HighwayMan
Super Secret Senior Member
Maybe out there but that's not possible anywhere around this part of the country. A personal vehicle is just that.But, yes, some officers register their vehicles as "confidential"...
Maybe out there but that's not possible anywhere around this part of the country. A personal vehicle is just that.But, yes, some officers register their vehicles as "confidential"...
As the OP appears to be from CA I was referring to CA practices. I cannot comment on the laws and practices in most states other than CA.Maybe out there but that's not possible anywhere around this part of the country. A personal vehicle is just that.
Yep.Professional courtesy was shown to an officer in San Diego not too long ago after he smashed his vehicle into a tree and some of the officers who did so are facing administrative and criminal proceedings as a result.
That's because they're ... er ... dishonest.Some dishostest cops actually do deny the existence of a 'professional courtesy'.
Only if the officer cutting the break to a fellow cop wouldn't cut anyone a break ... ever. I dont know a single officer who has never let someone slide for some reason. The highest citation ration I know of was about 85%, the lowest, about 10%. Since it is highly unlikely that these 85% officers let ONLY family and friends go, they also cut breaks to members of the public. Had these officers stated that they NEVER cut someone a break and then cut an officer a break, THAT would be hypocrisy. While I have never met anyone who has admitted to NEVER giving someone a break or willing to do so, I suppose it is possible that some officer somewhere is dumb enough to speak in such absolutes such that he gets himself jammed up by his own words.It's the height of hypocrisy that a cop would let a fellow cop skate while busting a non-cop.
And I'd ask for you to objectively support that hypothesis, because I contend otherwise ... since I KNOW of officers caught for DUI and they have all been investigated both by a responsible agency and their own agency as part of an internal affairs matter.It's my hypothesis that 9 out of 10 cops would not arrest a fellow cop for dui when he could if there is not an accident involved.
First, the sample is too small to be statistically valid.My hypotheses is based on both what I have observed and statistics. Of the 13 Chicago cops arrested for dui, in article I referenced 6 where out of state. If the investigator knew anything about statistics she should have said: 'Woh, something is definitely wrong here, how could almost half of the times a cop is arrested for dui, it happens out of state (assumption here is an out of state cop less likely to give a free pass)'. For everybody else, that number is about 2 percent. Something definitely reeks here.
And any officer that might do such a thing as to cover up the criminal act of a peer deserves to - at least - lose his job. Isolated stories are not "proof" of anything endemic nor systemic malfeasance. Fortunately, criminal activities by law enforcement in The USA are still noteworthy enough to make national headlines when they are uncovered. I fear the day that such malfeasance might be so common place that it no longer is newsworthy.Look at how they even tried to protect a fellow officer who beat the tar out of a lady for not giving him more beer. You'd think the cops would be against that kind of action, even if the perp. is a fellow cop. Apparently not, and that is very sad.
Hardly an "educated guess."'Since your hypothesis is objectively unable to be proven, I suggest it is a belief and not a hypothesis.'
I believe it is a hypothesis since it is an 'educated guess' and perhaps could be proven if I can get more data.
That kind of breakdown would be largely unavailable as arrest data does not tend to contain this information, and NON arrests are not typically documented. Besides, those numbers would - in and of themselves - be meaningless as any number of other variables might account for the results. Percentages and numbers that you ask are subject to too many questions and interpretations as to what they mean. It would take a heck of a research study to take on even a portion of that data, and unless you've got a grant to put it together and a couple of years to spend ferreting out the data this will remain merely a curiosity without any real, hard objective data.'First, the sample is too small to be statistically valid.'
I do, in most part, agree with you here. I would very much like to find much more data, perhaps you are privy to some? I am looking for national data. Number of cops and non-cops arrested for dui. Number of deaths caused by cops and non-cops via dui. Number and percentage of cops and non-cops arrested for dui when no accident is involved. Number of previous arrests of cops and and non-cops involved in a fatal dui... etc., etc.
They make national news in police periodicals and websites, at least. When CPD stopped making gang affiliation a disqualifier for employment, it made news ... when fights broke out in briefing between the Folk and the People, it made news ... graft and corruption, it made news. As it should. But, Chicago is not at toe forefront of policing theory, though they are not without their innovations and positive attributes as an organization, and individually.Not sure how many non-locals know about all the shinanigans that goes on by Chicago cops,
He was also of a different age in a different era of policing. Policing 40 years ago was a very different animal, and a lot has changed for the better since then. They have written entire books on the transition of policing over the last 50 years, and my Masters Thesis incorporated a good deal of these theories.I think they made a movie on Serpico because he was a rarity among policemen, not the norm.
The names are not mentioned, likely because the matter is also an internal personnel investigation and the names are unable to be released by law (at least that is the case out here, and i suspect even in IL).This article is about a town very close to mine. 13 cops inflated dui numbers so they could get more grant money, and thus more overtime money, debunking the myth that dui's don't make officers money. The police do not mention the names of their fellow officers involved in the scheme for some odd reason.
"Courtesy" for a simple traffic offense is one thing, but these days no one is going to be looking to risk their job to cover for an idiot who is committing a crime."
I've never heard of any cop who lost their job from giving a fellow cop a pass instead of arresting him for dui, do you java? Most would give the pass knowing arresting another officer will make him an enemy of other police members. Look at the hyperlinks I sent, one cop was too afraid to give a fellow cop a dui, because he was fearful of being hated by the others (this is all on tape). If cops try to cover up the crime of an off-duty cop who beats the tar out of a lady for not giving him more beer, do you really think they are fearful of not arresting a fellow cop for dui?
If you know any cops, just ask them. Most will flat out tell you about the 'professional courtesy' mentality of the boys in blue. Think of the cops you know, do you truly think they entered the force to 'serve and protect their fellow man'.
It's just painful for me to read the sad stories of people being arrested for dui when no accident is involved and what they have to go thru to get their life back in order (sometimes being convicted of manslaughter gives less of a punishment after outrageous fees, revokation of license, etc. is concerned). I don't condone driving under the influence, however it bothers me that cops can dish out dui's for the hoi polloi while rarely doing the same for fellow officers unless. Police should have to play by the same set of rules as everybody else.
Firsthand? No. Anecdotally, yes.I've never heard of any cop who lost their job from giving a fellow cop a pass instead of arresting him for dui, do you java?
That might be the case where you are, but if you were in a place where the officers took their profession and their oaths seriously, they would know that the idiot who screwed up is the guy that should take the blame, not the officer who did his or her job.Most would give the pass knowing arresting another officer will make him an enemy of other police members.
Again, you cite anecdotal incidents as evidence of a wider problem. If there is such a vast conspiracy behing the badge, I haven't seen it and I'm on the inside. Such concerns and actions do exist - I won't deny it. But, they are hardly systemic and tend to be isolated into the culture of a particular agency. The culture of that agency can often be just as strong as the social controls within a distinct community and officers will tend to conform to the norms of that subculture just as members of any community will. The key to changing these problems is addressing the cultures that exist within those agencies where officers express this fear of isolation. NYPD has come a long way in the past 20 years in addressing this, and New Orlands PD is still wrestling with this sort of thing. Chicago ... well, their problem may be more than just the PD you have a patronage and power system in part of that state that goes back over a century, so that is more than merely the police.Look at the hyperlinks I sent, one cop was too afraid to give a fellow cop a dui, because he was fearful of being hated by the others (this is all on tape). If cops try to cover up the crime of an off-duty cop who beats the tar out of a lady for not giving him more beer, do you really think they are fearful of not arresting a fellow cop for dui?
I know a LOT of cops ... I am one. I supervise them. I train them. I know them.If you know any cops, just ask them. Most will flat out tell you about the 'professional courtesy' mentality of the boys in blue.
Many did, yes. Some entered the career because it paid decent, sounded like fun, and the retirement sounded good. Almost to a man they will tell you that they entered to serve and help others. Fr some that may be so much smoke, but when you evaluate the psych profiles you find that police officers tend to have some common characteristics, and those characteristics do tend to lead towards a sense of service and duty. The problem isn't the attitude they have when they ENTER police work, it's the attitude that develops when they have been in it for a while.Think of the cops you know, do you truly think they entered the force to 'serve and protect their fellow man'.
So, you'd rather give people a pass because they did NOT kill or injure someone on this outing?!? Really?It's just painful for me to read the sad stories of people being arrested for dui when no accident is involved and what they have to go thru to get their life back in order (sometimes being convicted of manslaughter gives less of a punishment after outrageous fees, revokation of license, etc. is concerned).
If it bothers you, and you see a problem, advocate for a change in your local department where you seem to see this as a problem. Find out what their policy is and how it is being enforced. Advocate for change, or greater civilian oversight. But, since this is something you can't quantify because an officer that is stopped and cut a break will rarely have that contact documented, it's left only to the imagination or to very thorough research on the subject which would take years and lots of money.I don't condone driving under the influence, however it bothers me that cops can dish out dui's for the hoi polloi while rarely doing the same for fellow officers unless. Police should have to play by the same set of rules as everybody else.
I have. And there was an incident a few years ago where a NYPD officer was arrested for DWI and the arresting officer encouraged him not to take the breath test. He was severely disciplined.I've never heard of any cop who lost their job from giving a fellow cop a pass instead of arresting him for dui, do you java?
Not any more, not around here anyway. Especially if there is an accident involved.Most would give the pass knowing arresting another officer will make him an enemy of other police members.
Well, boo-hoo. Those people make their own choices and put other's lives at risk. Hardly a sad story when a drunk driver gets locked up.It's just painful for me to read the sad stories of people being arrested for dui when no accident is involved and what they have to go thru to get their life back in order...
Well, that's exactly what it sounds like.I don't condone driving under the influence...
Most of them probably did so, just like most 20 somethings enter other professions with ideals burning bright.<<<snip>>>
Think of the cops you know, do you truly think they entered the force to 'serve and protect their fellow man'.
<<<<snip>>>
Agreed.Most of them probably did so, just like most 20 somethings enter other professions with ideals burning bright.
Rich?!?! Not sure how that happens. If you're single and have no real debt, and commute an hour or more to a police job in a large metropolitan police department from a much lower cost of living community, you might do quite well for a while. But, getting rich as a peace officer? where does that happen - I'd like to go there!The high pay and benefits play a part, but most ambitious young people expect to be rich anyways.
Yes, but it doesn't have to occur. While this is a function of the job, there are ways to mitigate it ... unfortunately, not every department administration is capable or willing to take the steps necessary to affect the cultural change that might limit the emotional effects of the job.After a few years (in any job), some degree of cynicism and weariness settles in. That is just human nature.