Why Police Lie Under Oath [View all]
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Why Police Officers Lie Under Oath | NY Times http://fb.me/2C7P3Zna7
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/03/opinion/sunday/why-police-officers-lie-under-oath.html?pagewanted=1&_r=0
THOUSANDS of people plead guilty to crimes every year in the United States because they know that the odds of a jurys believing their word over a police officers are slim to none. As a juror, whom are you likely to believe: the alleged criminal in an orange jumpsuit or two well-groomed police officers in uniforms who just swore to God theyre telling the truth, the whole truth and nothing but? As one of my colleagues recently put it, Everyone knows you have to be crazy to accuse the police of lying.
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The New York City Police Department is not exempt from this critique. In 2011, hundreds of drug cases were dismissed after several police officers were accused of mishandling evidence. That year, Justice Gustin L. Reichbach of the State Supreme Court in Brooklyn condemned a widespread culture of lying and corruption in the departments drug enforcement units. I thought I was not naïve, he said when announcing a guilty verdict involving a police detective who had planted crack cocaine on a pair of suspects. But even this court was shocked, not only by the seeming pervasive scope of misconduct but even more distressingly by the seeming casualness by which such conduct is employed.
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Mr. Keane, in his Chronicle article, offered two major reasons the police lie so much. First, because they can. Police officers know that in a swearing match between a drug defendant and a police officer, the judge always rules in favor of the officer. At worst, the case will be dismissed, but the officer is free to continue business as usual. Second, criminal defendants are typically poor and uneducated, often belong to a racial minority, and often have a criminal record. Police know that no one cares about these people, Mr. Keane explained.
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For the record, the New York City police commissioner, Raymond W. Kelly, denies that his department has arrest quotas. Such denials are mandatory, given that quotas are illegal under state law. But as the Urban Justice Centers Police Reform Organizing Project has documented, numerous officers have contradicted Mr. Kelly. In 2010, a New York City police officer named Adil Polanco told a local ABC News reporter that our primary job is not to help anybody, our primary job is not to assist anybody, our primary job is to get those numbers and come back with them. He continued: At the end of the night you have to come back with something. You have to write somebody, you have to arrest somebody, even if the crime is not committed, the numbers there. So our choice is to come up with the number.
(More at the link.)