Monday, May 16, 2011

Casey Anthony Knock Knock Joke...

OK, let me say from the outset that jokes involving the case of a child that has been murdered are not usually repeated by me. The Casey Anthony case alleges that little Caylee Anthony met her fate at the hands of her mother Casey. We'll see what the jury decides.

In the meantime, speaking of the jury, here is a knock knock joke I heard that I confess I (and others) have found to be funny.

Knock, knock.
Who's there?
Casey Anthony.
Casey Anthony who?
Congratulations. You are on the jury.

Reserve Cops: Original Homeland Security on PoliceReserveOfficer.com


Police Reserves are the original homeland security. That's the position in my latest article The Original Homeland Security Force: Police Reserves on PoliceReserveOfficer.com.

The article covers the evolution of World War II. era civil defense (CD) forces into (at least for some parts of the country) a sophisticated academy trained and state certified sworn law enforcement professional serving on a part-time or volunteer basis.

Disasters have come to the forefront with recent events such as the tornadoes in Alabama and flodding in Louisiana. As for terrorist incidents, one has to look only at the recent death of Osama bin Laden to see the need for enhanced homeland security.

Police reserves, known also under the titles Auxiliary, Special, Supernumerary, and Intermittent, have long been a part of the fabric of their local police and sheriffs operations, as well as thei communtities. Check out the article for more detail on police reserves and homeland security.

Thursday, May 12, 2011

The Cop Doc Radio Show: Officer.com redesign, Casey Anthony update, & Police Reserve Officer website


Tonight, be sure to listen to The Cop Doc Radio Show Officer.com redesign show. We'll have Officer.com editor-in-chief Frank Borelli back again along with two of his star columnists- Chief William Harvey and Kevin Davis. Along with host police expert former police chief Dr. Richard Weinblatt, The Cop Doc, they'll discuss the redesign of one of the leading law enforcement websites, as well as the top police items dominating the news headlines.

Casey Anthony Trial Update

Also covered tonight will be an update of the Casey Anthony legal proceedings underway here in Florida. Michigan prosecutor and well-known legal media commentator Donna Pendergast will weigh in with her thoughts on the jury selection in Pinnelas County, FL.

Police Reserve Website Launch


Lastly, the launch on April 23, 2011 of a new website serving the information needs of aspiring and current volunteer and part-time law enforcement officers (known variously as reserve, auxiliary, special, supernumerary, or intermittent depending on local jurisdictional preferences) and police and sheriffs administrators, will be touched on. The website was created by an authority expert on reserve policing. PoliceReserveOfficer.com has a combination of original content and classic writings dealing with everything from the duties of reserves to the tragic line of duty deaths of these law enforcers who are the ultimate in community policing as they put the police in the community and the community in the police.

The Cop Doc Radio Show was devoted to this topic a week ago and can be listened to at The Cop Doc Radio Show Police Reserve Officer. More detail was previously on PoliceReserveOfficer.com Radio Show and The Cop Doc Blog Police Reserve Officer Radio Show.


PoliceReserveOfficer.com has been well received as evidenced by its already ranking number nine on May 5, 2011 on the first page of Google. It is seeing some great traffic and keyword searches. This screen capture illustrates it's high ranking (which is even better since it happened so quickly) in it's niche market of reserve police.


Taser Titans: Chairman and VP

Be sure to tune in next week (5/19/11) to The Cop Doc Radio Show Taser Titans is the topic with Taser International founders Chairman Tom Smith and Vice President Steve Tuttle. They'll discuss the controversy surrounding their products, the new Taser X2, as well as the past, present, and future of the Scottsdale, AZ, company. Do Tasers save lives?


As with all editions of The Cop Doc Radio Show, you can tune in to listen and let us know your thoughts via the show call in number of (646) 652-4259 or the chatroom.

In addition to listening live at 7:00 pm Eastern Time on Thursday nights, The Cop Doc Radio Show may also be listened to in it's archived form at the show page link and via podcasts on Apple iTunes.

Monday, May 9, 2011

Casey Anthony Trial Costs: Police Expert News Interview


As the Casey Anthony trial gets underway here in Central Florida, I did yet another news interview in my role as a police expert. I've done another of other Anthony case media interviews. This one was on the high bill in costs to taxpayers for the trial concerning the death of little Caylee Anthony. I told WOFL Fox 35 News at 10's Shannon Butler, who is a terrific reporter and a real pleasure to work with on stories, that quite a bit of the costs that are going to come in the form of security and law enforcement. Mostly borne by the Ornage County Sheriff's Office, the impact will also be absorbed by the Orlando Police Department.

As I explained to Shannon Butler, there will be a lot of behind the scenes issues that Sheriff Jerry Demings' folks are going to have to contend with. Traffic, parking, and front door security is but the tip of the iceberg. It will involve more than just the deputy sheriffs manning the metal detectors at the courthouse entrance. The agency will also have to do its share of threat analysis in response to the messages coming from the many not so stable folks fixated on the trial's participants. I covered this quite a bit in another blog post: Chaos or Order: Police Expert View on Casey Anthony Trial Security.

The news interview with Fox 35's Shannon Butler is below. What do you think?

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Would You Go Down That Dark Alley? Imagine Doing it For FREE: Police Reserve Officers on The Cop Doc Radio Show

Police Reserve Officers are the little known facet of law enforcement. Join me, police expert former police chief Dr. Richard Weinblatt, The Cop Doc, on The Cop Doc Radio Show on Thursday, May 5, 2011 at 7:00 pm eastern time as my expert panel and I discuss the incredible phenomenon of volunteer and part-time law enforcement officers. The expert panel members are David Rayburn, retired Florida Highway Patrol Auxiliary lieutenant colonel and president of the Volunteer Law Enforcement Officer Alliance (VLEOA), Tom Harrier, chief of the Orange County Sheriff's Office Reserve in Orlando, FL, and Marc Spigel, an Auxiliary Captain with the Framingham, MA, Auxiliary Police.

And if you can't listen to The Cop Doc Radio Show live, you can replay the archived version from the show page or other platforms such as podcasts from Apple iTunes.


Unsung law enforcers, known variously as reserve, auxiliary, special, supernumerary, or intermittent (depending on local preferences), these men and women are the ultimate in community policing as they literally put the police in the community and the community in the police. They amazingly come to the aid of strangers for little or no money at great personal risk and reflect well on their police departments and sheriff's offices.


The panel and I will explore who and what they are, how full-time officers view them, as well as the variety of ways that they are screened, trained, certified, deployed, and armed.

Would you go down that dark alley... for FREE? For more information on police reserves, go to Dr. Richard Weinblatt's new website: www.PoliceReserveOfficer.com




And heads up police fans, next week, on May 12, we're focusing The Cop Doc Radio Show on Officer.com and the unveiling of the police website's new design at Officer.com Website Changes. Joining us will be returning guest Frank Borelli, editor-in-chief of Officer.com, With Frank Borelli will be two of his star columnists, radio show semi-regular retired police sergeant and police trainer extraordinaire Betsy Brantner Smith and Kevin Davis.

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Osama bin Laden's Burial at Sea: Was the Obama Administration Right?


The decision to bury the world's most wanted criminal, Osama bin Laden, at sea with all due respect accorded to his religious practices, has sparked quite a bit of controversy. My good friend to the North in Canada and a star blogger, Jon Hansen, posted a survey and call for response explanations on his PI Window on Business blog.

I think President Obama and his administration made the right call to take the high road and do the honorable thing to a man whose actions in life make many think that the President should have done otherwise.

As a police expert, former police chief, police academy director, and criminal justice professor, and even as a uniformed patrol law enforcer, I have always tried to see the big picture of what I and my colleagues in law enforcement were supposed to be all about.

I posted a response explanation to Jon Hansen's LinkedIn and PI Window on Business blog posting to explain why I voted "yes" to his poll. Here is my explantion. What do you think?

Jon: I voted yes and here is why... as an experienced law enforcement professional and police chief, I often dealt with people that just made poor decisions and I was there to enforce the law. And then there were people who were evil sociopaths that just saw the rest of the world as tools to get them what they wanted. If you were not useful, or stood in their way (as I did as a law enforcer), then their aim was to squash you. Even though those people needed to be incarcerated forever (or otherwise removed from society as their actions dictated the response and outcome) in order to protect the community at large, I never felt the need to "become a monster in order to defeat a monster." If I crossed the line in conduct in order to engage those folks, then I became no better than them. True honor involves treating all in a dignified, respectful manner and taking no further action than is required. More becomes an emotional vindictive display worthy of the criminals that we arrest or otherwise dispose of (again, our response is predicated by their actions). We as law enforcers in a society of laws and morals are better than our enemies. As I have often said to my nine-year-old son, "actions speak louder than words." We can say we are a nation that treats people with dignity and respect. Or we can show it via our actions. The proper burial at sea was an action that showcases our words in our powerful way.

Saturday, April 30, 2011

Why Some Cops and Reserves Hate Each Other


It's a crack in the blue wall. Why some full-time police officers and reserves hate each other was a hot topic when I originally wrote two related articles for as part of my "Reserve Power" column for the mega police website Officer.com in 2006. It still is. Both columns were just posted on my new website PoliceReserveOfficer.com. The first part can be read at "Why Some Cops Hate Reserves: A Crack in the Police Family" and the second installment of the column can be read at "The Flip Side: Why Some Reserves Hate Cops"

Part of what I covered in those columns, in concepts and terms that are still as valid and germaine today as they were then, is that full-timers and reservists should not paint each other with a broad brush based on the less than stellar actions of a few within their respective ranks.


The aim should not be to crush the other guys. Rather it should be unite to accomplish the mission of policing. With all the attacks on law enforcement officers we can certainly do without grenades being lobbed from within the police family. Such negative forces create cracks in our wall.

It touched a nerve and I ended up getting an avalanche of messages and emails. I think the concerns resonate today in law enforcement buildings and patrol cars everywhere.

Let me know what you think?

Friday, April 29, 2011

Chaos or Order: Police Expert View on Casey Anthony Trial Security


As a police expert, I see large problems looming for local law enforcement officials when the Casey Anthony circus, er, murder trial commences on May 9 here in my home town of Orlando, FL. While many are focusing on the recent court motions and rulings, officials with the Orange County Sheriff's Office (the law enforcement agency charged with court security), the Orlando Police Department, and others are meeting behind closed doors working out the strategies and contingency plans. Of course, the Sheriff's Office well knows the case itself as they have been the lead agency in the Caylee Anthony case investigation from the start.

Many have lamented the fact that large gobs of resources will be taken from other areas of local law enforcement especially the Sheriff's Office. While that is true, I don't believe that the Orange County Sheriff's Office has much choice. While I understand the torment on the part of other victims of crime who don't garner the same level of attention, I appreciate the fact that the Sheriff's Office has to handle the situations they are presented.

It is the same with 911. They can't tell someone that they can't respond because no one is available. When it comes to matters of public safety, law enforcement has to be present to take care of the potential or existing danger. When they do run to those 911 calls, or the issues surrounding the Casey Anthony trial, other areas do get less attention. If it's anybody's fault, it's Casey Anthony's (if she does end up being found guilty).

The Issues

Certainly there is the front door security, but there are also a number of other concerns that few have contemplated, but that the law enforcement folks are likely pondering. As a former police chief and who has handled court security issues, I see a plethora of issues to be tackled. I am also certainly familiar with the dynamics of the case having done countless Casey Anthony media interviews.


Precedent situations include venues such as the Michael Jackson and O.J. Simpson trials. Those who watched those legal proceedings know full well that order and chaos are not far apart especially when all the attendant issues are not planned for.

Courthouse Security

The obvious one, courtroom and courthouse front door security is clearly the first line of defense and where a considerable amount of resources will be expended. The court room will be packed with friends and family from both sides, as well as the hordes of media that will be descending on Orlando. Judge Belvin Perry has already devised a system for picking people who are vying for the limited supply of seats at the trial

While Orlando is used to being host to a bevy of high profile celebs, the trial will bring star news people to the land of Disney. The presence of those folks will bring its own set of security concerns. At a minimum, patrol officers and deputy sheriffs will surely be responding to incidents big and small involving these stars.

Threats

Casey Anthony's unique form of celebrity has already created a rabid group of defenders and detractors. Some of those folks are a little on the, shall we say, mentally unhinged end of the spectrum, and will send notes of varying severity of threats to the various players in this trial. The recipients would include members of the prosecution and defense teams (including lightning rod Jose Baez), Judge Belvin Perry, Casey, Cindy, George, and Lee Anthony, as well as members of the media who may be perceived as not reporting the case as someone would wish them to.

Whomever the target, law enforcement (and it will fall mostly to Sheriff Jerry Demings' Orange County Sheriff's Office) will have to conduct a threat assessment to determine the veracity and seriousness of the note writer. That will take resources and is no simple task.

Just ask the United States Secret Service and its special agents who have serious expertise in evaluating potential threats to the President, Vice President, and other dignitaries. Closer to the targets that are present in this case, the United States Marshals Service has long had a specialty of protecting federal judges and providing courthouse security. And probably no agency has more experience with celebrity and high profile trials than the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Office in California.

Threat assessment and target protection is not an endeavor for the ill-trained or run of the mill law enforcer. Experienced, seasoned investigators will be put on the case.

When I served in a Sheriff's Office Courthouse Division, I investigated threat notes sent to judges. These were clearly mentally unbalanced individuals penning the notes. Their apparent mental illness makes them no less a threat to the protected person.

Traffic


Handling the influx of vehicles into downtown Orlando is going to be another headache that falls on the shoulders of law enforcement. Not only will the additional cars pose an issue, but the presence of the media will bring its own set of problems. Large satellite live trucks will have to find places to park that afford convenient access to the courthouse, but don’t impede the flow of traffic. Additionally, some media types will be coming with mobile homes in tow to house them during the two month trial. Those also will have to be parked somewhere that works for all concerned.

Jury Security

And then there is the matter of the jury. Much like the prosecution, defense, and Anthony family protectees, there will be the additional potential targets in the jurors and alternate jurors. Like most judges, Judge Perry will look to not give a reason to be overturned on appeal. Judges hate to be overturned, so he is going to want to keep people away from them including particularly aggressive members of the media or the public.

To its credit, the Orange County Sheriff's Office is a professional agency with over 3,000 employees. It is no stranger to high profile cases or public scrutiny. They will be on the international stage as the world will watch all aspects of the trail very carefully. I fully expect that they will rise to the challenge with perhaps a few understandable glitches along the way.

More on the Casey Anthony case can be found at:

TheCopDoc.com - Media

http://richardweinblatt.blogspot.com/2008/08/caylee-anthony-police-expert-analysis.html

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/the-cop-doc/2011/04/21/thecopdoc-casey-anthony-legal-eagles-new-taser-x2

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Police Reserve Officer Role & Professionalism Highlighted on PoliceReserveOfficer website


The role and professionalism of today's Police Reserve Officer is highlighted on a new website: PoliceReserveOfficer.com. I created the website to help handle the many questions I field on the topic of police reserves. As a former law enforcement reserve, around stints as a police chief, police academy director, and criminal justice professor, I fully appreciate the enormous contribution and sacrifices of the around a quarter of a million men and women who serve under many titles depending on local rules and preferences. Some of those monikers include: reserve, auxiliary, special, supernumerary, and intermittent law enforcers.

Whatever the name, reserve officers undertake the mission of the badge for their communties and for the approx. 700,000 full-time counterparts for little or no compensation at at great personal risk.

One of the articles on the website addresses the ultimate sacrifice that police officers, deputy sheriffs, and state troopers make which sadly includes reserves as well. It is: The Ultimate Sacrifice: Line of Duty Deaths Underscore Police Reserve Officers' Service.


Another article I wrote exclusively for this website addresses the use of reserve officer service to boost a full-time applicant's attractiveness for hire. This is a particularly valuable move as the competitveness for few salaried slots has greatly intensified given the current governmental budgetary climate. Any edge is very useful for the candidate.

Reserve officers gain valuable training, experience, and contacts. The article is called: Police Job Jumstart: Police Reserves Standout.

Whether you are a reservists, full-timer, law enforcement executive, aspiring officer, or just interested individual, check out the website and learn more about this great segement of our public safety service branches.

The PoliceReserveOfficer.com video is below and gives more highlights of the website dedicated to the professional volunteer and part-time law enforcement officer.

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Pretend Police: Are Impersonators Stopping You?


Pretend police in your mirror lights flashing and siren blaring is a scary prospect for all drivers on the road. Factor in being a woman alone or driving late at night and the prospect can be even more terrifying.

As a police expert, speaker, author, and media commentator, I hear what folks' police, crime, and safety related concerns are. And so, it was little surprise that quite a few people have been reading my latest police article for Examiner.com, "Pretend Police: Safety Tips for Drivers Being Stopped." As Examiner.com's designated "police examiner" for their national edition, I had a feeling that the article would strike a nerve for all concerned about police, crime and safety issues on an issue that really happens. I was right on target as the article opened with real life cases of police impersonators arrested in Florida, Massachusetts, California, and Pennsylvania.


Fake fuzz are out there and they are stopping drivers on the highways with pseudo cop accoutrements. The illicit equipment on the nabbed impersonator law enforcement officers have included badges, uniforms, radios, flashing lights, sirens, guns, and of course, a police style vehicle such as the ubiquitous Ford Crown Victoria.

The article gave safety tips, as I also do via my TheCopDoc.com website, on what to do if you think that a pretend police officer, deputy sheriff, or state trooper is trying to stop you.

The real police certainly want to stop police impersonators from engaging in their illegal conduct, arrest them, and bring them to justice. Fake fuzz endanger the public and law enforcers alike.

Check it out and comment below on The Cop Doc blog, on my Facebook page, or on the Examiner.com article. Have you been stopped by the Pretend Police?

Here is the link to the PoliceImpersonator article I wrote: http://www.examiner.com/police-in-national/pretend-police-safety-tips-for-drivers-being-stopped

Sunday, April 3, 2011

WORLD PREMIERE of new The Cop Doc Radio Show Promo Video


Here is the WORLD PREMIERE of the new The Cop Doc Radio Show promo video. The video highlights the arresting topics such as Officer Down!, Policing Japan's Crisis, Cops and Crazies, and Domestic Violence. There are many more topics that have been covered on the show encompassing Police, Crime, and Safety. The show is geared for law enforcement and non-law enforcement listeners as part of The Cop Doc's mission to explain complex justice topics in understandable terms.





The Cop Doc radio show has had numerous guest experts on the program and the promo video featured radio show guests Criminal Profiler Pat Brown, Dave "Buck Savage" Smith, and police guru Roy Bedard. A complete lists of guests and topics can be viewed at www.TheCopDoc.com.

This is fast paced, rocking beat video that showcases the police, crime and safety topics show. The show was recently moved to it's new time of 7:00 pm EDT on Blogtalkradio to make it more available for guests and listeners.


In addition to the live show that can be listened to via the Internet on Blogtalkradio.com or on the telephone, listeners can also enjoy the archived version via many application platforms including Apple iTunes, Windows Media Player, AppleCoreMedia, GoogleListen, and PodTrapper.

Check out the video below. And listen to The Cop Doc radio show in the Blogtalkradio player at the bottom. Or you can click on the link to go to the Blogtalk radio show page: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/the-cop-doc



Listen to internet radio with Dr Weinblatt on Blog Talk Radio

Thursday, March 31, 2011

The Cop Doc Radio Show- Policing Japan's Crisis

Tune for an arresting version of The Cop Doc radio show tonight as we discuss police and crime in the wake of Japan's disasters. Joining us tp provide insightful analysis will be John Jay College of Criminal Justice's Dr. Maki Maria Haberfeld and University of New Mexico's Dr. Aki Roberts. The new time for the show is 7:00 pm eastern. If you miss the show, you can listen to the archive version by clicking the link or going to Apple iTunes.

TheCopDoc- Policing Japans Crisis 3/31/2011 - Dr Weinblatt | Internet Radio | Blog Talk Radio

Warring Cops Disgraceful


The following is an editorial I wrote. It appeared on the front page of PoliceLink.com today.

The article is about the warring cops in neighboring Pennsylvania towns that were caught on viral video and thus make the work of good law enforcers that much more difficult. It is heartening to see good law enforcerment people condemning this behavior and evidenced by the comments on PoliceLink.

Warring Cops on Video: How to Make Our Mission Even Tougher
By Dr. Richard Weinblatt, The Cop Doc


I’m sure many of my fellow law enforcement professionals watched the video carried on Fox News Channel, myfoxphilly.com and other outlets that showed neighboring Pennsylvania law enforcers at war with each other. I think all would be as embarrassed for our profession as I was.

Far from not establishing good pro-active community relations programs, the viral video makes these officers from Darby and Colwyn boroughs look like the proverbial keystone cops and worse.

According to Fox, the incident caught on video all started when a Colwyn officer crossed the street into Darby to nab a man that had just punched a woman in the face. The officer had apparently been flagged down by the woman.

The problem (at least in the eyes of the Darby Police chief) was that it was in the neighboring Delaware County borough of Darby. While I understand the jurisdictional legal concerns that may be present, I would argue that the officer couldn’t just continue driving and ignore the woman. So he stopped to render aid and control the situation.

As the report details, the Darby Police chief came soon thereafter to the scene yelling at the Colwyn officer to get out of Darby. Incredibly, officers had to use their skills – you know, the ones they use on emotional members of the public at calls for police service - to deescalate the police chief, but it was to no avail. Officers then had to physically intervene to stop the fight from escalating to a physical level. All of this played out in public view involving the very type of behavior that we are called to control. Incredible.

Now, I know it’s best not to believe all that is put out by the media. And I also know that sometimes events happen before the video is rolling that help to put what is seen in context. That said, the video speaks volumes of the situation. I am hard pressed to find any justification for what I saw on the tape.

The damage to officers everywhere, including those on scene, is immeasurable. This impacts all of us in a number of ways.

1) We’re in an era where budget cutters do not see police officers and firefighters as the untouchable sacred cow immune to layoffs. Witness what happened in Camden, NJ not too far from the Philadelphia area. Officers were pushed off the public payroll. The same thing happened in Newark, NJ. Incidents like this do not help bolster the fiscal health of law enforcement agencies or their employees.

2) Many people who viewed this disgraceful video have used it as fodder for their call for regionalization of law enforcement services. While the concept itself is worthy of debate, it should not be on the coattails of clearly avoidable schoolyard kid style conduct.

3) That particular area of Delaware County, Pennsylvania, is apparently rife with crime and drugs. Such displays do little to convince the beleaguered community that their police are up to the task.

4) Leadership emanates from the top. If this is the hot-tempered publicly displayed behavior of the police chief, who should be the most seasoned, rationale, and calm person on the municipal police agency, I shudder to think what some of his subordinates may have done.

5) As a defensive tactics instructor who has handled volatile calls in uniform where emotions are high, I know it is a basic tenet that you must have control of yourself before you can expect to have control of the scene. With a man in custody and a woman being treated by medics on the street, no ongoing scene safety or investigation has control or integrity while the law enforcers themselves are arguing emotionally and publicly on the scene.

6) From a national perspective, long-standing critics of the police are already pointing to this video to bolster their anti-police argument. Their contention has long been that crime fighters are just street fighters with badges. They want people to believe their skewed view of law enforcers. This video does nothing to refute their argument and does everything to bolster it. They are able to apply a broad paintbrush to the 700,000 ethical and hardworking police officers, deputy sheriffs, and state troopers in the United States based on the actions of a few.

Specifically in regard to this incident, while we can blame the video and the news media for disseminating it, the reality is that if the officers, starting with the Darby police chief, had not acted in such a manner, there would be nothing news worthy to display. The Colwyn officer should have walked away from the chief and not been baited into a confrontation.

As professionals, we need to address this conduct and identify it as not worthy of our position of trust in the community. The days of circling the wagons or sticking our head in the sand are long gone in policing. Our credibility is at stake and we need to distance ourselves from such conduct and repudiate it.

The intensely bright spotlight on isolated viral episodes, such as what transpired in Darby, are diminished if we acknowledge them as being outside the standard of professional conduct we as professionals hold ourselves to. We need to highlight the good work done by 700,000 law enforcers in the United States, and many more internationally, that gets overshadowed by the tarnished badge behavior of a few. It’s hard to get the mission done that with emotionally charged, warring police chiefs and officers out there fighting.

As I’ve told basic law enforcement academy students for a number of years, we live in an era of video technology. You should always assume that you are on camera and should act in a professional manner worthy of the oath we took and the badge we wear. In short, the conduct should be such that it that would make your mother proud. I doubt the Darby police chief’s mother would be proud of her son today.

Dr. Richard Weinblatt, “The Cop Doc,” is a former police chief, ex busy jurisdiction patrol deputy sheriff, and criminal justice educator who has written articles and provided media commentary since 1989. He can be reached via www.TheCopDoc.com.

Here is the link to the front page article on PoliceLink where you can watch the video and judge for yourself:
http://policelink.monster.com/training/articles/152341-warring-cops-making-our-mission-even-tougher

Monday, November 29, 2010

News Interview on Officer Involved Police Shootings News Interview 11/29/10 Dr. Richard We...

My live in-studio news interview on WOFL Fox 35 News "Good Day" on the recent spate of police officer involved shootings.

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Does Size Matter? Small Agencies: The Cop Career Gatekeepers - PoliceLink

My latest article on PoliceLink.com on Small Agencies and Police Careers: Does Size Matter? Small Agencies: The Cop Career Gatekeepers - PoliceLink

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Full Body Scanners Bad for America News Interview


As seen in the below two videos of an interview I did this afternoon with Central Florida News 13 reporter Jacqueline Fell in the station's downtown Orlando conference room, I do not believe that body scanners (as used by the courthouses and particularly by the TSA at airports) and other efforts to enhance the safety of the American people is the way to go.

Not only did Centrral Florida News 13 put the print and video version of the TV news package on my objection to body scanners up on their website ( http://www.cfnews13.com/article/news/2010/november/174083/Questions-continue-to-surround-body-scans - click on SCANNED IMAGES RELEASED FOR VIDEO OF NEWS REPORT ), they also put video of my raw interview on their website: http://www.cfnews13.com/video?clip=http://static.cfnews13.com/newsvideo/cfn/1117BodyScan_111720100546.flv

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Tasering Sports Fans


Few are those who have not seen the now infamous video of a 17-year-old running on the Philadelphia Phillies ball field and being the recipient of a Philadephia Police officer's well-executed Taser shot. And many have become acquainted with the incident of the man that became disorderly and belligerent while Tiger Woods golfed away in Florida. Yesterday, I did a live via satellite interview with MSNBC anchor Tamron Hall on Taser and sports fans. As a former police chief, Taser instructor, and long-time law enforcement issues media commentator, MSNBC asked me on Sunday if I would appear on the Monday afternoon segment.

The segment had originally been slated to be six minutes or so, but was cut back due to the news surrounding President Obama's United States Supreme Court nomination announcement. I was unable to make a few of points given the time crunch. They also did not air a you tube clip of me being Tasered during training in 2004 that clearly demonstrates that you can be Tasered and walk away (like I did). But, alas, time did not permit. That's understandable as that is the nature of the TV news biz.

Also appearing was Petra DeJesus, a commissioner on the San Fransisco Police Commission. Ms. DeJesus, a civilian lawyer, was appointed to serve on the political commission. Ms. DeJesus is a vocal critic of the Taser and I believe that she is throwing the baby out with the bath water.



While Amnesty International, a great organization whose work I admire, and Ms. DeJesus trumpet deaths attributed to the Taser, they misunderstand the facts and ignore the greater good that Taser has done. I do agree that, much like a firearm or pepperspray, Taser is a tool that can be misused. But when we have bad shoots with a firearm, we do not propose getting rid of the police use of a side arm. Rather, we correctly deal with the individual officer's misconduct.

In the interview, I pointed out that many studies, including a fairly recent one by the U.S. Justice Department, have shown that the Taser is relatively safe. What I did not have time to go into in the interview is the deterrent effect that the red laser dot on the suspect's chest has. As I have stated in HLN Headline News and other media interviews in the past: the best fight for law enforcement to be in is the one that doesn't happen.

Most police officers and deputy sheriffs have seen resistant subjects give up when that red laser dot hits their chest. While they do not fear the firearm as they know it will not be used except in extreme, deadly force situation, they also know that the officer may fire that Taser.

As I opened up the segment, I answered Tamron's question by pointing out that I do not always take the position of the police. I examine each incident on its own merits, based on the information presented, and render an expert analysis. I told Tamron and the viewers that the two incidents at issue: the Philadelphia Phillies and Tiger Woods golf occurrences, appear to be proper uses of the Taser. Philadelphia Police Commissioner Charles Ramsey, former deputy superintendent of the Chicago Police and former Chief of the Washington, DC, Metropolitan Police, had already come out publicly saying that the use of the Taser was within departmental policy guidelines.

I pointed out that if someone were to come in to the Iron Man 2 movie that I saw this weekend and was loud, security would ask him to quiet down. I then took it further through the steps of law enforcement asking him to quiet down, then to leave, then to submit to the arrest that he resisted. The Tiger Woods golf guy was arrested for disorderly intoxication and resisting arrest.

Ms. DeJesus opined that Taser is too large a step to take for someone being disruptive and resisting arrest. I explained in the segment that whether the person is dangerous or not is not known. Law enforcement officers cannot read minds and we do not know what someone's intent is before they make an overt act to demonstrate their purpose.

I mentioned the case of Kansas City Royals first base coach Tom Gamboa who in 2002 lost the hearing in his right ear after two fans attacked him on the ball field. During the attack, a knife even fell out of one of the attacker's pocket. MSNBC host Tamron Hall jumped in agreeing and reminded Ms. DeJesus of the Monica Seles attack.

I said that the police are not mind readers. We do not know what people do before they do it. We in law enforcement can only deal with what we know at the time that we know it. We did not know that the 17-year-old young man who rushed onto the Phillies-Cardinal game field what his intent was. As has been demonstrated by Columbine and other events, teenagers can be dangerous too. That is especially true in the time that we live in.

Getting onto a ball field is not a matter of just stumbling a few steps. One has to overcome physical barriers and other security measures to make a conscious effort to enter the controlled and restricted space. The young man in this incident was charged with defiant trespass.

As for the incident at Tiger Wood's golf outing in Florida, I did not have the time to explain that St. Johns County deputy sheriffs only ended up Tasering the golf fan after security and then law enforcement had asked him to 1) stop, 2) leave, and 3) not resist arrest. The man was charged with disorderly intoxication and resisting arrest. I guess Ms. DeJesus and her ilk would rather that he be beaten into submission with a baton which is sure to cause broken bones and possibly serious injury or death. People forget that that is how it used to be done and the results were not pretty.



Ms. DeJesus in the segment thought that law enforcers should be able to just "muscle" people into compliance. As I mentioned in the interview, there is no magic bullet. Law enforcement officers can't just put their fingers on someone and put them out a la Mr. Spock of Star Trek fame.

I did not have time to point out is that San Francisco's own newly minted star police chief, George Gascon, tried to get his city to approve his drafting of a tightly controlled Taser policy. Interestingly, Ms. DeJesus' own commission voted narrowly four to three to turn down Chief Gascon's request.



Chief Gascon, by the way, is no slouch when it comes to law enforcement expertise. A lawyer himself, Chief Gascon came to San Francisco from his post as chief of the Mesa Police in Arizona. Prior to that, he served with the Los Angeles Police Department rising to the position of Assistant Police Chief and Director of Field Operations under the legendary Chief Bill Bratton.

No mere rubber stamp of hard-line law enforcement types, not all of Chief Gascon's policies were welcomed warmly by the Mesa Police officers. That should give more credibility to his independent assessment and support of Tasers. The device is good for policing and good for the community that law enforcement serves.



San Fancisco is the only big city to not allow it's police officers the less than lethal option that the Taser affords. Other steps such as the baton have been shown to cause more injuries and deaths to officers and suspects when deployed.

What I also did not have time in the MSNBC to elaborate on is that the deaths have been time after time shown to be caused by other factors.

Not five minutes after leaving the TV studios in Columbus, OH, I received an email on my iPhone from a person who thought I was a bad man for supporting the use of Tasers. I get quite a few of these well-intentioned, but ill-informed messages. Without the sender's name being mentioned here, here is the text of his email:

It's unfortunate there are people such as yourself propagating a tool that causes death to stop a 17 kid from running around a ballfield in jest. That cop is an idiot, I don't know how a moron like that could get on the police force. You know what I mean; the taser. Do you have interest in the company that makes these things? I think you may. It's disgusting that there are idiot cops that are stupid enough to use it on harmless citizens. Instaed of teaching cops how to use a taser, why don't you teach them some common sense and how not to be a vigilante? You are just as responsible, and liable for any deaths that these taser's cause, and if I were a judge I would hold you liable in any court of law for the death of anyone killed by your taser's, and pressing the use of these things.


As I mentioned above, the officers did not know the young man's intentions. I don't think it is worth the risk. If something had happened, than folks would be saying why didn't the police do something or do something different. It's a damned if you do and damned if you don't situation.

And, no, I am not in any way compensated nor do I have any financial interest in Taser International, the makers of Taser. Remember, I am not a proponent of the Taser in every situation. The device, however, is a good tool and needs to be available for appropriate and professional use.

Some things that uninformed people, such as Ms. DeJesus and the email sender, are missing in the Taser debate:

- Officer and Suspect injuries and deaths have gone down
- Use of Force incidents have gone down
- The police deal with some people who have risk factors exacerbated since they tend not to have adequate preventative and diagnostic health care
- The police also tend to deal with some people who have ingested drugs such as cocaine and meth.
- Physical confrontations with the police are stressful events in and of themselves. Use of the baton and other physical and mechanical means actually prolongs and intensifies the stressful situation.
- The public overwelmingly in media run polls vote that the use of the Taser is appropriate.
- The public and media overreact and do not understand how the Taser works.


Most coroners have found that deaths come from the above contributory factors. While I fully agree that some Taser usage incidents have been wrong, and I am vocal in my rectifying of those situations, not all Tasers should be eliminated.

In general, the Taser is a useful tool on an officer's tool belt. The key is proper and professional policy formulation, training, supervision, and deployment. Used appropriately, the Taser is the closest thing we have today to Star Trek's stun phaser.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Times Square Bomb & Arizona Immigration: Balancing Policing in A Democratic Society


Many Americans woke up this morning (Sunday) to the news that a bombing situation had been thwarted in a high profile hub of our nation: New York City's Times Square. They also awoke to see pictures of hundreds of thousands of people participating in rallies protesting the Immigration law (and it's slightly altered current incarnation) in Arizona. As a former deputy sheriff who worked on the border (as pictured above) and a former police chief, I see that both deal with ideas that go the very heart of who we are as a people and what ideals our country stands for.

DICTATORSHIP POLICING EASY

It is easy to police in a dictatorship. Sadam Hussein was able to keep murderous, warring factions of Iraq in check by being more murderous than those groups. At the other end of the spectrum, The anarchy that is Somalia has no central government or ability to speak of to keep the various local warlords in check.

The United States has long struggled with governmental control and it's most visible component is that of law enforcement. Policing in a democratic society is hard as is evidenced by the events of the past few days in Times Square and in Arizona.

In general, I do not believe that we should sacrifice our ideals in order to be safer. In the words of U2 lead singer Bono (I know he is not the biggest philosopher around, but his thought here is true): "We do not need to become a monster, in order to defeat a monster."

ALERTNESS

What saved the day in New York City was the vigilance of a civilian street vendor. This veteran took a moment to notice an unusual situation and reported to a mounted New York City Police officer. The officer in turned notified his chain of command and the NYPD Bomb Squad and NYC FBI field office bomb techs responded. The system worked there thanks to the alert observation and good law enforcement response.

In Arizona, police intervention could go too far in a situation which is really larger and more political in nature (My earlier blog post on Blogger and my interview with Alternet.org goes into more detail). If the police go with the Arizona scenario, we have started to move down the slippery slope that personified our country's treatment of the Japanese during World War II., as well as the Nazis. The solution needs to come from Washington, DC, so as to preserve our localized, democratic style of policing.

Having the police pull double-duty stretches already thin resources, opens fiscally-strapped local governments up to lawsuits whether they enforce the new law or not, and will propel crimes towards non-illegals as Hispanic victims and witnesses will be intimidated and not help the police stop predators. Those predators will also victimize non-illegals. The predator illegals that are here will not be scared by this; only the non-violent illegal aliens will be wary of the law and police.

Other states, such as Ohio, are thinking about copying the Arizona law. As I told the Ohio News Network (ONN), that would be a mistake. In both cases, what we need is alert people that will bring law enforcement into the picture when violence (or the potential such as bomb) enters the scene. The collection of intelligence has stopped some threats from coming to fruition and the same could be used more effectively to combat illegal immigration.


In this country, many officers have observed that people always want the laws enforced- as long as it is not against them. For example, all across the country, officers have agreed with my own experience having run radar in residential subdivisions in response to community outcry. The biggest offenders end up being the residents themselves and then they are not so happy to have that enforcement presence. Officers reading this can relate to it in their own policing experiences.

Even has a member of the police community, I have always been a staunch defender of the protections, rights, and even technicalities of our society. As I have said before, "It is those rights that protect you, me, my wife, and my son." I want a government that is strong enough to protect us, but not strong enough to move away from its democratic principles.

Much like the scales of justice, we must balance police and the power of the government enforcers in the middle. To much movement in either direction turns into the dictatorship of old Iraq or the anarchy of Somalia. We don't want to be either country. We are the United States of America and all the ideals that it stands for.

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Arizona Illegal Immigrant Law Bad Policing


In the furor that has followed the signing of the Arizona illegal immigrant law by Governor Jan Brewer and supported by Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio (creator of the famed tent city jail and the self-proclaimed "Toughest Sheriff in America"), few have stopped to look at the effect it has on policing. In a word it is bad.

I come at this perspective after having served as a deputy sheriff in a border state - New Mexico (I am in the picture above as a patrol deputy sheriff in rural New Mexico).

First I was in Dona Ana County (a 4,000 square mile county with 50 miles along the Mexican border) and then as a Patrol Division deputy sheriff II. with the Santa Fe County Sheriff's Office (a 2,500 square mile state capital county). I also served as a police chief in North Carolina and as an educator of law enforcers. I have worked for many years providing police services for legal and illegal immigrant populations.


Above: With fellow deputy sheriff in New Mexico.

And that's the key here, folks. The police provide police services. And we provide it to all. And we do it in a challenging economic, fiscally austerity-laden governmental structure. The Arizona law sets policing back many years.

BAD COMMUNITY RELATIONS

First off, the police rely on information. If you mandate that they investigate and arrest a very vulnerable population, those folks won't come forward with information. I would have thought that in policing a democratic society, we moved beyond intimidating the victim. We want to encourage victims to come forward with information.

As a police chief in North Carolina, I had a program where I spoke in uniform at churches all around the city in an effort to reach out to the community. I stopped my unmarked Ford Crown Victoria one day at a church that served Hispanics. They scattered afraid that I would try to deport them (under the Arizona law, deportation would happen only after a possible jail sentence and fine). I convinced the pastor that I wanted to reach out to their community and that they were deserving of the police's protective service also.



I spoke that Friday night (speaking some Spanish and some translated) and started to get more and more information from the good folks in that church. First it was little nuggets of information to test if I was trustworthy. Little by little the information got bigger. It crossed into items that effected the immigrants' legal neighbors. So the issues touched all and their information helped the entire community.

If nothing else, it is important to understand that easy victims are the first step for predators. They then become emboldened to prey on the legal residents of our nation. Crime and quality of life concerns do not know borders within our communities.

RACIAL PROFILING

I respectfully disagree with Sheriff Arpaio's interpretation of the mandate to investigate and detain upon a finding of reasonable suspicion concerning legal resident status. Sheriff Arpaio says that it is not racial profiling. I disagree. Having had to compile reasonable suspicion while investigating crimes, I can see how police officers and deputy sheriffs would have no choice. Any person who appears to be of darker color with an accent would have to have those facts as part of the reasonable suspicion building blocks.

Given the current scenario, people who have some of the "building blocks" (dark skin, accent) will be stopped repeatedly and questioned. That is more akin to a police state. We should not sacrifice what has made our country great to have an appearance of action.

The reasonable suspicion part of this will be legally challenged and officers will be confused as to how they can investigate without running afoul of legal issues. This is not as simple as the public thinks and officers cannot just move from the police-person consensual encounter to reasonable suspicion on flimsy information.

BURDEN TO SYSTEM

Sheriff Arpaio and others have contended that they run white people as well through the system. I disagree with that position from several angles. We need to have discretion as to who you run through the system to check for warrants and other information.

I know some agencies and officers have departmental or personal policies that call for running every person they come in contact with. That is not always advisable or feasible. Once the arrest warrant comes through, or the officer decides to make a lower priority arrest, he or she is tied up and is unable to handle higher level calls and assist other officers. The officer has no choice and has to follow the court ordered arrest warrant or, as in this case, the mandated detention of the illegal alien. Some agencies are too busy handling 911 calls for police service to be tied up handling smaller warrants or illegal alien investigations.

VICTIMIZING THE VICTIM

Worse yet, making arrests will have a chilling effect on victims. They will be afraid to come forward. This is something that we are already battling against and the law sets us way back.

The most vulnerable of victims, women and children, will suffer the most under this law. Domestic violence investigations is one area that has truly been dealt a blow now. Few victims will have the courage or trust that they need to overcome often brutal psychological, emotional, and physical abuse.

As a uniformed patrol officer in New Mexico, I had to repeatedly assure people that I was not Immigration or the Border Patrol. That I was not interested in their status, but rather in their safety. It was hard to gain their trust. This law shatters that trust for officers with boots in the dirt trying to gain information.

In my own experience as a uniformed peace officer, I often chose not to run someone who came to me as a victim as I knew arresting them would not be in the interest of justice. If I knew of the existence of an arrest warrant, that was different. But I certainly did not go out of my way to traumatize someone who already had come forward to me as a law enforcement officer. Sometimes at great personal peril.

UNFUNDED MANDATE

This is an unfunded mandate to already fiscally strapped counties and municipalities. Arresting, charging, and jailing a person is not cheap. Law enforcement can barely keep up with what they need to do for public safety, let alone this requirement that does not give the needed dollars to make it a realistic financial picture. This law does not just call for the turning over of illegal aliens to the feds for deportation. An entire investigation and prosecution has to take place, along with the expensive jailing of the accused, which has a jail sentence and fine attached to it. Only later does the possibility of deportation come up. And the federal government may nullify this by refusing to take the person.

This law, while an attempt to keep America whole, is blatantly un-American. It undermines many of the principles that we are founded on and places the police and county sheriff's offices in an untenable position. It is at odds with our mission to gain the trust and cooperation of our democratic society. Without that trust, the most vulnerable victims, and our ideals, will suffer.

Sunday, December 6, 2009

Watching "Clash of the Dinosaurs" on Discovery Channel. Phenomenal program.