2023 Community Perception Research: Police Communication and Public Trust
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2022 Police Employee Survey Results
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Calgary Police Commission
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Here we we go again with analysis with police traffic stop data. Police departments have to start doing a better job with conducting traffic stops! Ann Arbor Police Department (AAPD) if you are listening PLEASE pay attention. A quick look at the population demographics shows that Ann Arbor, MI has the following breakdown: White: 69.52%, Asian: 17.4%, and Black: 7.01% (6.07% other). Now AAPD there are these things called computers. All you have you do is get a program to record real-time the race of the person that AAPD officers stopping and issuing tickets to and then share that information with all the officers so that AAPD officers would know who they can issue tickets to. If an AAPD officer makes a traffic stop of an Asian person and when the officer returns to the vehicle to issue a ticket, if the Asian ticket percentage is greater than 17.4%, the officer shouldn’t issue the ticket. Simple! If the officer knows that there are several AAPD cars conducting traffic stops at the same time the officer can wait to see if the Asian ticket percentages decreases therefore allowing the officer to issue a ticket. Conversely if an AAPD has stopped a White person on a traffic stop and the officer notices that the ticket percentage for Whites are way below the 69.52% this might be a good opportunity to issue several traffic tickets in order to raise the White ticket percentage. Job well done!
Ann Arbor Police Department I’m trying to help you stay within the findings of the study. I wouldn’t want the fine government leaders of Ann Arbor, MI to think that the answer of a more equitable way of traffic enforcement would be to have civilians perform the duties of traffic enforcement. Or to restrict the Ann Arbor Police Department to the enforcement of ONLY some of the State Vehicle and Traffic Laws, “just the unbiased laws”. Or tohave all of the AAPD officers go through some type of training that will make the AAPD officers treat the motoring public in a more equitable way.
There are 2 major flaws with the SMART Analysis (which is available from a link on it’s website). First is in it’s conclusion:
“These disparities were not uniform across racial categories nor across various Reasons for Contact. Some of the largest disparities identified in this analysis involve African-American male drivers for stops initiated for Equipment Violations (which occurred 2.41x more likely than would be expected) as well as for Searches after the initial stop (which occurred between 5.4x to 3.65x more often than would be expected). Despite these significant disparities, the above results place AAPD traffic stops generally in line, neither dramatically better or worse, than similar analyses.”
Again the analysis rests against the population and the conclusion points out that AAPD is not “dramatically better or worse against similar analyses”. So I guess AAPD is doing…..GOOD?
The second flaw is that this type of analysis treats the data as if “ALL THINGS ARE EQUAL”. This type of approach disregards all other elements of the stop that could impact the officer’s decision to write the traffic ticket or search the vehicle such as the condition of the vehicle, the interaction between the officer and the driver/passengers, history of the driver/passengers, and plain view evidence that may impact the traffic stop.
The result is a narrow interpretation from the study that the AAPD is biased with it’s traffic enforcement. Think to how AAPD conducts traffic stops. AAPD probably has about 80 officers (patrol, traffic & Sergeants) that routinely conducts traffic stops. Are they ALL racially biased? I doubt it. Is the training they receive biased to make them write tickets in a biased manner? Probably not, but the AAPD administration should review the training to make sure it isn’t biased. How do AAPD write tickets? AAPD officers make traffic stops from officer discretion as to which cars to stop and who to ticket, they probably conduct checkpoints from traffic complaints, there are probably 911 call for real-time traffic complaints, and traffic accidents. So there are some traffic incidents where the officer selects the reason for the traffic stop and other times when the public influences the officer as to which vehicles should be stopped.
Then there are several reasons why an AAPD officer would issue a traffic ticket. The officer has discretion under some circumstances, the officer may have to issue the ticket in accordance to AAPD policy or State law, there is the interaction between the officer and the driver/passenger, other factor such as the driver’s criminal history, driving record or police contact history, there may be a warrant, an arrest or the ticket may be needed for probable cause. There may be several violations that can be issued and the officer may issue one ticket, some tickets or tickets for ALL of the violations. Do the data reflect all of these decisions?
The PROBLEM is that critics believe that at anytime AAPD stop data is looked at all the STOPS, SEARCHES, TICKETS ISSUED should look like White: 69.52%, Asian: 17.4%, and Black: 7.01% (6.07% other). Even though traffic stops are conducted by 80 plus different AAPD officers, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, in response to 100’s of reason and circumstances.
Good luck AAPD. What would be helpful is for an academic to take this study and reanalyze the data considering some of these other factors mentioned above to see how they affect this traffic enforcement study.
A federal appeals court in Louisiana decided last week that a cop can sue a protest organizer for injuries caused by another person during a demonstration, ratifying a novel legal theory that threatens to further suppress protests and First Amendment rights more broadly.
— Read on www.reuters.com/legal/government/black-lives-matter-other-protesters-vulnerable-liability-suits-after-appeals-2023-06-23/
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NOTE: There are 200 publications based on “Race & Policing” available at the link below – Check it!!!
Again and again the data show that people of color in the U.S. are disproportionately, and systematically, stopped, frisked, arrested, and exposed to the use of force by police. Police departments and communities across the U.S. are struggling with these realities and with what has become a glaring divide in how Americans experience and relate to policing. This special collection includes research from nonprofits, foundations, and university based research centers, who have not only described and documented the issue but who also provide much-needed recommendations for addressing this chronic and tragic problem. More ways to engage: – Add your organization’s content to this collection. – Easily share this collection on your website or app.
— Read on raceandpolicing.issuelab.org/
The fiscal losses caused by fare and toll evasion are staggering.
This should include improving the measurement of fare evasion on commuter railroads and passing new state legislation to crack down on drivers who use fraudulent and blocked license plates to evade tolls, or who persistently ignore toll bills. Modernizing fare arrays – turnstiles, exit gates, and other physical barriers – is the single most important thing the MTA can do to reduce fare evasion in the subway, saving hundreds of millions of dollars over time. These fare arrays would replace the aging turnstiles with motorized swinging doors or panels. They will also enable the MTA to get rid of the existing emergency gates – the single biggest source of evasion in the subways. About 400,000 riders enter the subway each day without paying – a problem so big that enforcement alone cannot solve it
The Four E’s strategy is based on the idea that new anti-evasion strategies should respond to the reasons why people evade in the first place. For example, evaders (particularly on the subways) typically fall into several general categories:
The opportunistic evader – the person who approaches the subway turnstile with MetroCard or OMNY in hand but evades when they see others entering through an open emergency exit gate. Remedies should focus on taking away the opportunity – the open gate.
The frustrated evader – the person who walks up to a MetroCard machine, cash in hand and ready to pay, but finds the machine’s cash slot has been vandalized. Unable to pay the MTA with cash, they reluctantly resort to evasion through the emergency exit gate – sometimes being forced to pay someone illegally controlling gate entry.
The economically stressed evader – the person who evades the fare because paying it is a true hardship. The panel heard from New Yorkers who feel as if they have to choose between paying the fare and paying for other necessities. They told us they would much rather be paying customers and they find evasion painful and embarrassing.
The student evader – the young person who evades the fare when their student discount is unavailable.
The determined evader – this category includes the person who simply Is determined not to pay, regardless of subsidies, educational messages or other nudges. This category also includes those who are determined to facilitate and profit from evasion by others. Social media chatter makes clear that many see fare evasion as outright cool or somehow socially justified. It is neither.
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This is one copy of the video of the incident found on Twitter. The incident allegedly began with an argument between Jeremy Brown and Carlishia Hood. The argument escalated with Brown punching Carlishia Hood. Apparently Carlishia Hood was able to contact her 14 year old son to bring her firearm and come in the hotdog stand to help her. The son entered the establishment saw the altercation and shot Brown. The according to news reports (below) Carlishia Hood instructed her 14 year old son to go after and continue to shoot Brown and then attack another patron that was laughing during the incident.
There was a decision to Arrest Carlishia Hood and her 14 year old son. I don’t know all the facts in the case but I can see how Chicago PD (CPD) made this decision. The main issue is Carlishia Hood having her 14 year old son shoot Brown and then when the threat stopped have her son continue to pursue Brown and kill Brown. Then if the allegation is true to have he 14 year old son to attack a second person for laughing during the incident, which was asked but didn’t happen.
It makes sense that CPD would arrest Carlishia Hood and her 14 son for the death of Brown and then Carlishia Hood for endangering the welfare of her 14 year old child. Then the prosecutor would prepare a case against Carlishia Hood and then it becomes the defendant’s burden to raise the motion of self-defense and prove it. By the prosecutor dropping the case it opens up the police officers involved and police department to a lawsuit even though they acted lawfully when they made the arrest.
Keep in mind that (this is only looking at the video) Carlishia Hood had to text her 14 year old son to get the gun before she was punched. No one reacted in the video by leaving or running away until the 14 year old son shot Brown. Was anyone in fear of their life?
Video about the arrest: https://wgntv.com/news/chicagocrime/woman-14-year-old-charge-in-fatal-shooting-on-far-south-side/
This is an example of a slippery slope for police that Progressive Prosecutors artificially create. This is an example of one instance that police act lawfully and the prosecutor should have followed through with the charges, however they drop the charges leaving police officers and the police department exposed to civil liability. It appears that the police officers acted improperly, but they didn’t.
There are other examples like when Progressive Prosecutors make their own special policy on which crimes or under what circumstances they will prosecute arrests. The law hasn’t changed just the prosecutor’s discretion.
For example in New York is a person shoplifts and during the shoplifting crime and the offender’s escape the offender displays a hammer and says “If you try to stop me I’ll smash your head in”. This act would raise the shoplifting to a robbery, but not in Manhattan under DA Bragg. In DA Bragg’s “Day One Memo” he stated:
a) An act that could be charged under PL §§ 160.15 (2, 3, or 4), 160.10(2b), or 160.05 that occurs in a commercial setting should be charged under PL § 155.25 if the force or threat of force consists of displaying a dangerous instrument or similar behavior but does not create a genuine risk of physical harm.
So if the NYPD made the correct arrest they would have arrested the offender for robbery, criminal possession of a weapon, and larceny. Who knows how DA Bragg’s assistant prosecutors would have handled the case. They might drop the whole case which would leave the NYPD and the officers open to a civil lawsuit.
Video about charges dropped: https://wgntv.com/news/chicagocrime/charges-dropped-against-mother-and-14-year-old-son-in-fatal-shooting/
Video about the lawsuit: https://wgntv.com/news/chicago-news/mother-in-deadly-maxwell-street-express-shooting-expected-to-speak-after-charges-dropped/
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As Minneapolis prepares to negotiate a federal consent decree that would install an independent monitor of its embattled police force, potential pitfalls can be sidestepped if officials are mindful.
— Read on www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/chicagos-consent-decree-woes-offer-warning-minneapolis-police-face-fed-rcna90186
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