 42 United Arab Emirates edit Police in the UAE have abused those in their custody and sometimes this abuse has led to death The Abu Dhabi Police allegedly assisted Sheikh Issa bin Zayed Al Nahyan in a 2009 torture incident 108 The Police are also alleged to have used excessive force on critics and protesters 109 United Kingdom edit Police misconduct negligence in the UK has been altered numerous times due to the influx in claims in negligence against the police The case of Hill v Chief Constable of West Yorkshire initially provided that police could not be liable in negligence since when investigating crime the police owe no duty of care in tort to individual citizens This was widely adopted by the courts but there was backlash since it granted the police blanket immunity essentially meaning they could not be liable in claims of negligence 110 This was demonstrated in the cases of Hill v Chief Constable of West Yorkshire Van Colle v Chief Constable of Hertfordshire and Smith v Chief Constable of South Wales Police This was later overruled in the case of Robinson v Chief constable of West Yorkshire in which the courts held the police could be liable for harm caused to a claimant as a result of their direct actions It was still acknowledged that similar to the general public they do not have a duty of care to warn protect or rescue an individual from harm caused by a third party of external factor 110 United States edit Further information Police brutality in the United States Police riots in the United States and Henry A Wallace Police Crime Public Database See also New York City Police Department corruption and misconduct and Misconduct in the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department The Chicago Police Department in August 1968 initiated a police riot according to the Walker Report which gathered testimony on the violence surrounding the 1968 Democratic National Convention and Anti Vietnam War protests 111 Years later the Chicago Police Department would deal with even more scandal involving the now infamous crooked cop Lt Jon Burge and the torture cases that came out of his district The New York Police Department NYPD had a prominent case of two detectives working for the Mafia during the 1980s The Los Angeles Police Department LAPD in the late 1990s had a large incident of misconduct with the Rampart scandal implicating 70 officers of an anti gang unit called C R A S H This resulted in a US 70 million in lawsuit settlement payouts dissolving of the unit and the LAPD entering into a consent decree with the U S Department of Justice on comprehensive reforms 112 113 114 During the 1990s the New Orleans Police Department NOPD also came under the scrutiny of the Justice Department when a series of crimes including murders by officers prompted attempts at reform by then Police Chief Richard Pennington In the wake of Hurricane Katrina there was a spike in allegations of misconduct and in March 2011 the Justice Department published a 158 page report that found systemic violations of civil rights by a NOPD that routinely failed to discipline officers involved 115 Six cases stemming from Katrina have been investigated and followed closely by ProPublica 116 one being the Danziger Bridge shootings that resulted in two civilian deaths and four wounded In August 2011 four officers were convicted of unlawfully firing on citizens then trying to cover it up with the assistance of a fifth investigating officer 117 In a number of jurisdictions police officers have been accused of ticket fixing 118 Police lying under oath particularly in drug crimes is allegedly commonplace in certain areas some federal grant programs such as Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant Program are tied to numbers and police officers may also feel pressured to prove their productivity 119 The New York State Police Troop C scandal involved the fabrication of evidence used to convict suspects in New York by the New York State Police 120 Police Misconduct in Chicago s Police Department CPD edit Investigations have found that there is little to no accountability within the CPD The department has neglected to investigate a majority of case complaints regarding police brutality Investigations that were made were carried out poorly Civilian and officer witnesses are often not interviewed investigators ignored the potential for witness coaching and inappropriate coordination of testimony Questioning of officers often aim to elicit favorable statements from them often ignoring inconsistencies and unreasonable explanations when recounting events 121 Cost of police misconduct editUnited States edit nbsp Misconduct Payouts by the 10 U S Cities with the Largest Police DepartmentsThe United States has lost millions to police misconduct City Years of Cost Total CostBaltimore 2010 2014 12 million 122 Boston 2005 2015 36 million 123 Chicago 2004 2014 521 million 124 Cleveland 2004 2014 8 2 million 123 Dallas 2011 2014 6 5 million 123 Minneapolis 2011 2014 9 3 million 123 New York City 2006 2011 348 million 124 Phoenix 2010 2014 5 6 million 123 Philadelphia 2010 2014 54 3 million 123 Los Angeles 2002 2011 101 million 124 Oakland 1990 2014 74 million 124 Washington D C 2010 2014 30 5 million 123 In 2015 the Wall Street Journal reported that during a five year period the 10 United States cities with the largest police departments had spent over 1 4 billion on police misconduct settlements 125 In between the years of 2010 and 2014 the total annual cost of police misconduct settlements increased declining only in 2012 and then followed by the highest total in 2014 of 248 7 million 125 Largest police misconduct settlements edit With the rise of body worn cameras by police departments settlements have also increased in both the size of the settlement and frequency of settlements In 2015 Eric Garner s family settled with New York City and was awarded 5 9 million in a wrongful death suit at the hands of a New York City Police Department NYPD officer 126 While Garner s case was more recent and perhaps more known to the general public it was not New York City s most expensive individual settlement due to police misconduct Abner Louima was abused by NYPD personnel while in custody in 1997 and settled in 2001 with the city of New York for 8 75 million 127 Perhaps the most costly individual settlement ever due to police misconduct occurred in Chicago when Christina Eilman suffered from a bipolar episode at Midway Airport and was arrested Eilman was then released in a high crime neighborhood at night in Chicago without any assistance or follow up on her well being Eilman fell from a 7th story window after being raped and suffered permanent brain damage Eilman received 22 5 million in a settlement with the city of Chicago 127 The most expensive group police misconduct settlement case in New York and possibly the most expensive group police misconduct settlement case ever was awarded to the Central Park Five These five men were victims to police torture that eventually resulted in false confessions and convictions These men settled for 41 million 127 Other notable police misconduct settlements edit Jon Burge a former Chicago Police Department Commander is estimated to have cost Chicago the state of Illinois and the county of Cook 132 million in over 20 different cases 128 Burge was known to torture beat electrically shock suffocate and play games of Russian roulette to force confessions 128 As part of a reparations package to victims of Burge and his team Chicago opened the Chicago Torture Justice Center in Englewood to provide services such as counseling to those who have been victim of police misconduct 129 In 2000 Prince Jones a student at Howard University was followed by an unmarked police car fearing for his safety he exited the car to confront the man following him who proceeded to flash a gun Jones entered his car and put his truck into reverse hitting the officer twice The officer fired 16 shots into Jones car killing him 130 This incident received national news coverage and was featured in Ta Nehisi Coates book Between the World and Me 131 Jones family received a settlement from Prince Georges county of 3 7 million 132 Settling for Misconduct edit The Chicago Reporter created a database titled Settling for Misconduct to track civil suits against the Chicago Police Department CPD with the intent of bringing awareness to the fact that a lawsuit against CPD is settled on average every other day 133 The website lists cases such as the murder of Laquan McDonald by Jason Van Dyke which gained national attention and resulted in a 5 million settlement for McDonald s family 134 The database also shows less known cases such as an older settlement for 100 000 in which Jason Van Dyke was named for excessive force 135 The database even includes a false arrest settlement for 1 00 against CPD officer Luis Luarenzana 136 Canada edit Canada has also lost millions of dollars to police misconduct settlements Toronto in particular has paid 27 million in settlements for actions of police dogs use of force false arrests and car chases 137 The biggest settlement was for 2 million when a taxi driver Ali Adaba Ghomi was hit by a car fleeing from police and was taken to the hospital in critical condition 137 In October 2007 members of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police RCMP tased Robert Dziekanski ultimately killing him 138 The settlement in Dziekanski s case was confidential although it was revealed that the RCMP in addition to the cost of the settlement also donated 20 000 for a scholarship 138 South Africa edit In 2011 Nathi Mthethwa the South African Police Minister disclosed that across the country more than R106m 7 153 276 was paid in police misconduct settlements due to actions of the South African Police Service SAPS in the 2010 2011 fiscal year 139 According to financial statements of SAPS the financial balance of civil claims against the South African Police at the conclusion of the 2012 fiscal year totaled R14 8 billion 998 651 608 140 In one of the more notable cases Mido Macia was dragged by a police van and assaulted by police in 2013 in Daveyton South Africa the event was caught on camera and Macia later died while in the custody of police On 21 November 2018 his family received R6 5m 439 110 75 in a lawsuit settlement 141 Russia edit The cost of police misconduct in Russia comes in the form of bribery In 2015 Russia Police reported the average amount per bribe had reached 654 000 rubles US 9 105 18 142 Russia has attempted to crack down on the situation in 2015 between January and September Russian President Vladimir Putin reported that 8 800 people were convicted of corruption 142 On a 5 000 kilometer route truck drivers can expect to pay anywhere from 50 000 786 to 70 000 rubles 1 101 45 on bribes to police officers 142 Oversight editHong Kong and New York City edit The Hong Kong and New York City police departments both of which have had issues with police misconduct and corruption have approached the problem in different ways For corruption Hong Kong created an external agency which investigates corruption while New York reviews corruption through an internal department although the information is reported to a monitoring commission New York also uses integrity checks in which an officer s integrity is tested through an opportunity for corruption For misconduct Hong Kong reviews complaints internally with a monitoring commission while New York has created the New York City Civilian Complaint Review Board NYCCCRB which investigates and makes a formal recommendation to the commissioner 143 The disciplinary records of police in New York State are confidential Norway edit The Special Unit for Police Affairs SUPA was established on 1 January 2005 In 2006 the unit received 904 complaints of which 101 led to indictment Of these 26 ended with the issuance of a fine 8 cases criminal charges were brought 64 went to trial and 3 cases were given pataleunnlatelse no charges despite misconduct likely took place Four police officers alone were responsible for 63 of the 101 cases In September 2007 Jan Egil Presthus Director of SUPA stated to the Oslo newspaper Dagsavisen that investigations of police conduct involving death are going to be posted on the Internet He states that total openness will strengthen the publics confidence in the unit s integrity and impartiality citation needed This came following Dagsavisen in June 2007 publishing an overview of police cases with a deadly outcome The article showed that in the ten most serious cases after the establishment of the SUPA all charges against the police were eventually dropped citation needed A media discourse focusing on deaths incurred during police arrests and transports continued in Norway throughout 2007 and Presthus counts this as one factor triggering the initiative to publish ongoing investigations on the Internet citation needed The cases will be presented on the web pages of SUPA in a way that preserves the anonymity of officers and other parties involved where deemed necessary 144 United States edit See also Police brutality in the United States Police riots in the United States and Henry A Wallace Police Crime Public Database In the United States access to police disciplinary records vary from state to state 145 The Murder of George Floyd encouraged some US states to make police disciplinary records public 146 The U S government does not regularly collect data on police misconduct One attempt to track misconduct is the Cato Institute s National Police Misconduct Reporting Project which estimates misconduct rates using newspaper reports 147 The project s data suggest that police are more likely than the average person to commit a number of crimes including assault sexual assault and murder but less likely to commit robbery 148 The NPMSRP projects that roughly 1 in 4 7 officers will be implicated in an act of misconduct during the course of their career 149 In the United States the exclusionary rule means that evidence gathered through misconduct is sometimes inadmissible in court The Black Panther Party sought to oppose police brutality through neighborhood patrols Police officers were often followed by armed Black Panthers who at times came to aid African Americans who were victims of brutality and racial prejudice Groups like Copwatch continue to use the patrol method in communities often using video cameras to document them 150 In a 2004 United States survey of the public s opinions on accountability in reforming police most members of the public wanted an early warning system that flags officers who have received many complaints video cameras on police cars detailed records of police stops and citizen review boards 151 Citizen review of police has been an issue with law enforcement concerned that citizens reviewing their actions do not understand the procedures they operate by and the citizen review board advocates arguing that the law enforcement code of silence requires that they have input into the disciplinary action As of 2003 three fourths of the United States largest cities had citizen review boards 152 Early warning systems are procedures designed to identify and address issues of problem officers as around 10 of officers are theorized to cause 90 of the problems Early warning systems were recommended by the U S Commission on Civil Rights in 1981 and by 1999 an estimated 27 of police agencies serving populations of over 50 000 people had implemented these programs The systems collect data such as complaints which triggers an intervention at a certain point After the intervention the officer is monitored as a follow up 12 It had been argued that civil liability could create new deterrents to police misconduct 153 Following major liability settlements in the Breonna Taylor and George Floyd cases insurance companies began to significantly raise rates for liability insurance Insurance companies also began to inquire about the practices of the law enforcement agencies requesting insurance and requiring modification of their practices as a condition of obtaining coverage 154 Police commissioners and citizen review boards have been cited as institutions that can help reduce police misconduct 155 There is some variation as to how much access the civilian reviewers are given to internal police documents and personnel files 156 Decertification of police has been cited as another possible remedy 157 Surveys suggest that officers are aware of the detrimental impacts of police misconduct and hold strong opinions as to what strategies are preferable 158 The exclusionary rule has been one classic deterrent to obtaining evidence through police misconduct but it is proposed that it be replaced with restitution to victims of misconduct 159 United Kingdom edit England and Wales edit The Police Complaints Board was founded in 1977 to oversee the handling of complaints This was succeeded by the Police Complaints Authority and the Independent Police Complaints Commission The current police misconduct authority is the Independent Office for Police Conduct IOPC which was created in 2018 The IOPC investigate only the most serious matters with the majority of complaints and misconduct cases handled internally by the respective force 160 In the 2018 19 financial year 31 097 complaint cases were recorded by police forces in England and Wales 161 Northern Ireland edit Complaints about the Police Service of Northern Ireland are handled by the Police Ombudsman for Northern Ireland 162 Scotland edit The Scottish Police Investigations and Review Commissioner oversees complaints about Police Scotland 163 See also editContempt of cop Gypsy cop Lists of killings by law enforcement officers Mass arrest as a war crime Photography Is Not a Crime weblog Presumption of guilt Prisoner abuse Professional courtesy in law enforcementIndividuals edit H Rap Brown Antonio Buehler Patricia Feerick Rodney King Epaminondas Korkoneas Abner Louima Cory MayeWhistleblowersAdrian Schoolcraft Frank SerpicoAccusedRichard Cain Lon Horiuchi Bernard Kerik Stacey Koon and Laurence Powell Johannes Mehserle Patrick Pogan Salvatore Rivieri Roger Rogerson Justin VolpeIncidents edit 39th District corruption scandal Conflicts involving Critical Mass Death of Jean Charles de Menezes Death of Harry Stanley Death of Otto Zehm Knapp Commission The Los Angeles May Day Melee Mafia cops MOVE Organization NYPD subway sodomy incident Rampart Scandal Shooting of Sean Bell Shooting of Oscar Grant Shooting of Corey Jackson Shooting of Kathryn Johnston Wickersham reportOrganizations edit Christopher Commission COINTELPRO FBI Internal affairs Newham Monitoring Project People s Law OfficeReferences edit Stinson Philip Matthew Liederbach John Brewer Steven L Mathna Brooke E 21 April 2014 Police Sexual Misconduct A National Scale Study of Arrested Officers Criminal Justice Policy Review 26 7 665 690 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 671 6143 doi 10 1177 0887403414526231 ISSN 0887 4034 S2CID 40083569 Martinelli TJ 2007 Minimizing Risk by Defining Off Duty Police Misconduct Archived 12 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine The Police Chief Dogs Shot by Cops Companion Animals and Law Enforcement Animal Legal Defense Fund Animal Legal Defense Fund Retrieved 14 December 2017 Martinelli TJ 2006 Unconstitutional Policing The Ethical Challenges in Dealing with Noble Cause Corruption Police Chief Ferrell CE 2003 Code of Silence Fact or Fiction Police Chief Westmarland L 2005 Police Ethics and Integrity Breaking the Blue Code of Silence Policing and Society Matacic Catherine 24 May 2019 Police misconduct may spread like a contagion new study suggests Science AAAS Retrieved 5 June 2019 Quispe Torreblanca Edika G Neil Stewart 27 May 2019 Causal peer effects in police misconduct PDF Nature Human Behaviour 3 8 797 807 doi 10 1038 s41562 019 0612 8 ISSN 2397 3374 PMID 31133678 S2CID 167211278 We found 85 000 cops who ve been investigated for misconduct Now you can read their records www usatoday com 25 April 2019 Retrieved 25 January 2021 a b c Khalek Rania 27 July 2011 15 Years in Prison For Taping the Cops How Eavesdropping Laws Are Taking Away Our Best Defense Against Police Brutality AlterNet Retrieved 1 August 2011 a b Gratl Jason 13 November 2007 Report Following a Public Interest Investigation into a Chair Initiated Complaint Respecting the Death in RCMP Custody of Mr Robert Dziekanski BC Civil Liberties Association Archived from the original on 30 September 2011 Retrieved 9 August 2011 a b Hughes F Andre LB 2007 Problem Officer Variables and Early Warning Systems Police Chief No author 2007 Annotated Bibliography on Performance of Officers with Bachelor s Degrees The Police Chief See also from same issue Carter L Wilson M Measuring Professionalism of Police Officers Kane Robert J 2002 Social Ecology of Police Misconduct The vol 40 Criminology p 867 Hess Matthew V 1993 Good Cop Bad Cop Reassessing the Legal Remedies for Police Misconduct vol 1993 Utah L Rev p 149 a b Schafer JA 2007 The Future of Police Image and Ethics The Police Chief Why Don t More Cops Go to the Videotape Reason 25 March 2010 Retrieved 11 December 2016 Schweers Jeff 28 October 2010 Police buying Taser Cams for stun gun accountability USA Today Cops on Camera Cato Institute 14 September 2010 Retrieved 11 December 2016 Evans Danielle 2015 Police Body Cameras Mending Fences and How Pittsburgh Is a Leading Example Pittsburgh Journal of Technology Law amp Policy 16 Andreescu Viviana Kim David December 2022 Drivers of police agencies resistance to body worn camera adoption International Journal of Police Science amp Management 24 4 437 452 doi 10 1177 14613557221126492 ISSN 1461 3557 S2CID 252607046 Research on Body Worn Cameras and Law Enforcement National Institute of Justice Retrieved 16 April 2023 White Michael D Gaub Janne E Todak Natalie 19 January 2017 Exploring the Potential for Body Worn Cameras to Reduce Violence in Police Citizen Encounters Policing paw057 doi 10 1093 police paw057 ISSN 1752 4512 White Michael D Gaub Janne E Todak Natalie 2017 Exploring the Potential for Body Worn Cameras to Reduce Violence in Police Citizen Encounters Policing pp paw057 doi 10 1093 police paw057 Retrieved 21 April 2023 White Michael D Gaub Janne E Todak Natalie 2017 Exploring the Potential for Body Worn Cameras to Reduce Violence in Police Citizen Encounters Policing pp paw057 doi 10 1093 police paw057 Retrieved 3 March 2023 a b c Douglas Stephen 26 July 2020 The Effects of Body Worn Cameras on Violent Police Victimization Policing A Journal of Policy and Practice 15 2 1399 1416 doi 10 1093 police paaa032 ISSN 1752 4512 Louis Ermus St Saulnier Alana Walby Kevin 7 September 2019 Police Use of Body Worn Cameras Challenges of Visibility Procedural Justice and Legitimacy Surveillance amp Society 17 3 4 305 321 doi 10 24908 ss v17i3 4 8649 ISSN 1477 7487 S2CID 213101212 St Louis Ermus Saulnier Alana Walby Kevin 7 September 2019 Police Use of Body Worn Cameras Challenges of Visibility Procedural Justice and Legitimacy Surveillance amp Society 17 3 4 305 321 doi 10 24908 ss v17i3 4 8649 ISSN 1477 7487 S2CID 213101212 Johnson Kevin 18 October 2010 For cops citizen videos bring increased scrutiny USA Today a b Balko Radley January 2011 The War on Cameras Reason p 6 Retrieved 1 August 2011 Busted For Felony Eavesdropping Illinois ABC 7 28 September 2011 Archived from the original on 31 May 2020 Retrieved 8 October 2011 U S Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals ACLU v Anita Alvarez PDF Archived from the original PDF on 19 March 2015 Retrieved 15 April 2015 Illinois Compiled Statutes Article 14 Eavesdropping 720 ILCS 5 14 2 e Man who shot Dziekanski video gets journalism award CBC 28 October 2009 Retrieved 12 May 2021 Salisbury Chris 1 July 2019 Thirty years on the Fitzgerald Inquiry still looms large over Queensland 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to arrest people Toronto Star Retrieved 24 June 2010 Toronto police were overwhelmed at G20 review reveals The Globe and Mail 23 June 2011 Retrieved 24 June 2011 McLean Jesse Yang Jennifer 20 August 2010 Anatomy of the G20 the story from both sides of the fence Toronto Star Retrieved 20 August 2010 Chief admits 5 metre G20 security rule didn t exist Archived from the original on 9 October 2011 Retrieved 3 September 2011 1 from the Globe and Mail website as updated on Tuesday 29 June 2010 9 27PM EDT Doolittle Robyn 1 September 2011 Police board refuses to promote G20 officers Toronto Star Retrieved 3 September 2011 B C teen arrested for photographing mall takedown CBC News 25 October 2012 Wang Peng 2017 The Chinese Mafia Organized Crime Corruption and Extra Legal Protection Oxford Oxford University Press Wang P 2014 Extra legal protection in china how guanxi distorts China s legal system and facilitates the rise of unlawful protectors British Journal of Criminology 54 5 809 830 Chin K 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December 2018 Retrieved 15 January 2020 L ordre et la force Enquete sur l usage de la force par les representants de la loi en France PDF in French France ACAT Retrieved 29 August 2020 Bock Pauline 29 November 2019 Emmanuel Macron s Year of Cracking Heads Foreign Policy Retrieved 15 January 2020 La carte des gilets jaunes gravement blesses Liberation Liberation Retrieved 15 January 2020 French delivery man s death sparks debate over controversial police restraint technique The France 24 Observers 10 January 2020 Retrieved 15 January 2020 French police break up yellow vest and black bloc protests in Paris CNBC 21 September 2019 Retrieved 15 January 2020 France RSF and 13 journalists file complaint about French police violence Reports Without Borders 20 December 2019 Retrieved 15 January 2020 French firefighters hit Paris streets in protest BBC News Retrieved 15 January 2020 French police brutality now subject to international inquiry TRT World French PM slaps down UN rights chief on Yellow Vest police violence Radio France Internationale 7 March 2019 Retrieved 15 January 2020 IPS Bribe amounts depend on earning potential Rediff News 14 December 2004 Retrieved 5 June 2011 IPS officer resigns after political harassments threats and non promotion Rediff News 15 December 2004 Retrieved 5 June 2011 2010 110 IAS IPS officers face criminal charges The Indian Express 16 April 2010 Retrieved 5 June 2011 Senior IPS officer gets life sentence in Shivani Bhatnagar murder iExpress India 24 May 2008 Archived from the original on 14 October 2012 Retrieved 5 June 2011 Maha IPS officer faces FIR for sexual harassment Deccan Herald 31 May 2011 Retrieved 5 June 2011 Police arrest lady teacher FIR against another IPS officer Outlook 3 August 2005 Archived from the original on 30 January 2013 Retrieved 5 June 2011 IPS officer booked in dowry harassment case Zee News 12 February 2011 Retrieved 5 June 2011 Retired IPS officer booked for fraud Mid Day 5 January 2011 Retrieved 5 June 2011 Supreme Court of India declines bail to IPS officer in Sohrabuddin case Deccan Herald 5 February 2010 Retrieved 5 June 2011 Kidnapped academic dumps cheating hubby who hooked up with one of her friends 9 April 2021 Solli Bjorn 7 September 2007 Markering for Obiora in Norwegian NRK Retrieved 20 September 2007 Politimann domt for pass og vapentyveri Aftenposten in Norwegian 23 November 2006 Politimann fikk 60 dagers fengsel Aftenposten in Norwegian 1 October 2009 NTB 17 September 2007 Fire politifolk fikk 63 anmeldelser Dagsavisen in Norwegian Archived from the original on 21 May 2011 Retrieved 21 September 2007 Haugli Borre O Ida Johansson 25 June 2007 Politiet slaktes Nettavisen in Norwegian TV 2 Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 25 June 2007 19 politiansatte fradomt jobben Dagbladet in Norwegian NTB 12 April 2012 Retrieved 12 April 2012 a b Caldwell Shane Alexander 9 September 2013 Norwegian Police recorded on video Article 3 Inhuman or Degrading treatment Circus Bazaar Retrieved 31 October 2020 Mokhtari Arash 16 February 2015 Oslopolisen far bota for tortyrliknande arbetsmetoder SVT Nyheter in Swedish Retrieved 31 October 2020 Batons and Starlight Tours Norwegian Police Accused of Breaking Anti Torture Conventions www vice com 16 February 2015 Retrieved 31 October 2020 Her stapper politiet to batonger i munnen pa mistenkt narkoselger TV 2 in Norwegian 30 January 2015 Retrieved 31 October 2020 Oslopolitiet godtar ikke foretaksstraff etter batong episode www aftenposten no in Norwegian Bokmal 16 February 2015 Retrieved 31 October 2020 Brakstad Tommy H S 18 September 2013 Selv drittsekker skal behandles anstendig av politiet Nettavisen in Norwegian Retrieved 31 October 2020 The Serpent in Paradise A Documentary The Serpent in Paradise Retrieved 31 October 2020 Civil war in Poland Europe since 1945 an encyclopedia Volume 2 Bernard A Cook in English a b c Police brutality in Russia The economist 18 March 2010 Retrieved 5 September 2011 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Archived from the original on 3 September 2011 Retrieved 4 September 2011 Rashbaum William K Baker Al 27 October 2011 In Ticket Fixing Scandal 16 Officers to Be Charged The New York Times Alexander M 2013 Why Police Lie Under Oath The New York Times Police Investigation Supervisor Admits Faking Fingerprints The New York Times 30 July 1993 Retrieved 21 June 2007 In a widening scandal that has rocked the New York State Police a lieutenant who supervised criminal investigations in seven upstate counties admitted yesterday that he had faked fingerprint evidence in three cases The lieutenant Craig D Harvey also said in court in Delhi N Y that he had been assisted in fabricating evidence by another lieutenant Patrick O Hara who works out of state police headquarters in Albany supervising drug and organized crime investigations United States Department of Justice Civil Rights Division United States Attorney s Office Northern District of Illinois 2017 Investigation of the Chicago Police Department pp 1 164 Frosch Zusha Elinson and Dan 16 July 2015 Cost of Police Misconduct Cases Soars in Big U S Cities The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 4 December 2019 a b c d e f g Wing Nick 29 May 2015 We re Paying A Shocking Amount of Money For Police Misconduct HuffPost Retrieved 8 November 2019 a b c d Lumsden Elanor 2017 How Much is Police Brutality Costing America Golden Gate University School of Law GGU Digital Law Commons 40 1 176 a b Frosch Zusha Elinson and Dan 16 July 2015 Cost of Police Misconduct Cases Soars in Big U S Cities The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 6 November 2019 Goodman J David 13 July 2015 Eric Garner Case Is Settled by New York City for 5 9 Million The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 6 November 2019 a b c Largest Legal Settlements Against Police HuffPost 11 September 2015 Retrieved 6 November 2019 a b Malagon Elvia 21 September 2018 4 things The cost of Jon Burge s police torture legacy Chicago Tribune Retrieved 11 November 2019 Eltagouri Marwa 27 May 2017 Chicago s new center for police torture victims is first of its kind in U S Chicago Tribune Retrieved 12 November 2019 Black Victim Black Cop Black County Washington City Paper 22 September 2000 Retrieved 12 November 2019 Coates Ta Nehisi 26 March 2009 A Little More on Prince Jones The Atlantic Retrieved 12 November 2019 Civil Jury Awards 3 7 Million in Jones Case The Law Office of Gerald Oginski LLC Retrieved 12 November 2019 Settling For Misconduct Chicago Reporter projects chicagoreporter com Retrieved 8 November 2019 Davey Monica 15 April 2015 Chicago Pays 5 Million to Family of Black Teenager Killed by Officer The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 8 November 2019 Case 15 L 3870 Chicago Reporter projects chicagoreporter com Retrieved 8 November 2019 Case 11 Cv 3440 Chicago Reporter projects chicagoreporter com Retrieved 8 November 2019 a b Toronto police paid 27 million in lawsuit claims The Star Toronto Star 11 October 2013 Retrieved 6 November 2019 a b CBC News Canada RCMP apologizes to Dziekanski s mother 4 April 2010 Archived from the original on 4 April 2010 Retrieved 6 November 2019 R30m lawsuit for assault wrongful arrest The Star Independent Online South Africa Retrieved 6 November 2019 SA police face R14 billion in civil lawsuits not R7 billion as reported Africa Check Retrieved 6 November 2019 Police killed him five years ago now Mido Macia s family gets paid out TimesLIVE Retrieved 6 November 2019 a b c Cost of corruption in Russia Where police are openly taking 1 000 bribes that are raising grocery bills Nationalpost 1 April 2016 Retrieved 8 November 2019 Jiao AY 2009 Controlling Corruption and Misconduct A Comparative Examination of Police Practices in Hong Kong and New York Asian Journal of Criminology Letvik Tore 18 September 2007 Vil legge politi klager ut pa nett Dagsavisen in Norwegian Archived from the original on 21 May 2011 Retrieved 21 September 2007 https project wnyc org disciplinary records https www virginiamercury com 2023 08 02 after george floyds murder more states require release of police disciplinary records text Delaware 20in 20June 20became 20the the 20public 20in 20recent 20years PoliceMisconduct net The Cato Institute s National Police Misconduct Reporting Project policemisconduct net Retrieved 11 December 2016 2010 Quarterly Q2 Report policemisconduct net Archived from the original on 18 March 2017 Retrieved 11 December 2016 Putting Police Misconduct Statistics in Perspective policemisconduct net Archived from the original on 21 December 2016 Retrieved 11 December 2016 Krupanski Marc 2012 Policing the Police Civilian Video Monitoring of Police Activity The Global Journal vol 32 Weitzer R 2004 Public Opinion on Reforms in Policing Police Chief Farrow J Pham T 2003 Citizen Oversight of Law Enforcement Challenge and Opportunity Littlejohn Edward J 1980 1981 Civil Liability and the Police Officer The Need for New Deterrents to Police Misconduct vol 58 U Det J Urb L p 365 Kimberly Kindy 14 September 2022 Insurers force change on police departments long resistant to it The high cost of settlements over police misconduct has led insurers to demand police departments overhaul tactics or forgo coverage The Washington Post Retrieved 15 September 2022 St Ann will chase you until the wheels fall off Littlejohn Edward J 1981 1982 Civilian Police Commission A Deterrent of Police Misconduct The vol 59 U Det J Urb L p 5 C Stone M Bobb 5 8 May 2002 Civilian Oversight of the Police in Democratic Societies PDF Global Meeting on Civilian Oversight of Police permanent dead link Goldman Roger Puro Steven 1987 1988 Decertification of Police An Alternative to Traditional Remedies for Police Misconduct vol 15 Hastings Const L Q p 45 Hunter Ronald D 1999 Officer Opinions on Police Misconduct Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice 15 2 155 170 doi 10 1177 1043986299015002004 S2CID 145003252 Barnett Randy E 1983 Resolving the Dilemma of the Exclusionary Rule An Application of Restitutive Principles of Justice vol 32 Emory L J p 937 Who we are Independent Office for Police Conduct Police Complaints Statistics for England and Wales 2018 19 PDF London Independent Office for Police Conduct 2019 ISBN 978 1 9161845 1 0 About us Police Ombudsman for Northern Ireland About us Police Investigations and Review Commissioner Further reading editBalko Radley 2006 Overkill The Rise of Paramilitary Police Raids in America Cato Institute Chevigny Paul 1998 Edge of the Knife Police Violence in the Americas The New Press ISBN 978 1 56584 183 3 Cea Robert 2005 The No Lights No Sirens The Corruption and Redemption of an Inner City Cop Harper Collins ISBN 978 0 06 058712 3 Copperfield David 2006 Wasting Police Time The Crazy World of the War on Crime Monday Books ISBN 978 0 9552854 1 7 Palmiotto Michael J 2001 Police Misconduct A Reader for the 21st Century Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 13 025604 1 Krupanski Marc 2012 Policing the Police Civilian Video Monitoring of Police Activity The Global Journal Wang Peng 2017 The Chinese Mafia Organized Crime Corruption and Extra Legal Protection Oxford Oxford University Press External links editPolice brutality archive worldwide evidence CBC The Secret Policeman with link to article by Mark Daly Police Misconduct News Daily News on Police Misconduct in United Kingdom Fatal Encounters Database of killings by police in the United States Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Police misconduct amp oldid 1184472051 Brazil, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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