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- <text id=91TT0676>
- <link 91TT0611>
- <link 90TT1853>
- <title>
- Apr. 01, 1991: Law And Disorder
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Apr. 01, 1991 Law And Disorder
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 18
- COVER STORIES
- Law and Disorder
- </hdr><body>
- <p>For cops, fear and frustration are constants. Sometimes even the
- best of them snap under the pressure.
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by Cathy Booth/Miami, Sylvester
- Monroe and Edwin M. Reingold/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> To watch the videotape of Los Angeles policemen kicking and
- clubbing Rodney King was to suddenly explore a dark corner of
- American life. For many police officers who fear that the
- incident could undermine their image of cool professionalism,
- the case quickly became an occasion for dismay, soul searching
- and a measure of defensiveness. For many citizens, particularly
- blacks and other minorities, it brought back bitter memories
- of their own rough encounters with police. George Bush bluntly
- summarized the prevailing shock: "What I saw made me sick."
- </p>
- <p> The sickening glare from that grisly scene has thrown light
- upon police brutality all across the country. Was the beating
- an aberration, as Los Angeles police chief Daryl Gates insists?
- Or did it affirm yet again that many cops resort to violence,
- and even deadly force, when no threat to their safety can
- justify it? Is racism so pervasive among police that the fight
- against crime all too often becomes a war on blacks? Has the
- criminal-justice system, which permits too many criminals to
- go free after serving only token sentences or none at all,
- become so ineffectual that officers feel the need to play judge
- and jury on the spot? Has police work become so dangerous that
- even well-meaning officers can snap under the pressure?
- </p>
- <p> Those questions became more urgent last week as evidence
- grew that the officers involved in King's beating might have
- expected their behavior to be winked at, at least in their own
- department. In tapes of radio calls and computer records of
- police communications on the night of the attack, some of the
- officers involved could be heard swapping racist jokes and
- boasting to other cops about the beating. Their lighthearted
- exchanges, which they knew were being recorded, sound nothing
- like the words of men who fear they have done something
- reprehensible--or even something out of the ordinary. Two
- nurses at Pacifica Hospital, where King was taken after the
- beating, testified to a grand jury last week that the officers
- who assaulted King showed up later at the hospital room to
- taunt him. One allegedly told the victim, "We played a little
- hardball tonight, and you lost."
- </p>
- <p> In the eyes of many outraged citizens in Los Angeles and
- elsewhere, responsibility for the beating rests with Chief
- Gates. Though he has rebuffed demands that he resign, a
- citizens' group last week began a push for a special election
- to undo what practically amounts to his lifetime appointment
- as leader of the nation's third largest police department.
- Almost unique among police chiefs, Gates cannot be dismissed
- by Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley, himself a former L.A.P.D.
- lieutenant, or by a five-member police commission, except "for
- cause"--misconduct or willful neglect of duty.
- </p>
- <p> Los Angeles is far from the only place where police play
- hardball, dispensing curbside justice with disturbing
- regularity, especially in crime-plagued ghetto neighborhoods
- and to people whose only offense is the color of their skins.
- Those who live outside such areas can usually ignore that
- reality. Fed up with violent street crime, they are often
- content to send in the police force and demand that it do
- whatever is necessary while they look the other way. But the Los
- Angeles beating has shaken such head-in-the-sand attitudes.
- A spate of brutality cases that normally would have attracted
- little attention made national news last week:
- </p>
- <p>-- In New York City five officers were indicted on murder
- charges in the Feb. 5 death by suffocation of a 21-year-old
- Hispanic man suspected of car theft. The officers were accused
- of having hit, kicked and choked Federico Pereira while he lay
- face down and perhaps hog-tied--his wrists cuffed behind his
- back while another set of cuffs bound his hands to one ankle.
- </p>
- <p>-- In Memphis a black county sheriff was convicted Friday
- of violating civil rights laws in the June 1989 choking death
- of Michael Gates, 28, a black drug suspect. Gates' body was
- covered with bruises in the shape of shoe prints.
- </p>
- <p>-- In Plainfield, N.J., 50 people demonstrated outside
- police headquarters, charging that a policeman beat Uriah
- Hannah, a 14-year-old black. Last Sunday Hannah and his friends
- were playing with a remote-controlled toy car on a sidewalk
- near his home. A motorist stopped short at the spot where the
- boys were playing, and a police cruiser ran into the rear of
- his car. Hannah's parents, whose older son allegedly committed
- suicide in police custody last year, charged that the officer
- jumped from his car, accused the teenager of obstructing
- traffic and at one point tried to choke him. His parents were
- arrested when they tried to intervene.
- </p>
- <p> Skull-drumming tactics have an enduring and dismal place in
- police history, not least in the U.S., where accusations of
- brutality commonly accompany charges of racism. Many of the
- ghetto riots of the 1960s were prompted by police incidents.
- More recently, Miami has suffered five street uprisings in 10
- years, all ignited by episodes of perceived police brutality.
- </p>
- <p> Spotty record keeping makes it hard to measure the frequency
- of police misconduct. Departments often refuse to disclose the
- number of complaints they receive. Citizens often bring their
- accusations to civil rights or police-watchdog groups, which
- complicates attempts to compile a comprehensive count.
- Allegations of misconduct can also multiply in the wake of
- reforms that make it easier for citizens to report abuses.
- </p>
- <p> In the end, many cases doubtless go unreported, especially
- in cities where complaints have to be filled out at the station
- house that is the home base of the very officers against whom
- the charge is being brought. "The general feeling out on the
- streets is that you can't get justice when a cop mistreats
- you," says Norman Siegel, executive director of the New York
- Civil Liberties Union. Many blacks believe, with considerable
- cause, that if the King beating had not been recorded,
- complaints about the case would have been discounted.
- </p>
- <p> But while the experts cannot agree on whether abuses are up
- or down, few dispute that they are common--and sadly
- predictable. Even in the best of times, police work is
- dangerous and stressful, and an officer can face several
- life-or-death decisions during a single eight-hour watch. The
- pressures have mounted in recent years as crack has poured into
- the inner cities, giving rise to drug-dealing gangs armed with
- automatic weapons--and the hairtrigger temperament to use
- them.
- </p>
- <p> In New York City, which has highly restrictive guidelines
- for when police may use their guns, the number of people shot
- by local cops soared in the past three years from 68 to 108.
- At the same time, police have been fired on by suspects in
- greater numbers every year since 1980. Though the number of
- officers killed nationally has fallen from 104 in 1980 to 66
- in 1989, that is partly the result of wider use of bulletproof
- vests. "It used to be that arrested suspects got right into the
- patrol car," sighs Boston policeman John Meade, who heads the
- department's bureau of professional standards. "Now they put
- up a fight. Weapons suddenly turn up. Just like that, everything
- explodes."
- </p>
- <p> As inner cities have degenerated into free-fire zones, many
- officers have become more aggressive, if only in self-defense.
- Danger "is something you get used to," says Officer Dennis
- Rhodes, a 20-year veteran of the L.A.P.D., "but every time you
- check in for a shift, you don't really know if you're going to
- go home that night." Two weeks ago, a suspected car thief
- pointed a 9-mm pistol at Rhodes' partner in the squad car, who
- then fired a shot at the gunman, forcing him to drop his
- weapon. "The whole incident took a minute and a half," says
- Rhodes, "and what raced through my mind was...the fact that
- I was going to get killed in the front seat of my car."
- </p>
- <p> The temptation to administer street-corner sentences is
- sometimes reinforced by the frustration of knowing that many
- of those the police collar will get off on plea bargains or
- serve mockingly short sentences.
- </p>
- <p> Beyond those factors, police have been saddled with a task
- for which they are singularly ill-equipped. Most authorities
- believe that urban street crime arises from a combination of
- poverty, poor education and a lack of opportunity in inner-city
- neighborhoods, problems that the police can do nothing about.
- Officers, who tend to be recruited from places far from the
- neighborhoods they will patrol, often have little in common
- with the citizens they must serve and protect. "The bulk of
- police forces are white males of the middle class," says Ron
- DeLord, head of the Combined Law Enforcement Associations of
- Texas. "Yet we send them into large urban centers that are black
- and Hispanic and poor, with no understanding of the cultural
- differences, to enforce white, middle-class moral laws. Doesn't
- that create a clash?"
- </p>
- <p> Law-abiding residents of crime-infested neighborhoods are
- desperate for police protection. They, after all, are the ones
- most likely to fall victim to muggers or drive-by shooters. But
- they also want the police's use of force kept in check,
- especially in poor neighborhoods where everyone is apt to be
- treated like a suspect. Even though many police departments
- have abandoned the official use of so-called drug-dealer
- profiles, officers may continue to carry racial stereotypes in
- their heads. To them, virtually any young black male with a
- gold chain is a potential drug courier. Any well-dressed black
- man in an expensive car might be a big-time dealer.
- </p>
- <p> As a result, middle-class blacks, including celebrities like
- actor Blair Underwood, one of the stars of L.A. Law, complain
- that they have been harassed, and worse, during simple
- encounters with the law. At the University of Massachusetts,
- Boston, last week, the ACLU sponsored a conference that
- attracted 500 people to discuss the topic of police and local
- communities. "Over and over, black youngsters stood up and
- talked about how scary and demeaning it is to be stopped and
- searched," says ACLU state executive director John Roberts.
- "Even good kids now see police as the enemy. They shun cops."
- </p>
- <p> Hassled cops, in turn, often retreat into a bipolar outlook:
- us vs. them. "Police see the sorry side of it all," says Mark
- Clark, former president of the Houston Police Officers
- Association. "A policeman can start out bright-eyed and
- bushy-tailed, but it goes away quickly on the street. It takes
- a mature officer not to stereotype people." Immersion into the
- police culture can quickly strip away a rookie's idealism. Says
- Hubert Williams, president of the Police Foundation: "Many
- officers will say, the moment I graduated from the police
- academy my partner told me, `Forget all that stuff they told
- you at the academy; this is the real world.'"
- </p>
- <p> Many of the best cops are no longer willing to pay the
- physical and psychological costs. Take Paul Wyland, who is
- planning to quit the Washington force after 20 years. "How many
- dead bodies have you seen?" he asks. "I've lost count. I'm not
- burned out. But you look at yourself and you say, `How long can
- I keep doing this and not get messed up?'" Partly because so
- many seasoned officers have retired, departments around the
- nation have found themselves seriously understaffed. Others
- have expanded too rapidly, filling their ranks with
- inexperienced--and sometimes poorly trained--officers.
- Because the L.A.P.D. grew from 6,282 to 8,382 in the past three
- years, 38% of its field officers and 36% of its sergeants have
- less than three years on the force.
- </p>
- <p> Experts on police psychology insist that most officers are
- attracted to police work by the opportunity to protect and
- serve. But a certain number of rotten apples, predisposed to
- brutality, make it through psychological testing that can be
- woefully inadequate. Ed Donovan, who runs a counseling service
- in Plymouth, Mass., for police suffering from stress, warns
- that police supervisors--and other officers--must be
- trained to be on the lookout for misfits as they move through
- the ranks. "Police are out there looking for troubled people,"
- he says. "They ought to be able to spot troubled cops."
- </p>
- <p> A few cities have revamped their training and supervision
- to make abuses less likely. Since 1988, all 2,400 police
- officers on the Metro-Dade county force have undergone
- violence-reduction training to school themselves in ways to
- defuse potentially violent situations and to avoid overreaction
- to typical confrontations.
- </p>
- <p> Critics of the police say that legal-damage suits are a more
- useful deterrent to police brutality and that they would work
- even better if jury awards were paid out of individual
- officers' pockets instead of by city treasuries. While courts
- have decided that public employees are not individually liable
- for most of their actions on the job, taxpayer concern about
- the rising cost of lawsuits has revived the popularity of
- civilian review boards. Such panels are at work in 26 of the
- nation's 50 largest cities, up from 13 seven years ago. The
- boards save municipal dollars by providing complainants with an
- alternative to the courts. They can also help departments
- identify and weed out problem officers before they strike
- again.
- </p>
- <p> Rodney King, the victim of the Los Angeles beating, is
- bringing a $56 million civil suit against the L.A.P.D.--according to his lawyer, $1 million for each blow against him.
- As it happens, Chief Gates appeared before the city council
- last week to testify about the sums being paid by Los Angeles--about $10.5 million in 1990--to successful plaintiffs in
- police-misconduct suits. One was a $265,000 judgment to an
- 18-year-old white youth who was dragged from a car and beaten
- severely enough to suffer permanent ear damage. Although a
- civil-court jury found six officers at fault, Gates told the
- council that after a nine-month investigation, his department
- could not determine which officer had actually done the
- beating. "If you can't identify them, it's difficult to
- discipline them," he insisted. Members of the council were
- incredulous.
- </p>
- <p> In the end, discipline must come from rank-and-file police
- with courage enough to break the so-called Blue Code, which
- prohibits one officer from ratting on another. A few
- encouraging signs exist that some officers are abandoning the
- tradition of blind loyalty to one another in misconduct cases.
- In Houston more than half of all complaints now come from other
- officers. During the King beating, two California
- highway-patrol officers reportedly took down the names of those
- involved from their breast-pocket name tags. They have since
- testified to investigators.
- </p>
- <p> Episodes of police brutality are likely never to vanish
- entirely. But they could be significantly curtailed if more
- officers concluded that as long as their fellow police take the
- law into their own hands, there is no law at all.
- </p>
- <p>LAW AND DISORDER
- </p>
- <p>MARCH 3, 12:39 A.M. AFTER BREAKING UP A QUARREL THAT REPORTEDLY
- INVOLVED BLACKS, LOS ANGELES POLICEMEN LAURENCE M. POWELL AND
- TIMOTHY E. WIND USE THEIR PORTABLE COMMUNICATIONS COMPUTER TO
- CONTACT A TEAM OF OFFICERS ON A BURGLARY STAKEOUT:
- </p>
- <p> "Sounds almost exciting as our last call...It was right
- out of Gorillas in the Mist."
- </p>
- <p> THE STAKEOUT TEAM REPLIES:
- </p>
- <p> "Hahahaha...let me guess who be the parties."
- </p>
- <p> 12:47 A.M. THE POLICE RADIO DISPATCHER ALERTS NEARBY SQUAD
- CARS THAT THE CALIFORNIA HIGHWAY PATROL IS PURSUING A WHITE
- HYUNDAI AT HIGH SPEED. MINUTES LATER POWELL AND WIND HELP
- APPREHEND THE DRIVER AND TWO PASSENGERS.
- </p>
- <p> 12:56 A.M. L.A.P.D. SERGEANT STACEY C. KOON NOTIFIES THE
- NIGHT WATCH COMMANDER AT THE FOOTHILL POLICE HEADQUARTERS THAT
- ONE SUSPECT HAS BEEN BEATEN BY THE ARRESTING OFFICERS:
- </p>
- <p> "You just had a big-time use of force..."
- </p>
- <p> THE WATCH COMMANDER REPLIES:
- </p>
- <p> "Oh well...I'm sure the lizard didn't deserve it...haha."
- </p>
- <p> 1:12 A.M. POWELL AND WIND HAVE ANOTHER COMPUTER CHAT WITH
- THEIR FRIENDS ON THE BURGLARY STAKEOUT:
- </p>
- <p> "Ooops."
- </p>
- <p> "Ooops, what?"
- </p>
- <p> "I haven't beaten anyone this bad in a long time."
- </p>
- <p> "Oh not again...Why for you do that...I thought you
- agreed to chill out for a while..."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-