SW AG80 said:
Nosh said:
In your professional opinion, what does "very few cops cross the line and do things the wrong way" mean?
After giving this alot of thought, I typed out a lengthy and well thought out response. Then it suddenly disappeared. I won't re-type it all. The 2 in Houston in this case are criminals. There are very few of those in law enforcement. I sent a sheriff to prison when I was DA. Another sheriff in Presidio County went to the pen. These 2 were criminals. In the last 10 years 2-5 were prosecuted in the RGV, as was the DA in Brownsville, Of course, I am not counting the ones who get DWIs or even family violence cases. Those don't have anything to do with their profession.
Most of the problems are caused by officers who are not smart enough to know what they are doing is wrong. Felony stupid, like the current Texas Attorney General.
For the ones calling for no more "no knock" warrants, they are certainly over used. But they are absolutely needed. When LE rolls up to a house at 6:00 am of a known Mexican Mafia member with security cameras on every corner of the house, cops might as well be wearing a target as they stand at the door and knock. They do a job I want no part of, and I have accompanied them on search warrants in west Texas, San Antonio and Houston.
I have also given this a lot of thought, and I will disagree with your percentages, if not necessarily your statements. I believe Danny Duberstein's response is FAR more accurate...
"I don't think there are a ton of cops that break the law. I do think there are a ton of cops that are willing to turn a blind eye to one that does tho. I do think the us vs them mentality is fostered many places, I do think they'll protect a brother, I do think there is pressure to protect a dept's reputation, and I do think there s pressure to not be a rat. Wrap all that up, and some bad cops like this crew are able to operate for longer than they should and a lot of other cops are aware"
The number of cops who create a completely false affidavit that allows a drug raid on a couple who never committed a crime is small. But, you suggest that every other issue is simple stupidity. It is not. A huge percentage of cases have police who fudge police reports, who do not collect evidence, who steal evidence and money, who inflict beatings on defendants, then charge the defendant with assault, and numerous other transgressions. Every one of the examples I gave are either felony Tampering With Evidence, Tampering With Government Documents, or Official Oppression. The overwhelming majority of police officers AND District Attorneys wink at these crimes as letting criminals know who's in charge.
Who is complicit in this criminal cop culture? Well, certainly, every "good" cop who turns the other way is complicit. Training officers who tell rookies are at fault. Internal Affairs departments who whitewash these incidents are to blame. Police unions, who fight to keep every offense off the officer's record are to blame. District Attorneys who do not fully investigate these claims are to blame, even moreso when they mislead the Grand Jury to no bill the charges. And, last, but not least, the public and news media, who promote hero worship of law enforcement, and who do not demand accountability are to blame.
The stories cops told me while I was an ADA would make your jaws drop. How about the DPS troopers who told me that they are no longer allowed to remain on pursuits when a certain sheriff's department joins in, because of the time that they cornered a fleeing suspect, shot him dead, then picked up incriminating evidence and drove off with it before the homicide and DA investigators arrived? Or the ones who laughed about the beatings they inflicted on arrestees already in handcuffs? No, it is not "very few cops" who cross the line. It is a lot. They have earned the dirty reputation that they have, and those defending them by saying it is very few are doing no one any favors.