SWAT
Cop Says American Neighborhoods Are 'Battlefields,' Claims Cops Face
Same Dangers As Soldiers In Afghanistan
21
August, 2013
One
of the central themes of
my book
is that that too many cops today have been conditioned to see the
people they serve not as citizens with rights, but as an enemy. My
argument is that this battlefield mindset is the product of a
generation of politicians telling police that they're at war with
things -- drugs, terrorism, crime, etc. -- and have then equipped
them with the uniforms, tactics, weapons, and other accoutrements of
war.
Over
the last several days, the popular online police magazine PoliceOne
site has
been rolling out a series of opinion pieces
in response to my book. As you might expect, most of them are
critical, although a couple have
been thoughtful.
One
essay by Sgt. Glenn French
was particularly disturbing. French serves as commander of a SWAT
team in Sterling Heights, Michigan. French doesn't criticize me for
arguing that too many police officers have adopted this battlefield
mindset. Rather, he embraces
the combat mentality, and encourages other cops to do the same.
Referring to an article I
wrote here at HuffPost,
French writes:
“What
would it take to dial back such excessive police measures?” the
author wrote. “The obvious place to start would be ending the
federal grants that encourage police forces to acquire gear that is
more appropriate for the battlefield. Beyond that, it is crucial to
change the culture of militarization in American law enforcement.”
We
trainers have spent the past decade trying to ingrain in our students
the concept that the American police officer works a battlefield
every day he patrols his sector.
Note
the choice of words. Not neighborhood,
but "sector." Although I suppose such parsing isn't even
necessary when French just comes right out and declares America a
battlefield. Note too that French isn't even referring to SWAT teams,
here. He's suggesting that all
cops be taught to view the streets and neighborhoods they patrol in
this way.
French
then tosses out some dubious statistics.
The
fact is, more American police officers have died fighting crime in
the United States over the past 12 years than American soldiers were
killed in action at war in Afghanistan. According to ODMP.org, 1,831
cops have been killed in the line of duty since 2001. According to
iCasualties.org, the number of our military personnel killed in
action in Afghanistan is 1,789.
Cops
on the beat are facing the same dangers on the streets as our brave
soldiers do in war.
Even
accepting French's preposterous premise here, his numbers are wrong.
The
U.S. has lost 2,264 troops
in Afghanistan, about 22 percent more than French claims. Moreover,
more than half police officer deaths since 2001 were
due to accidents
(mostly car accidents), not felonious homicide. Additionally,
depending on how you define the term, there are between 600,000 and
800,000 law enforcement officers working in the United States. We
have about 65,000 troops in Afghanistan. So comparing overall
fatalities is absurd. The rates of cops killed versus soldiers killed
aren't even close. And that's not factoring in the soldiers who've
come home without limbs. The dangers faced by cops and soldiers in
Afghanistan aren't remotely comparable.
As
I've pointed out before,
the actual homicide rate for cops on the job, while higher than that
in the country as a whole, is still lower than the rate in about half
of the larger cities in America. If cops on the beat face "the
same dangers on the streets as our brave soldiers do in war," so
does everyone who lives in Boston, Atlanta, or Dallas.
That
is why commanders and tactical trainers stress the fact that even on
the most uneventful portion of your tour, you can be subjected to
combat at a moment’s notice.
I
think French's choice of words in this passage speaks for itself.
What
is it with this growing concept that SWAT teams shouldn’t exist?
Why shouldn’t officers utilize the same technologies, weapon
systems, and tactics that our military comrades do?
We
should, and we will.
Again,
it's hard to even respond to this. You're either alarmed to hear this
kind of language from a domestic police officer, or you aren't. And
if you aren't, I don't think there's much I can write to convince you
otherwise. I highlight it here only to point out that it is indeed a
domestic police officer who wrote this. I've been criticized at times
for making the argument that too many cops in America today see their
jobs in this way -- that I'm exaggerating when I write or say that
some cops see American streets as war zones. Well, here it is.
Black
helicopters and mysterious warriors exist. They are America’s
answer to the evil men that the anti-SWAT crowd wouldn’t dare face.
The
second sentence is undoubtedly true. I'm not opposed to SWAT teams.
When used properly -- to defuse an already violent situation, where
lives are at risk -- they perform marvelously. I am
opposed to using them to
raid organic farms in response to nuisance violations,
or to storm
animal shelters to kill baby deer.
Or, more to the point, to serve search warrants on people suspected
of consensual drug crimes, the reason for the vast majority of the
100+ SWAT raids conducted each day in America.
One
could argue that French is merely one cop, and there's no evidence
that his essay, alarming as it may be, is representative of any
significant percentage of law enforcement officials. The problem is
that his essay appeared on PoliceOne, one of the most popular police
destinations on the Internet. It's a part of a series of essays that
the editors of that site chose to run in response to my book. If
French's perspective isn't representative of a significant portion of
law enforcement, it's difficult to see why PoliceOne would have
chosen to run it. At the very least, the editors don't appear to have
found it objectionable enough to exclude from the series.
It's
also worth noting that French trains other police officers. He has
also written a book on policing. So his perspective and approach to
the job is getting passed on to other officers. Moreover, there's
ample anecdotal evidence that plenty of other law enforcement
officials share his perspective. Here, for example, is the sheriff of
Clayton County, Georgia in 2008:
"The
war on drugs in Clayton County, as in most jurisdictions, I liken it
to the Vietnam War," Hill said. "Hit and miss, there is no
clear win — we don’t know if we’re gaining ground or not. What
we want to do is we want to change our strategy. We want to make this
more like a Normandy invasion."
Here's
a Milwaukee detective and former SWAT officer writing in National
Review a few years ago, chastising Berwyn Heights, Maryland Mayor
Cheye Calvo for pushing for reform after his home was invaded and his
dogs were killed by a SWAT team in a botched, mistaken raid:
Sorry
if Calvo and his mother-in-law were “restrained” for “almost
two hours.” Would you rather have them be comfortable for those two
hours, and risk officers’ lives and safety? Calvo should be able to
understand what the officers did and why they did it.
Municipal
police departments do fight a war on the streets of this country
daily. This incident should not be considered overkill (to take a
word from Reason’s Radley Balko), but sound police tactics.
Here's
Milwaukee Police Chief Ed Flynn, explaining how he will instruct his
officers to ignore the state's gun laws:
“My
message to my troops is if you see anybody carrying a gun on the
streets of Milwaukee, we’ll put them on the ground, take the gun
away and then decide whether you have a right to carry it.”
There
are lots of examples like these. The sheriff in Orange County,
Florida recently referred to his agency as
a "paramilitary organization." New
York Mayor Michael Bloomberg recently referred to NYPD as "the
seventh largest army in the world.” I've
recently written
about the disturbing culture of police t-shirts, which dehumanize the
citizens they serve and make light of police brutality. ("We get
up early, to beat the crowds.")
Incidentally,
a
few notes about Sterling Heights, Michigan,
where Sgt. French works. According to the city's website, in 2010,
Sterling Heights was rated the safest city in Michigan with a
population of 100,000 or more people. It was also named one of the
100 best cities in America to raise a family. In 2008, it had the
lowest crime rate of any city in Michigan. From 2005 to 2010 (the
last year data was available) it
had all of 10 murders,
in a city of about 130,000 people. This is the "battlefield"
where Sgt. French works. I'd be curious to know what the residents of
Sterling Heights would say upon learning that the commander of their
city's SWAT team views each of them more as potential combatants than
citizens with rights.
The
lead essay
for the PoliceOne series on militarization is a review of my book by
Lance Eldridge. It's titled: "Police militarization and rise of
the warrior journalist: Radley Balko’s new book on police
militarization — and subsequent articles by him and others —
signals the radicalization of America’s discourse on civilian law
enforcement."
PoliceOne
published an essay by a SWAT leader and police trainer that urges
cops to view American streets and neighborhoods as "battlefields,"
absurdly claims that working as a cop in America is as dangerous as
serving in a war zone in Afghanistan, and says cops should look at
the citizens they serve as potential combatants.
Yet
it is those of us who find all of this troubling who are the
"radicals."
Detroit
Has Gone To The Dogs... Literally
23
August, 2013
Detroit
may be on its way to becoming a ghost town, but the disappearance of
homo sapiens from the streets just means the largest US bankrupt city
is about to have a new master - man's formerly best friend, in the
form of tens of thousands of stray dogs most of which happen to be a
particularly vicious breed of pit bulls. Step aside Motown, and say
hello to Dogtown.
Bloomberg
reports that as many as 50,000 stray dogs roam the streets
and vacant homes of bankrupt Detroit, replacing residents, menacing
humans who remain and overwhelming the city’s ability to find them
homes or peaceful deaths. Dogs which are becoming ever hungrier, and
ever less domesticated. "Dens of as many as 20 canines have been
found in boarded-up homes in the community of about 700,000 that once
pulsed with 1.8 million people. One officer in the Police
Department's skeleton animal-control unit recalled a pack splashing
away in a basement that flooded when thieves ripped out water pipes.
“The dogs were having a pool party,” said Lapez Moore,
30." Well at least someone is having a party.
With
everyone concerned about zombies roaming the streets in the Post-New
Normal, it appears everyone forgot about the dogs. And especially the
"Highland Park Red" pitbull.
Poverty
roils the Motor City and many dogs have been left to fend for
themselves, abandoned by owners who are financially stressed or
unaware of proper care. Strays have killed pets, bitten mail carriers
and clogged the animal shelter, where more than 70 percent are
euthanized.
“With
these large open expanses with vacant homes, it’s as if you
designed a situation that causes dog problems,” said Harry Ward,
head of animal control.
...
Pit
bulls and breeds mixed with them dominate Detroit’s stray
population because of widespread dog fighting, said Ward. Males are
aggressive in mating, so they proliferate, he added.
One
type of fighting pit bull has become known as far as Los Angeles as
the “Highland Park red,” named after a city within Detroit’s
borders, Ward said.
Their
prevalence was clear as Ward and officers Moore and Malachi Jackson
answered calls Aug. 19. On a block where vacant houses and lots
outnumbered occupied ones, they found four dogs in an abandoned house
-- a male and three females, including a pregnant pit bull with a
prized blue-gray coat.
For
now the biggest casualty of the dog infestation is the
long-suffering, and longer-insolvent, USPS.
Aggressive
dogs force the U.S. Postal Service to temporarily halt mail delivery
in some neighborhoods, said Ed Moore, a Detroit-area spokesman. He
said there were 25 reports of mail carriers bitten by dogs in Detroit
from October through July. Though most are by pets at homes, strays
have also attacked, Moore said.
“It’s
been a persistent problem,” he said.
Mail
carrier Catherine Guzik told of using pepper spray on swarms of tiny,
ferocious dogs in a southwest Detroit neighborhood.
“It’s
like Chihuahuaville,” Guzik said as she walked her route.
At
two nearby homes, one pet dog was killed recently and another injured
by two stray pit bulls that jumped fences into yards, said neighbor
Debora Mattie, 49.
***
Four
months ago, a woman sitting on her porch on the east side was
attacked by two strays that tore off her scalp, Ward said.
“We
got those dogs,” he said. “It’s a big difference to that lady
that those dogs were gone that day.”
*
* *
Last
year, there were 903 dog bites in Detroit, according to Ward, adding
that most go unreported to police. He said 90 percent are by dogs
whose owners are known.
That
was before the rabies spread.
Summarizing
the surreal reality of Dog Town best is Kristen Huston, who leads the
Detroit office of All About Animals Rescue, a non-profit that
obtained the Humane Society’s $50,000 grant last year to feed,
vaccinate and sterilize pets.
“Technically,
it’s illegal to let a dog roam, but with the city being bankrupt,
who’s going to do anything about it?”
The
good news: for now the strays are dogs. How long before humans are
forced to hunt other humans, some of them rabid, vicious killers,
roaming the streets of whatever the latest and greatest municipal
bankrupt casualty is?
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.