I could go on this topic
forever. Really. I'm just going to briefly list and summarize a few things, though (note, some of these may only apply in the US):
1. Get rid of "internal investigations." Entirely separate agencies should investigate police for misconduct.
2. Implement civilian review boards, which have the power to investigate and discipline cops, including the power to fire.
3. Give cops full whistle-blower protection, making it a crime to fire a cop for snitching on other cops.
4. Eliminate qualified immunity for lawsuits against police officers, making it easier to find cops personally financially liable for their mistakes.
5. Make it easier to fire cops with bad histories in general, and implement higher standards in hiring former cops so that bad cops aren't merely shuffled from department to department.
6. Make it a crime for cops to inhibit the public recording of cops engaged in official duties.
7. Have the cops themselves record everything humanly possible. All interactions with the public, all interviews, etc. should be taped. Make it a crime to stop the recording, and implement legal presumptions against the police if the recordings are stopped (i.e., if there's a lawsuit against a cop for conduct that happened when the recording wasn't on, the court will presume the unrecorded facts
against the officer).
8. End the war on drugs. Seriously. This, and the resulting stat games, are a huge cause of the us vs. them attitudes, from both the public and the police. The police are no longer
protecting the community, but looking for arrests and seizures.
9. Speaking of seizures, just eradicate the current policy of asset forfeiture, which allows police to seize property that they suspect has anything to do with any crime, regardless of evidence or due process -- and then keep that money for their own department.
10. Another policy that needs changed: the use of SWAT and other paramilitary tactics. These should be used extremely rarely only in inherently high-risk situations (such as with hostages or standoffs), not to bust down the door of someone suspected of only non-violent drug offenses in the middle of the night. This current policy of KNOCK DOWN ALL THE DOORS endangers both cops and civilians, and further encourages the "us vs. them" attitude.
That's enough for now. The biggest issue is accountability. The sense of entitlement among cops is so prevalent because cops are almost never held accountable for their actions. This needs to change, and is what the majority of my recommended changes addresses.
Happy, Bleys?
