Saturday, December 19, 2015

9 ways police have more protections than you do when they're arrested

9 ways police have more protections than you do when they're arrested
Even if you get a cop arrested, they have way more protections than you or I do. "The police reform advocates who have long argued that cops shouldn't be allowed to investigate themselves for wrongdoing now have some new data to back them up. Earlier this month, four activists affiliated with the Black Lives Matter movement launched Check the Police, a database of police union contracts from departments in 50 cities. After scrutinizing the documents, the project's creators identified four key provisions by which the contracts shield officers from accountability, or receive rights and courtesies not available to most civilian suspects. These common provisions stipulate: 1. That an accused officer cannot be interrogated within 24 hours of an incident. 2. That complaints be expunged from an officer's personnel file and destroyed after five years. 3. That complaints against an officer submitted more than 180 days after the contested incident be disqualified, along with complaints that require more than a year to investigate. 4. That civilian oversight boards are severely limited in their ability to penalize officers. Police union contracts in Austin, Texas; Columbus, Ohio; and Seattle include all four of these provisions. Many of the municipal contracts also mandate that officers involved in shootings receive paid leave."

2 comments:

bunny42 said...

You really like to push my buttons, don't you.

Jeff said...

There may be some truth to that.
That being said, does this not seem wrong? Either give suspects those same extra rights or have cops follow the same rules we do.

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