The Mind of James Donahue In Front Of Their Noses |
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Are Modern Police Officers
Really This Dumb? By James Donahue July 2005 During my years of covering
police news stories, I grew to respect some of the officers in the field, developed friendships with a few, and experienced
a severe dislike and distrust of others. All-in-all, however,
I realized that all police officers seem to be cast from a particular mold. Most have a lower than average IQ and consequently
can follow orders without questioning the moral ethics involved in their actions. The brighter ones become
master criminals hiding behind badges, guns and the authority the uniform prescribes to them. In the early years, before
police stations became off-limits to reporters and dispatchers began hiding behind one-way bullet-proof glass, there was camaraderie
between desk sergeants and reporters. I used to have my own personal coffee cup hanging on the wall behind the coffee maker.
There were mornings when I would drink coffee and have friendly conversations with not only the sergeant but the shift officers
before they went on the road. That was how I got the news. I also had access to
the night log, and could read every entry. That was how I found interesting little stories about UFO sightings, odd creatures
in the woods, frantic searches for lost children, and once a report of a detective that accidentally shot himself in the foot
when reaching for his handgun. He holstered his loaded weapon without putting the safety on. Those are stories you
don’t hear about now. The dispatcher (now a hired radio voice) hands out reports that are approved by
the people in charge. No reporter reads the log. The change in attitude
crept over the police in the That is what you get
on your six o’clock news now. Faxed reports from the local police. They are usually dull, dry reports about accidents
involving unnamed people who were either killed or taken to local hospitals. The stories always conclude with “the case
is still under investigation,” which means there were no arrests, no conclusions, and you won’t hear any more
about it after tonight. We cover arrests by sitting
in court. Court proceedings are still open to the public. But details of the crime allegedly committed are rarely known
unless there is a trial. Most cases are plea-bargained by the prosecutor's office so we never get much information. Hidden behind this smoke
screen is something I have found extremely troublesome. There has been a strange jaded sense of "them and us" as
to how the public perceives the police. The people we once hired to watch over us are now watching us. Not only are police becoming
more and more corrupted. They seem to be getting dumber and dumber. I hear more and more
stories about police dressed in black attack armor breaking down doors of homes for a big “drug bust” only to
frighten some innocent homeowner into cardiac arrest. We learn that the police raided the wrong house. This happened in a
city near my home about a year or two ago. It is happening more and more frequently all over the country. Then there was the case
of Dave Newman of Police in Yet another story that
is still making headlines is the search for Natalee Holloway, the pretty, 18-year-old blonde girl who went missing May 30
while vacationing on the It does not seem to be
occurring to the local authorities that Holloway’s disappearance might be connected to a similar disappearance in 1998
of another young traveler, Amy Lynn Bradley, who stepped off a travel liner that docked at Aruba on its way to Curacao in
the Ah, but then such things
are not supposed to be happening today are they? Just ask the police. They will tell you. |
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