One thing I like to do is ask people for examples of police misconduct, and then point out that the overwhelming majority of the examples they cited involved the cops getting arrested or prosecuted by their fellow officers for what they were doing. Not all, obviously.
The person elsewhere in this thread who cited domestic violence among police conformed exactly to that pattern - they cited a 2015 study that went over a bunch of different examples of domestic abuse by cops, and in pretty much every one the cop was being prosecuted for what they’d done.
You don’t have to agree with me of course, but I think this is part of the big change that’s gone unnoticed in the culture of policing even in the short time since Eric Garner and that era – it used to be that cops would protect each other even for very major crimes; I think that that’s becoming a lot less true now.
One thing I like to do is ask people for examples of police misconduct, and then point out that the overwhelming majority of the examples they cited involved the cops getting arrested or prosecuted by their fellow officers for what they were doing. Not all, obviously.
The person elsewhere in this thread who cited domestic violence among police conformed exactly to that pattern - they cited a 2015 study that went over a bunch of different examples of domestic abuse by cops, and in pretty much every one the cop was being prosecuted for what they’d done.
You don’t have to agree with me of course, but I think this is part of the big change that’s gone unnoticed in the culture of policing even in the short time since Eric Garner and that era – it used to be that cops would protect each other even for very major crimes; I think that that’s becoming a lot less true now.