The Police Crisis In America
By James Donahue
The nation has been sliding toward a police state situation for a long time. I watched it happening during the years I spent reporting police news, covering major fires, murders, court trials and sometimes just riding around with the police on night patrol.
I worked to maintain a good re'pore with the officers on my beat and it paid off. Because I was fair and always wrote balanced stories I was trusted. Consequently the people in the community trusted the police.
There was a time when I had my own personal coffee cup hanging on a hook with the other cups at the Michigan State Police Post in Sandusky, Michigan. I was given free access to the Sheriff’s Dispatcher’s radio room where I could read the nightly police and fire log. The night dispatcher usually called me at my office or home when major events were happening. Nothing that the police did in the county escaped my attention.
Those were the days when I picked up stories about a judge that saw a flying saucer over his house and a detective that accidentally shot himself in the foot during a raid. Stories like that are usually concealed from the press today. They are part of the human interest side of police life and tend to make the officers part of our community. But now things have degenerated into a "them and us" orientation.
There were times when I knew every officer on a first name basis. I was sometimes "pulled-over" along the road by deputies who just wanted a friendly chat. Two troopers stopped me one night to show me how their newly installed radar system on their squad car worked. Yes, they caught me driving ten miles over the limit but I suppose because we were friends, they let me go with a warning after demonstrating how their new "toy" worked.
I think things started going haywire back when President Lyndon Johnson was in the White House. The Vietnam War was going strong then but Johnson, a Democrat, was pressing what he called a "guns and butter" policy. He budgeted to keep the war going while funneling a certain percentage of our tax dollars back into state, county and city coffers through something he invented called revenue sharing.
To get their hands on some of that money local governments were required to invent new jobs. This was Johnson’s solution to a high unemployment problem that was plaguing the country in his day, as it is again now. And one of the easiest ways of creating new government jobs was to create new positions on local police agencies.
The Sheriff’s Department increased its staff by several new men designated for road patrol. The little town where I lived went from one police chief to a staff of about four officers and two patrol cars. Villages around the county that never had police departments suddenly had police chiefs and patrol cars. That rural Michigan county became crowded with police officers with little to do.
The next thing added was a drug task force. Every county in the state suddenly had one so the counties qualified for additional federal money funneling down the pipeline. Before we had a drug task force we never realized that we had a drug problem. Suddenly the police began raiding marijuana fields and arresting high school children on charges of possessing and distributing marijuana.
After this the local governments were granted money for tracking down child abusers. We were shocked at the number of neighbors who were suddenly being arrested on these charges. An entire new county department was established to receive the federal money for this project.
This was all socking change for the people in our quiet little farming communities. The county seat has a population of just over 2,000.
As time went on I noticed that the police were switching from soft light blue and tan uniforms to pure black. They looked much more menacing when they pulled us over along the road dressed in those black garbs. And people were getting pulled over more and more frequently because of the Sheriff's new "road patrol" assigned to do nothing else.
The police also began mounting additional flashing red, white and blue lights on their squad cars, and using high powered search lights to blind us during road stops. Friendly warnings about driving too fast or having a tail light out suddenly turned into a surefire summons for something the officer claimed we were doing wrong.
I remember riding with a deputy one night that boasted how an officer could find some legal violation to justify a road stop after following just about any car for a few miles. All a driver had to do to get a ticket was sway over the center line or fail to properly slow for people working along the side of the road.
When the old sheriff retired and we elected a new man to replace him, some major changes were made at the dispatcher’s room. That entire section of the station was encased in bullet-proof stained glass and reporter's access to the night police log was cut off. I had to have a special pass to get past the front room, and I was forced to ask specific officers to come out to talk to me if I wanted information about a police story. Police reporting became so difficult I found that it was easier just to call the dispatcher every morning and get a general run-down of the nightly news.
That is when the social link between the police and the general public was cut. It didn’t take a genius to realize that the police were telling me only what they wanted me to know and nothing more. Of course suspicion grew that the local cops might be up to something because they were now operating in total secrecy.
There was no personal coffee cup hanging on a hook for this reporter at the police station then.
We began hearing stories about police involvement in narcotics and gun sales. Some of the local deputies began living large, buying lovely new homes, speed boats, and nice cars. I knew something had gone very wrong but I was barred from getting past the bullet-proof window to find out what was going on.
After 9-11 even more federal money began pouring into local police departments through Bush’s newly created Office of Homeland Security. Suddenly the police began looking like they were dressed for war. They began showing up in body armor, bullet proof helmets, black boots and shields and carrying sophisticated new weaponry as they involved themselves in crowd control.
It has become an "us and them" condition all over America. Police are now beating and shooting civilians, and claiming self-defense. Citizens are using the new cell-phones equipped with cameras to defend themselves. More recently a few radicals have begun shooting back. New laws are being passed prohibiting people from photographing the police while on the job. Another new law just went on the books requiring police to wear small cameras while on the job. Everybody is under surveillance by everybody else.
Things have gotten so lop-sided that the young people are resorting to street rioting. It is reminiscent of the Watts race riots in 1965. The fatal beating of Freddie Gray in Baltimore, similar incidents involving police shootings of unarmed black men in Ferguson, New York City and elsewhere around the country and most recently the cold blooded shootings of Alton Sterling in Baton Rouge and Philando Castilein in Falcon Heights, Minnesota have heated public anger to a boiling point. The shooting of 11 police officers and the death of five of them in Dallas last week appears to have kicked off a national sense of anger not only among the black community, but the entire nation.
It all may get worse until the police are either reined under control, or the nation is put under Martial Law.
The old police motto: "To Protect and Serve" has been lost. It now should read: "To Intimidate and Enforce."
I should state here that not all police officers are bad. I personally know many who are hard-working and committed men and women still trying to serve their communities. But the invisible barriers raised between the media and the police, and the incidents of those few officers getting out of control and attacking unarmed citizens is raising flags of discontent.
I believe it all goes back to the day the media was locked out of the police station and police operations fell under a cloud of secrecy.
There is a common axiom among the people that I find especially troublesome now. They say that when there is trouble, the worst thing to do is call the police. It is best to handle the situation ourselves in the best way we can. When police get involved it makes everything worse.
By James Donahue
The nation has been sliding toward a police state situation for a long time. I watched it happening during the years I spent reporting police news, covering major fires, murders, court trials and sometimes just riding around with the police on night patrol.
I worked to maintain a good re'pore with the officers on my beat and it paid off. Because I was fair and always wrote balanced stories I was trusted. Consequently the people in the community trusted the police.
There was a time when I had my own personal coffee cup hanging on a hook with the other cups at the Michigan State Police Post in Sandusky, Michigan. I was given free access to the Sheriff’s Dispatcher’s radio room where I could read the nightly police and fire log. The night dispatcher usually called me at my office or home when major events were happening. Nothing that the police did in the county escaped my attention.
Those were the days when I picked up stories about a judge that saw a flying saucer over his house and a detective that accidentally shot himself in the foot during a raid. Stories like that are usually concealed from the press today. They are part of the human interest side of police life and tend to make the officers part of our community. But now things have degenerated into a "them and us" orientation.
There were times when I knew every officer on a first name basis. I was sometimes "pulled-over" along the road by deputies who just wanted a friendly chat. Two troopers stopped me one night to show me how their newly installed radar system on their squad car worked. Yes, they caught me driving ten miles over the limit but I suppose because we were friends, they let me go with a warning after demonstrating how their new "toy" worked.
I think things started going haywire back when President Lyndon Johnson was in the White House. The Vietnam War was going strong then but Johnson, a Democrat, was pressing what he called a "guns and butter" policy. He budgeted to keep the war going while funneling a certain percentage of our tax dollars back into state, county and city coffers through something he invented called revenue sharing.
To get their hands on some of that money local governments were required to invent new jobs. This was Johnson’s solution to a high unemployment problem that was plaguing the country in his day, as it is again now. And one of the easiest ways of creating new government jobs was to create new positions on local police agencies.
The Sheriff’s Department increased its staff by several new men designated for road patrol. The little town where I lived went from one police chief to a staff of about four officers and two patrol cars. Villages around the county that never had police departments suddenly had police chiefs and patrol cars. That rural Michigan county became crowded with police officers with little to do.
The next thing added was a drug task force. Every county in the state suddenly had one so the counties qualified for additional federal money funneling down the pipeline. Before we had a drug task force we never realized that we had a drug problem. Suddenly the police began raiding marijuana fields and arresting high school children on charges of possessing and distributing marijuana.
After this the local governments were granted money for tracking down child abusers. We were shocked at the number of neighbors who were suddenly being arrested on these charges. An entire new county department was established to receive the federal money for this project.
This was all socking change for the people in our quiet little farming communities. The county seat has a population of just over 2,000.
As time went on I noticed that the police were switching from soft light blue and tan uniforms to pure black. They looked much more menacing when they pulled us over along the road dressed in those black garbs. And people were getting pulled over more and more frequently because of the Sheriff's new "road patrol" assigned to do nothing else.
The police also began mounting additional flashing red, white and blue lights on their squad cars, and using high powered search lights to blind us during road stops. Friendly warnings about driving too fast or having a tail light out suddenly turned into a surefire summons for something the officer claimed we were doing wrong.
I remember riding with a deputy one night that boasted how an officer could find some legal violation to justify a road stop after following just about any car for a few miles. All a driver had to do to get a ticket was sway over the center line or fail to properly slow for people working along the side of the road.
When the old sheriff retired and we elected a new man to replace him, some major changes were made at the dispatcher’s room. That entire section of the station was encased in bullet-proof stained glass and reporter's access to the night police log was cut off. I had to have a special pass to get past the front room, and I was forced to ask specific officers to come out to talk to me if I wanted information about a police story. Police reporting became so difficult I found that it was easier just to call the dispatcher every morning and get a general run-down of the nightly news.
That is when the social link between the police and the general public was cut. It didn’t take a genius to realize that the police were telling me only what they wanted me to know and nothing more. Of course suspicion grew that the local cops might be up to something because they were now operating in total secrecy.
There was no personal coffee cup hanging on a hook for this reporter at the police station then.
We began hearing stories about police involvement in narcotics and gun sales. Some of the local deputies began living large, buying lovely new homes, speed boats, and nice cars. I knew something had gone very wrong but I was barred from getting past the bullet-proof window to find out what was going on.
After 9-11 even more federal money began pouring into local police departments through Bush’s newly created Office of Homeland Security. Suddenly the police began looking like they were dressed for war. They began showing up in body armor, bullet proof helmets, black boots and shields and carrying sophisticated new weaponry as they involved themselves in crowd control.
It has become an "us and them" condition all over America. Police are now beating and shooting civilians, and claiming self-defense. Citizens are using the new cell-phones equipped with cameras to defend themselves. More recently a few radicals have begun shooting back. New laws are being passed prohibiting people from photographing the police while on the job. Another new law just went on the books requiring police to wear small cameras while on the job. Everybody is under surveillance by everybody else.
Things have gotten so lop-sided that the young people are resorting to street rioting. It is reminiscent of the Watts race riots in 1965. The fatal beating of Freddie Gray in Baltimore, similar incidents involving police shootings of unarmed black men in Ferguson, New York City and elsewhere around the country and most recently the cold blooded shootings of Alton Sterling in Baton Rouge and Philando Castilein in Falcon Heights, Minnesota have heated public anger to a boiling point. The shooting of 11 police officers and the death of five of them in Dallas last week appears to have kicked off a national sense of anger not only among the black community, but the entire nation.
It all may get worse until the police are either reined under control, or the nation is put under Martial Law.
The old police motto: "To Protect and Serve" has been lost. It now should read: "To Intimidate and Enforce."
I should state here that not all police officers are bad. I personally know many who are hard-working and committed men and women still trying to serve their communities. But the invisible barriers raised between the media and the police, and the incidents of those few officers getting out of control and attacking unarmed citizens is raising flags of discontent.
I believe it all goes back to the day the media was locked out of the police station and police operations fell under a cloud of secrecy.
There is a common axiom among the people that I find especially troublesome now. They say that when there is trouble, the worst thing to do is call the police. It is best to handle the situation ourselves in the best way we can. When police get involved it makes everything worse.