After years of declining crime, a spike in city violence

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Doug M.

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After years of declining crime, a spike in city violence | The Seattle Times

Well, DUH.

The main factor here is the abuse of LE over incidents that are legally inane but which reveal the reality of what cops have to do and the ignorance of the overwhelming majority of most citizens about the lawful authority and obligations of cops. For a pleasant difference, see http://www.forcescience.org/champion.pdf. Maybe not perfect, but FAR less stupid than the usual drivel.

Criminal use of firearms is adequately address by existing laws, if they are enforced, but we have real problems getting the feds to do their job (I've experienced it) while joining the Terrorists, Anarchists, and Narcissists in their cockamamie mindset about police work. There is a culture, which for lack of a better description, I refer to as the MTV culture (it crosses all racial and other demographic lines as far as I have seen) that thinks cops are just out to get them (which may be a function of "if you don't want to get hit by lightning, don't look like a lightning rod). They think that they can resist the cops, applying gang based "respect" standards that simply do not reflect the law. See TinyURL: I?m a cop. If you don?t want to get hurt, don?t challenge me. - The Washington Post, which is a correct statement of the law. Maryland v. Wilson, 519 US 408 (1997); Michigan v. Summers, 452 U. S. 692 (1981). See also TinyURL: Ferguson, Idiot Cops, and Experts Who Know Nothing At All « breachbangclear.com. It is the duty of the police to hunt bad people. Being a mere "report taker" to the detriment of catching a criminal is probably misconduct. Law enforcement officers find and capture bad people, document the investigation, and pass on the documentation to prosecutors for consideration of the next steps in the process. Some of those people decide to compound their crimes by resisting and assaulting the police. Fights are ugly. Use of force is ugly. Is it sudden, and violent. It's not like a movie. LE is not a people pleasing business, either. It is a coercive compliance business. Failure to accept both of those will ensure that the offender gets hurt, and that people who do not know what they do not know will be outraged, but not at the offender as they should be. I can live with the family and friends being very upset. They are entitled to an emotional response, and I don't think it is reasonable to expect them to be objective.

However, that is not the standard of the law. The general rule pertaining to use of force has been more or less the same for centuries, and is generally the same in both criminal and civil settings. In short, the person using force must be "reasonable" under the circumstances. Being factually correct is not the standard, nor would it be a sound standard. The test is not based on hindsight or the unaware perspective of reporters, friends of the offenders, or anyone else with no qualifications to assess the matter. "The "reasonableness" of a particular use of force must be judged from the perspective of a reasonable officer on the scene, rather than with the 20/20 vision of hindsight." Graham v. Connor, 490 U.S. 386 at 396 (1989). "The calculus of reasonableness must embody allowance for the fact that police officers are often forced to make split-second judgments -- in circumstances that are tense, uncertain, and rapidly evolving -- about the amount of force that is necessary in a particular situation." Id., at 396-397. While this is the standard of Constitutional law applicable in the civil rights arena, many or most states also apply this to criminal law analysis. There are other cases from the U. S. Supreme Court since then, and they maintain the standard. It is not new.

We have the DOJ/Civil rights division, which is comprised of persons consciously chose for their ignorance of the law and police work, enabling that. They seek consent decrees that are not based on the law or facts, but driven by emotional responses (Seattle being the best possible example) and taking advantage of the ignorance of city officials. (Dear Mr. Holmes: I don't opine on bankruptcy, please SHUT UP about police operations. You don't know what you don't know.)

We have prosecutors engaging in questionable practices driven by mob rule (the Gray matter – pretty messed up from a tort perspective, but the stop and arrest were clearly legal under controlling law, and I am not sure if she is lying or completely unqualified; at a certain point, it does not matter). Governor Cuomo of NY has now taken review of LE shootings from local prosecutors and given to the (state) Attorney General's Office, for reasons that are simply insane and cannot be supported as a matter of law or fact (prosecutors could be biased or the populace has no confidence). I tend to believe that there are maybe 1000 lawyers and judges in the US who have any business opining on LE use of force, especially when it comes to understanding tactics, threat perception and control, etc, but anyone who thinks that their State AG's Office is any more likely to do a good job is either stoned out of their gourd or completely insane. Either way – they need a guardian.

After seeing the abuse of a friend in another state over an unfortunate but legally and ethically complete appropriate shooting, I have become more and more bothered by the mob rule responses to these events. (See http://dig.abclocal.go.com/kgo/PDF/Complete-OIS-Report-7-7-14.pdf.) Look at the data about the Florence neighborhood of South Central LA. L.A.?s Long Hot Summer of Racial Violence Is Brewing | PJ Media.

Note the data provided in the graphic: over 26 TIMES as many residents of the neighborhood killed by other private citizens (most presumably unlawfully given the sad state of crime and the virtual inability of a private citizen to be lawfully armed in most of CA) as by cops. Many of those were probably criminal on criminal offenses as they often are, but some number of the decedents were actually just victims. LE does not shoot near as many offenders as it could/should, which is also supported by the research data. Private citizens likewise.

This is one of the many things that gripes me about the silly posturing about the killings of offenders by cops. There is a complete failure to address the fact that the offenders are the ones who create the problem, and who choose to make the cops shoot them. There is also no recognition at all of what these offenders do to their neighborhood, and the impact on those who have to keep living there (usually just the same pigment, just the same deprived socio-economic status, etc – but not violent predatory offenders). (I've known more than one cop/retired cop who said they liked to work in these rough areas because there was a lot of good hunting of bad people, the primary job of LE, and that also the other folks in the neighborhood needed them to be doing that.) Another is the utterly moronic comments by the member(s) of the Police Commission. Anyone who known enough about the relevant area pf the law to comment knows perfectly well that the facts described provide a more than ample basis for a Terry stop. Ms. Madison is not even arguably qualified to opine, has no idea of the extent of her ignorance, and ought to shut up. Even if she was right about her claim of a lack of basis to make a non-consensual contact with Mr. Ford (and she is not even close to right), he had no right whatsoever to resist, to assault the officers, and to try to disarm and kill one. Ever.

(Edited) The reporting and folklore about Michael Brown and Eric Garner were dishonest and irresponsible. LE Command personnel should have been fired for their actions and statements during those events and that period. The people shot by cops (they are not victims, and anyone who uses that term is a blithering idiot) are not at all like most other people. They are broad spectrum dysfunctionals, with long histories of all sorts of violent predatory behavior, mental health problems that never get addressed worth a hoot, etc. Who they were, and their problems, no matter how sad in retrospect, is not relevant. It is not even to be considered, as a matter of law. The person they are at the time of the shots is all that matters, and it is demonstrated by their conduct.

--

"The world is a dangerous place to live, not because of the people who are evil, but because of the people who don't do anything about it." Albert Einstein.
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I did not paste in the text from any of the URLs because it would have taken a lot of time and space. I know that is by far the better practice, but in this instance, I thought it was less obnoxious to the members and mods to do it this way. (Dear mods: please don't beat me.) :o

Readers: Be careful in your responses. I don't care what you think, but the mods will care what you post and for good reason. Be very certain of this truth: the problem is not about race. It is about a criminal sub-culture that crosses all lines of ethnicity, pigment, and plumbing. I have dealt with a lot of them - the least important variable among these people is pigment/ethnicity.

It is also about an ignorant subset of the population of relatively functional people who would not know a pathology if it bit them in the butt like an alligator. They need to spend a month working with CPS workers; another with ER nurses (night shift, preferably), and another with cops (again, night shift). I've been a cop and prosecutor in two states, with broad experience in all aspects of prosecution including all types of crimes committed by juveniles; adult felony prosecution, including a significant number of sex offenses and other "strike" offenses, and government civil law (here in WA, the civil advisors to county officials are in the prosecutor's office). Among my current assignments are being Sheriff's counsel, and I have published several articles and two books on legal aspects of LE operations. Feel free to disagree, but my views and legal understanding are not drawn from folklore, the idiots of both political poles (like Balko and the Bundy apologists) who think that cops are militarized and all that garbage, or my exhaust port. I do this stuff for a living, and have for most of my adult life. I went to a top rate law school (but was not even close to an academic star; I hated law school) and my degree is older than some of the DPAs in my office.:eek: I am not the smartest, most experienced guy out there - but I'm in the upper levels.
 
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If I were a cop now days, approaching retirement age, and the city I worked in tended to blame cops for any incident, and let the media get away with trying cops in the press --

Then I'd hang out in the station as much as possible drinking coffee, wait for calls to come in then slow roll responding so all I had to do was take a report of an incident that was already over.

Then stop at the donut shop for an hour on the way back to the station.

And wait for retirement.

If I was a young cop with my whole career ahead of me, I'd quit and find another line of work.

I expect crime rates to rise more.
 
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If I were a cop now days, approaching retirement age, and the city I worked in tended to blame cops for any incident, and let the media get away with trying cops in the press --

Then I'd hang out in the station as much as possible drinking coffee, wait for calls to come in then slow roll responding so all I had to do was take a report of an incident that was already over.

Then stop at the donut shop for an hour on the way back to the station.

And wait for retirement.

If I was a young cop with my whole career ahead of me, I'd quit and find another line of work.

I expect crime rates to rise more.

Seattle cops are already doing this very thing.
 
In general the liberal progressives want to paint everyone as a victim, even the perpetrators themselves. It also serves the agenda to display guns as evil tools.
 
Great post, Doug. I'm hearing bad things coming from partneros still on the LAPD. The future of police work isn't bright.
Bob
 
Seattle cops are already doing this very thing.
I hope not. Only a person of low integrity would do what Cal44 suggested. I'm sure there are some out there, but why become a policeman if you're not going to do your job?

I've worked with people with this attitude. It sucks for the rest of the workforce and I have no respect for anyone who does that.
 
I hope not. Only a person of low integrity would do what Cal44 suggested. I'm sure there are some out there, but why become a policeman if you're not going to do your job?

I've worked with people with this attitude. It sucks for the rest of the workforce and I have no respect for anyone who does that.

You should not judge them unless you have been in their shoes.

How would you like to be under the microscope of the very people you swore to protect?

No, what sucks is that people think they know what it's like to be a cop. So they think they can second guess them. And they get no respect.
 
A great deal of this can be explained rather simply,....... Stat Fraud. The city I retired from had the dubious distinction in the early 90's as being number one in the nation in Part One crimes for cities of it's size. At that time roughly 250,000 souls full time.
This news hit the papers and the Brass and City Fathers were not at all happy as Tourism is our City is a big deal. So,.... you would document a Burglary for instance. The boss would review said report and tell you to make it a simple theft, thereby eliminating said B&E's Part One's crime status. I used to get annoyed at this Fraud and advised said boss I would change it as long as he ordered me to do it and many baulked so I just informed them I would note it in the report. Folks have to understand that these reports go to court, get reviewed by the Detective Division as well as the Victims of said crimes and who do understand what is a B&E and what is not. This went on for YEARS as did the push for arrests,...... ANY arrests. Policemen need to be able to do their jobs and make arrests when arrests are appropriate and warnings when appropriate. They also must be able to respond with appropriate force to make the aforementioned arrests and where I worked, that was up to and including KILLING you to make that arrest.
I do not blame Policemen nowadays for being Reactive. It's Sad, but when you will be judged in a Kangaroo court or the court of Public Opinion or the news media, go home at the end of your shift and hope you were able to help someone while you worked. The rise is crime comes from Police Unions and individual officer's, Troopers and Deputies suing these Stat concealing Cities and States and exposing them for what they are doing so now, honest reporting is being done which I believe explains a great deal of the increases. The other is the boldness of today's criminals as they just do not seem to care what they do and to who they do it to.
 
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You should not judge them unless you have been in their shoes.

How would you like to be under the microscope of the very people you swore to protect?

No, what sucks is that people think they know what it's like to be a cop. So they think they can second guess them. And they get no respect.
Not judging anyone at all. Merely speaking to what a person says they will do. If I say I'm going to do a job, I'm going to do it. It was not a comment on policeman at all.

No one has more respect for what our police force does for us or what they go through than I. Don't take my comment to mean that I'm minimizing the affect of public scrutiny on their ability to do their job.
 
Trying to employ logic to the criminal class is useless. It doesn't matter what you say, Mike Brown and the hundreds of thousands just like him, will never take responsibility for their actions. He saw nothing wrong with taking those cigars or assaulting that officer.

so Trayvon Martin was an innocent child buying Skittles, Mike Brown was simply walking in the street, Eric Garner was murdered with a choke hold, and the list goes on.

All I know is none of my family or friends have ever had a negative interaction with a cop. Neither have I.
 
This problem begins in the Public school system as a complete lack of respect for any authority.
Back when this country was firing on all cylinders if you got in trouble in school the last thing you wanted was to have that news delivered home because the punishment you received in school was nothing compared to what you faced at home.
Fast forward to today, the little angles are always right and do no wrong and it's always the schools fault.
These lessons learned early transfer to the streets and lenient judges become the new parents who send the poorly raised back out on the streets because, after all, the schools damaged them.
And now it's open season on LEOs and it's not getting better.
 
Some good posts here,hard to express an opinion with out a ding though. Good luck to all the officers out there who have to deal with the system as it exists today. The solutions to the problems won't be easy or popular.
 
It's kind of daunting to realize the whole situation is either the result of a completely mistaken social experiment, or an intentional plan. Either one is a mess that'll take years to ever improve. And it won't improve till the pain gets so bad that we have to admit it and make a decision to change.

If nothing changes, nothing changes.
 
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It's kind of daunting to realize the whole situation is either the result of a completely mistaken social experiment, or an intentional plan. Either one is a mess that'll take years to ever improve. And it won't improve till the pain gets so bad that we have to admit it and make a decision to change.

If nothing changes, nothing changes.

I'm 65 and so I guess that makes me old.

And we old guys like to sit around talking about how the country, and especially the younger kids are going down the tubes.

But I remember Sunday dinners as a kid at my grand parents house when my grandfather talking about how the country and younger generation was going down the tubes back then.

And that was in the 1950s.

But somehow the country survived, and now the 50's are viewed as the good old days.
 
There are three factors involved:
  1. Police Misconduct - That kid in the stairwell in NYC wasn't committing a crime. He's still dead, and the guy who shot him is still walking around free. Yet, there's no uproar about it from particular quarters who cry crocodile tears over armed strongarm robbers.
  2. Political Opportunism - There is a pattern of manufactured outrage over justified shootings, such as that of Michael Brown, while criminal acts by police, such as the shooting of the driver who sought to identify himself per the cop's orders, and the kid killed in the stairwell by the NYPD receive virtually no attention. The logical conclusion is that this isn't about justice for the victims of police criminality, but instead a calculated campaign to paint violent criminals as "victims" and to "normalize" their aberrant behaviors. In reaction, police union types exploit the exploitation to try to normalize aberrant behavior by police. It's a case of dueling sociopaths.
  3. Moral Cowardice - City officials, KNOWING full well the fraudulent nature of the claims by the social justice warriors, rush to curry favor with the social justice warriors, allowing the Revolutionary Communist Party and its ilk, and their ignorant cannon fodder to run wild, while the victims are left to fend for themselves... usually as disarmed targets.
The people who live in these communities VOTED for what they have, frequently (as in the case of Richard M. Daley) for decades. My only conclusion is that they WANT what they've got, since they keep voting for it.

None of this is any more surprising than stomach trouble following a steady diet of five day old roadkill.

That doesn't mean that I'm going to allow them to impose their psychopathologies on me. My answer has been, is now, and will always be "No, I refuse."
 
If I were a cop now days, approaching retirement age, and the city I worked in tended to blame cops for any incident, and let the media get away with trying cops in the press --
Police have neither the legal duty nor the physical ability to protect individuals.

Regardless of what they do or don't do, you and you alone are responsible for your own safety. Forget that at your own peril.
 
You guys are making my head hurt.....can't we all just get along?

What happened to respect (given and received) on both sides? I think Dr. Spock started all this nonsense...let's bring back the paddle and give it to the parents and teachers with impunity.

I think that as society grows, so does the sense of anonymity. The risk of being publicly shamed is greatly lessened and the repercussions for bad behavior removed - crimes will only increase.

Ever notice that small towns have lower crime rates?
 
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