Canadian Cop Puts On An Impromptu Clinic On How To Deal With Critics And Cameras
from the timcushinglovescops.com dept
timcushinghatescops.com brings you the following special holiday message:
When I call out law enforcement officers for brutality, excessive force, moral turpitude and a general contempt for citizens' rights, it's not because I think all cops are bad. In fact, I know the job is often thankless and unpleasant. Many officers only deal with the kind of people we all hope we'll never run into, and they do it day after day. Even when a cop does his or her job well, there's a chance he or she will be criticized for any perceived missteps. (Quite possibly by me...)
When I cover stories of police misconduct, it's not because I believe that the mindset and actions on display are present in a majority of law enforcement officers. I don't think it is. The problem is that it's still far too prevalent and will only increase as long as cops are shielded by other officers, supervisors and friends in the judicial system. Law enforcement members wield a great deal of power with very little accountability.
But not all cops are bad cops, just like all cops aren't saints. But underneath it all, they're all human beings dealing with the day-to-day rigors of a job most people would never take.
Via Photography Is Not A Crime comes this video of a Canadian cop, Mark Morelli, who makes the best of what could easily have become a bad situation -- an arrest featuring several onlookers with cameras and one very uncooperative suspect. How does he keep this from becoming something more in line with the stories I usually cover? Watch. (The first 4:30 is the arrest. What follows after that is worth sticking around for.)
There's nothing more powerful than using your position and experience to inform, and to do so patiently in the face of vocal critics. The only one who comes off as a jerk is the cameraman, who is so "disturbed" by what he's seeing that he wants to go back inside where it's warmer.
The suspect knows there's an audience and that fact undoubtedly colors her performance. (And it is a performance -- at 3:07 she adjusts her hair with her handcuffed hands, almost unleashes a smile and then returns to making a whole lot of noise.)
Morelli should be held up as an example for other officers all over his nation and ours (meaning the US in this case, but feel free to apply it to your own). Rather than view onlookers "armed" with cameras as an enemy, he treats them as a simple fact of life. The job of policing is no longer private or purely subject to opinionated eyewitness accounts.
Cameras can be a cop's best friend, even when wielded by antagonistic onlookers. Morelli seizes the opportunity afforded by this recording to explain what he's done, why he did it and all without tossing out threats or condescension. He exits the situation gracefully, having gained the respect of most of the viewers. That's how you "win" at being a cop. Communication -- communication that asserts authority without using it as a weapon. "These are the facts." "This is what I do." It's professionalism at its best.
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Filed Under: cameras, canada, mark morelli, police, police brutality
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This is an officer who kept his cool throughout, and did his job properly. Like you, Tim, I tend to rail on bad police officers, and live in an area where we have had several incidents in the past few years. That said, most police officers are hard-working and good, honest people who (I hope) would react the same way this officer did.
Well done Officer Morelli. Keep up the good work, we appreciate officers like you. You are the kind of police officer that we want to keep us safe!!
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This video has to be shown to every single cop out there. The man filing is a moron, anyone can see they are trying to do their best not to hurt her and constantly ask her in a very reasonable tonne to stop resisting for her own good.
I'm guessing that part of the cameraman reaction is exactly due to the things Tim exposed from the start. Cases of abuse have become so common that people got conditioned to loathe law enforcement. There's also a conflation of the abuses in the Govt level and the street level. Sometimes the cops are at the mercy of a corrupt Executive too.
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Yep. Two videos.
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Yep. Two videos.
Here's one more. Also from Tim Cushing.
http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20110725/17451715249/how-should-law-enforcement-handle-bein g-filmed-officer-lyons-provides-perfect-example.shtml
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Oh wait, that could take hours.
So if the bad cop to good cop article ratio here is like 50:1, we're supposed to think that not only are most cops bad, but by an absurdly large ratio.
Which is, of course, horse shit. Like pretty much everything on this Google-funded site.
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Mistakes are noticed and should be noticed in order to be corrected.
The ratio is irrelevent.
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A thug cop doing everything wrong is what makes for viral videos.
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If you are a very dim-witted person with no critical thinking skills then yes you are likely to think like that. You certainly appear to be in a small minority though, and the rest of us pity you.
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Could you please post a link to this video?
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Contrast this with the Thomas case in the US, and you will understand why most of the people here are saying that that officer is a police officer, rather than a sanctioned thug.
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Anyone with first aid experience will tell you that if someone is screaming "I can't breath" they can breath just fine. It stems from: if the subject is coughing, do not perform the Heimlich Maneuver. By extension, if the suspect is screaming "I can't breath" then the cop can continue the arrest.
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Actually I'd say that anyone who knows how to breath could tell you that. As soon as she screamed those words her credibility was out the window and I knew she was lying through her teeth about the 'injuries' she was supposedly suffering.
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I enjoyed the well other cops don't follow the law blah blah blah, but it is very clear that gentleman doesn't understand the law and just wants to place some blame for injustices that someone most likely told him about rather than first hand experience.
What I saw was a professional doing a difficult job made more difficult by people who wanted something to upload to prove their preconceptions, and they got something entirely different no matter how many times they interrupted him and tried to make it seem much worse than what everyone could clearly see.
Well done Officer Mark Morelli, hopefully your professional behavior can become the rule rather than what seems to be the exception.
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I'm also pleased it came up on TD, as it's sometimes accused of being anti-cop. This proves it's not.
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In this case, the girl was moving so much around that right at that moment I think it was clear that she didn't need immediate medical help.
This was a prime example of a good arrest and people often forget how much of a struggle even a small woman can put up... an elbow to the face, a broken finger or a finger to the eye is so easy to get, and if they had to treat her like a docile girl they would have to go to the hospital. Like all of us, even with their work, they can't sacrifice themselves every day and no matter what the cameraman and onlookers are saying, they can't just let someone go when they struggle a bit... for all we or they know, she could be a murderer or arsonist.
There is a line though. Excessive force is never okay and the people who misuse the trust they are given, should be punished severely. This was not one of those cases in my opinion, no matter how much that woman screamed.
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I was getting a bit pissed off with the guy doing the recording repeatedly exclaiming "she's just a girl!", even when he could see the officer was physically exhausted after he finally got her into the car. That matters how exactly?
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I still think that misuse of the trust given is a serious offense, but we got to remember that even with all the bad examples out there, if every single of them were in different precincts, it would still leave a lot of good ones. It is hard for Joe ordinary officer in one precinct to do something about another precinct; that is the job for the chiefs.
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Every oncei n a while, going just a little bit beyond is a sign of excellence.
This was a sign of excellence. Bravo to this man.
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This video should be NORMAL, I wonder if this cop still defends the actions of the other ones out their though?
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He took the time to do so, that is excellence.
And doing what you're expected to do is difficult. It's very hard to live up to all the rules and expectations put on you in any job. Just meeting those expectations I would say is uncommon, how many people REALLY meet all the expectations of their job?
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In my decades of experience in a professional work environment, I'd say about 85% of them.
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Oh, the WORST psychopaths perform well for audiences.
You've found the site of Internet Quipper Mike "Streisand Effect" Masnick! -- As you'll frequently be reminded!
04:56:38[f-137-2]
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Re: Oh, the WORST psychopaths perform well for audiences.
It was just last week you accused me of this:
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Re: Oh, the WORST psychopaths perform well for audiences.
soooo, you're talking about the lady getting arrested right? That she'd be a good politician? I'm so confused.
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Re: Oh, the WORST psychopaths perform well for audiences.
So, being as consistent as you are with your assertions of your ideals, you don't mind that we'll always be cynical of your messages and the motivations behind them. Good to know.
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Re: Oh, the WORST psychopaths perform well for audiences.
And we all watched her perform. What's your point?
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out_of_the_blue just hates it when due process is enforced.
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Gosh
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Normally...
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I concur that a lot of what she did and said seems to have been theatrics, but I'm not sure all of it was. Even if we assume she was entirely innocent, she certainly didn't handle the situation as well as she could have; at the very least, if she was in as much pain as her screams indicated, there would have been much better ways to convey exactly what was wrong and even potentially get accommodation for that (without halting the arrest).
I don't think the cop handled this perfectly either, despite the relatively hostile audience; for example, it would have been better to have explained what he meant by saying "she was resisting" (with specific examples), rather than simply asserting it as fact. Nonetheless, he certainly handled the fact of the cameras very well, and maintained a commendable attitude in the face of sustained hostility.
I support the right of anyone to resist an unlawful or otherwise illegitimate arrest, and I think there's room to argue for the right of anyone to resist any arrest. There are problems with that idea, however, not least among them the almost inevitable consequences - both of making that a policy, and of choosing to exercise that right - in escalation in use of force.
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> otherwise illegitimate arrest, and I think there's room to
> argue for the right of anyone to resist any arrest.
Wow, so you think, for example, that after murdering a dozen or so people in that Aurora movie theater, James Holmes also had the right to resist being arrested for it?
Sometimes the shit people say is unbelievable.
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Note also that I said "there's room to argue for the right of anyone to resist any arrest". That does not mean my mind is settled on the question.
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Nice cop
I was winding up my guitar chord and asked politely, "What is it that we did wrong?"
She yelled, "Pack it or you're under arrest!"
I said, "No, no. I mean what infraction did we cause, so that next time we don't do it again."
She was taken aback, like I had tased her with my words.
She said calmly, "No live music within 150ft of a residence"
"Oh, Ok. Thanks" I replied with a smile.
She smiled back.
She was cute too, wish I had invited her to the party.
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--US State Dept.
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Kudos
I know having a thankless job for a long period of time can leave one bitter, but in the end, respect is rarely given but often earned. If they want respect... they need to act in a respectful manner as this one did.
Hiding or trying to silence critics just gives their accusations or assertions credence.
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Different from the US which beats everyone else in number of firearms discharged and kill rate for suspects and criminals in the industrialized world.
http://www.theweek.co.uk/crime/46907/us-police-fire-more-bullets-month-germans-use-year
Are Americans angrier than other peoples?
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In the US the cops would have fired on the crowd, called for reinforcements and SWAT teams, while tasing everybody.
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An American cop would have endured about 20 seconds of that before pulling out his taser.
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Re: Tazer? Threatening to report is a firing offense (literally....)
Felony interference in a cop's business is an actionable offense to more of those hiding behind the "blue line" than it should be.
/s
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One of the better ones
As many people noted if this had been a police officer in a major US city the tazers would have been drawn, there would be casualties and lawsuits.
As many people haven't noted if this had been the PRC (where the police don't carry firearms), Vietnam or Myanmar the people holding the cameras would have been severely beaten, dragged off to jail and if by mischance they survived the ordeal, summarily executed. Ditto for N Korea-except the newest Great Leader uses them for artillery practice.
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I hate this video.
Resist arrest, get a punch in the face. Don't like it? Don't resist. He was acting for the camera just like the asshole he was arresting. Make no mistake, police are there to ensure societal compliance. Your active resistance earns a greater response, so YOU calm the fuck down and you won't get a smack.
Ridiculous.
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Re: I hate this video.
Maybe there are times when batons or other tools are necessary. But this video isn't showing such a time, and I'll take the police having to work a bit harder to make an arrest over the potential injury of a suspect because of a bludgeoning or tasering where it isn't required any day.
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Re: I hate this video.
'Adjustments', right, so that's aggressive cop speak for 'beating someone with a club', the rest of us just call it assault or beating someone up.
Were I to be generous, I'd say you're over-trained, but judging by your statement that it's okay to punch someone in the face, as long as they're 'resisting', I get the feeling you're one of those cops no-one wants to run into, ever, just in case you're in a bad mood that day and feel like taking it out on them.
Just a bit of friendly advice, but the idea of 'Yeah I punched/beat/tased/pepper sprayed him, but it's okay because he deserved it'... that is the kind of thinking that causes people to hate and distrust police.
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Good for him
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