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- <text id=94TT1307>
- <title>
- Sep. 26, 1994: Society:Officers On the Edge
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Sep. 26, 1994 Taking Over Haiti
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SOCIETY, Page 62
- Officers on the Edge
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> A spate of suicides has U.S. police reviewing how to help cops
- cope with pressures on--and off--the job
- </p>
- <p>By Nancy Gibbs--Reported by Hannah Bloch and Massimo Calabresi/New York and
- Elaine Lafferty/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> Ann Marie Hall sat next to her husband on the green sofa, trying
- to talk the gun out of his hands. "You know you can't kill yourself,"
- she said. "Think about the boys, and your mother, and your brother
- and me. How will we feel?"
- </p>
- <p> Michael admitted he wasn't thinking straight. "It's not about
- anything but you and me," he said. Even as cops' marriages go,
- theirs was badly bruised. They had fallen in love fast; he proposed
- five months after they met, on bended knee atop the Empire State
- Building, and they were married eight years ago. But since then,
- the fights had become more frequent, as Ann Marie learned what
- it meant to marry into the force.
- </p>
- <p> She remembers a night they spent cruising up the Hudson River
- at a wedding reception on a yacht. "Mike and I went up on deck,
- and we were the only two up there," she recalls. "We were slow
- dancing, and I was thinking about how romantic it was. And then
- Mike says, `Do you have any idea how many dead bodies there
- are in this river?'"
- </p>
- <p> Michael had grown quiet, withdrawn, in the days leading up to
- that Sunday afternoon in July. She glanced at the heavy flashlight
- on the stone fireplace and thought of grabbing it, hitting him
- on the head and getting the gun away. But she was afraid something
- would go wrong, so she stayed where she was. He put the gun
- to his head.
- </p>
- <p> "Don't be ridiculous," she said, "put that thing down."
- </p>
- <p> "Oh, I'm ridiculous?" When he pulled the trigger, the bullet
- passed through his skull and lodged in the wall behind the couch.
- </p>
- <p> Their three small children were playing in the next room. When
- they heard the shot, they came running, saw the red stain spreading
- over the sofa and didn't say a word.
- </p>
- <p> Michael Hall, an officer in the 46th precinct in the Bronx,
- became the seventh of 10 New York City cops to kill themselves
- so far this year, already tying the record set in 1987. No one
- has an adequate explanation of what finally drove him over the
- edge, and so the speculation runs a predictable course: it was
- the danger, the pressure, the grinding sorrows embedded in the
- daily routine. Last week the New York police department released
- the results of a three-year study that found that cops were
- more than twice as likely to kill themselves as were members
- of the general population. Though every case is different, the
- experts do see some patterns: male officers are far more likely
- to kill themselves than female ones, alcohol often plays some
- role, and corruption scandals within the department are usually
- followed by a spate of suicides.
- </p>
- <p> The cops themselves rarely blame the obvious culprit--the
- tension of living forever in the cross hairs. Veteran officers
- and the experts who study them agree that the pressure on police
- officers actually comes from some surprising sources. The most
- crushing battles, they argue, often occur not on the streets
- but in the rundown precinct houses, and the courtrooms, and
- the privacy of their own homes. Too often, police complain,
- the commanders and commissioners who cops imagined would guide
- and protect them seem to ignore or betray them instead. "Frequently,
- officers feel that somewhere on the line between lieutenant
- and captain, these people change," says Scott Allen, clinical
- psychologist for the 3,200-member Metro-Dade police department
- in Florida. "The command loses touch with the soldiers."
- </p>
- <p> Many cops on the street charge that they are being asked to
- do more with less; just getting the equipment they need requires
- a major bureaucratic struggle. "A car that breaks down while
- you're pursuing a suspect? That's stress. A gun that may not
- work? That's stress," says John Johnston, a 20-year veteran
- of the Los Angeles police department. The criminals, he takes
- in stride: "Dealing with bad guys is why I became a cop. What
- gets you down is the bureaucracy." In his office in the L.A.P.D.'s
- Northeast division, which includes the grimiest stretch of Hollywood
- Boulevard, the computers are antique, the shotguns routinely
- fail during practice and the cars in the lot are monuments to
- budgetary restraints: the odometers read 132,000 miles, 136,000,
- 148,000...
- </p>
- <p> Just as punishing to police morale is the problem of punishment:
- it is common for officers to risk their lives arresting suspects
- whom they meet again on the streets within days. "That's the
- main stress" Seattle Detective Nathan Janes says, "like the
- fact that the violent criminal doesn't even go to jail." He
- recalls a thug who attacked a fellow officer a few years ago,
- wrestled his gun away, jammed it under the officer's bulletproof
- vest and tried to fire. "He wanted to kill him, but the cop
- got his hand in between the hammer and the firing pin," Janes
- says. "I took this guy to jail, and he was joking that he'd
- do it again if he got the chance. Anyway, 18 months later, I
- was involved in a car chase. I finally stopped the car, and
- there he was. He didn't even serve 18 months for trying to kill
- a cop. That can cause some stress all right."
- </p>
- <p> When so much of the day's job involves exposure to the darkest
- corners of human nature, cynicism and denial serve as a handy
- emotional vaccine. But that coldness can take a personal toll;
- and at worst, the day's violence bleeds into the home. In a
- study by Arizona State University sociologist Leanor Boulin-Johnson
- of 728 officers in two East Coast departments, some 40% responded
- that "they had gotten out of control and behaved violently against
- their spouse and children." Last week in Alexandria, Louisiana,
- deputy sheriff Paul Broussard shot his estranged wife Andrea
- five times because she was filing for divorce. He fled across
- the street to a bank, still waving his gun, as police moved
- in and sealed the area. Surrounded by sharpshooters, Broussard
- talked to a priest for more than two hours. A friend and a police
- chaplain tried to persuade him to surrender as well. "Nothing
- worked," said Lieut. Tommy Cicardo. Broussard finally put the .45 to his jaw and pulled the trigger, as the local TV cameras
- rolled.
- </p>
- <p> At best, being a police officer places terrific stress on a
- family," says Harvey Schlossberg, the former director of psychological
- services for the New York City police department and a 20-year
- veteran himself. Cops "tend to feel very uncomfortable outside
- the company of other police officers," he observes. "They tend
- to be very clannish." The hypervigilance that keeps them alive
- on the street is hard to shed once they're home."It's as if
- you become a cop 24 hours a day," says the ex-husband of a New
- Mexico cop. "That's the way you treat everyone--commanding,
- suspicious, paranoid. She'd gone into the cop role so much that
- she regarded any challenge to her authority as an attack."
- </p>
- <p> Though urban cops may feel that they are the ones patrolling
- a war zone, rural officers often long for the anonymity of the
- big cities. At a crime scene, the odds are high that they will
- know both the victim and the suspect. It is impossible to go
- off-duty; like the small-town doctor, the local cop is constantly
- pressed for help and advice. "Community members expect the officer
- and their family to be free from family conflicts," explains
- psychologist Ellen Scrivner, an expert on police stress. "Moreover,
- children are expected to behave differently when their parent
- is a police officer."
- </p>
- <p> Twenty years ago, it was the rare police department that had
- any formal mechanisms for helping officers or their families
- cope with the demands of the job. Now more and more have instituted
- programs ranging from peer counseling to diet and exercise plans,
- designed to teach stress management. The L.A.P.D. has seven
- full-time psychologists working out of an old bank building
- in Chinatown, where cops can visit without fear of being seen
- by their colleagues or superiors. Since 1990, there has been
- a 103% increase in the number of counseling sessions conducted
- there, to a projected 3,734 sessions in 1993, and a 44% increase
- in the number of clients seen.
- </p>
- <p> But the experts acknowledge it is hard for police officers to
- admit when they need help. If an officer visits a counselor
- and is put on psychological leave, notes William Nolan, president
- of the Chicago Fraternal Order of Police, "they take him off
- the street because the city doesn't want the liability of an
- officer with stress on the streets. So if an officer is willing,
- or man enough, to admit it, they'll take away your gun and star,
- and you won't get them back until you can prove you're O.K."
- Nolan would prefer a more anonymous system, where officers could
- seek help without feeling a stigma or risking a career.
- </p>
- <p> The Halls' white clapboard and brick house is half empty; there's
- a FOR SALE sign in the yard, and the path to the door is strewn
- with Tonka Trucks. Ann Marie is inside packing, to move closer
- to her family in Connecticut. She hasn't been sleeping well,
- and has lost weight. Michael's dress uniform hangs in plastic
- in the closet. A carpenter has been in to fix the hole where
- the police dug the bullet from the wall. Michael's partner came
- by with the contents of his locker. Three-year-old Danny, who
- loves playing cop, went rummaging through the box, then came
- running upstairs to his mom, wearing his father's dark blue
- hat. "After we were married," Ann Marie says, "he told me he
- had a dark side and that I'd better pray that I never see it."
- Now she must wonder how long it will take to get the vision
- out of her mind.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-