I’ve been remiss in not writing the promised Part 3 of my
series on Code of Silence. Whether the
Code exists or doesn’t in your agency, the potential is prevalent in all police
agencies. Are there some things you should look for that are indicators that the
Code is alive and well in your agency?
Many years ago I was testifying in Boston Federal
Court. An issue was whether the police
agency had a Code of Silence and was this a moving force causing the injury to
a suspect. The judge was unsure whether
he would allow me to testify. So he
conducted a voir dire hearing asking me if I had some methodology to determine
the existence of the Code of Silence.
Since that time I’ve enhanced those points of my methodology. Let’s look at some of those points.
Is what other
officers say they were doing at the critical moment contrary to reasonable
practices? An example would be the
booking sergeant saying he heard some form of scuffle, but he was busy doing
paperwork. You and I know that if you
heard something like that you’d bust your ass to get out there and assist your
fellow officers.
Should the incident
have alerted a reasonable officer and focused attention to the incident? At the end of a pursuit when the suspect
stops or crashes, the focus should be on the suspect and his capture. But so often this is the time when some
officer may allow the adrenaline of the chase to obscure his decision to use
force. This is the time for the
noninvolved officer to restrain him; not say his attention was diverted by some
noise from another direction away from the incident. Looking the other way is not reasonable!
Was the misconduct so
obvious that an officer would have had to shut his/her eyes or ears not to
become aware of it? The prisoner
torture of suspects by Detective Burge in the basement of Precinct 2 in Chicago
is something everyone in the station should have been aware of. Yet, no one came forward until years of
wrongful convictions were reversed.
Were officers in a
position to have seen or heard what occurred but deny any knowledge? An incident like the infamous Rodney King
beating is a good example. It was
amazing how many of the 17 officers ringing the incident didn’t see anything or
couldn’t recall what occurred. Remember
many officers may avoid answering the questions with any degree of specificity,
rather than deny!
The development of
cliques can cause insulation and protection. We don’t have to look far to see this
influence of officers working close together causing them to clam up and either
engage in misconduct or look the other way.
Special enforcement units recently in Chicago, Philadelphia, Atlanta,
Tulsa and Los Angeles are recent examples.
It can also happen when shift work becomes cast in concrete. Fire departments are a prime example of this
where teams work together for years.
The retaliation of
officers who do come forward. In the
New Jersey State Police a group calling themselves the “Lords of Discipline”
preyed on troopers who came forward with information about the agency profiling
motorists. The probationary Officer Batt,
in 2000, was the person who first brought forth information about the
misconduct of four officers calling themselves the “Riders.” His information was what caused Oakland to be
placed under a consent decree and now faces the possibility of the Federal
Court putting the agency under receivership; something we haven’t seen
before. Yet, Officer Batt, the young
officer who did the right thing, faced so much retaliation that the Chief had
to get him a job with another police agency.
Unfortunately, these are not isolated incidents!
And lastly, we have
something I call the Blue Shield.
These are things police agencies do that insulate officers who engage in
misconduct from being held accountable.
When agencies purposefully conduct inadequate investigations, fail to
discipline for misconduct, and fail to hold officers accountable when they give
false and misleading statement during administrative investigations is a common
practice of an agency doing the wrong thing.
Some agencies accept the lack of a criminal charge for the officer’s act
of misconduct as an excuse to not conduct the administrative
investigation. Most agencies salivate
when a malignant officer elects to leave the agency rather than face discipline
and the failure to hold the officer accountable allows the officer the ability
to just go to work for some other agency.
And, lastly, the lack of transparency by agencies regarding
administrative investigations and employee discipline. This secrecy erodes public trust and allows
officers who are disciplined to put their own spin on it rather than have their
case used as an example to others in the agency.
All I can leave you with is this is a continuing pursuit you
must engage in to develop a professional police agency. This pursuit is essential to create an
environment where every member of our agency can be proud of the service
provided. This environment allows
employees to do the right thing with pride and a true belief that they will be
supported and honored. I always end my
class on the Code of Silence with a question, “Does anyone in the class know of
an officer who has received the Medal of Valor for blowing the whistle on
police corruption?” I’m still waiting
for someone to give me an example.