The trial of the police officer who killed George Floyd begins this week. That, and too many other killings of unarmed individuals (especially minorities, highlights the need for police reform. The House made a good start by passing the George Floyd Act. That would mandate some much needed reforms to police departments across the nation. But more needs to be done. Specifically, police departments need to do a much better job in the hiring of their officers. We give police officers a lot of power over citizens, and that makes it imperative that racists and mean people be weeded out in the hiring process.
The following is part of an article at MSNBC by former FBI agent Frank Figliuzzi. He gives some suggestions on better hiring practices:
While it’s essential, and understandable, for Congress to address the present-day realities of police forces, departments must also take responsibility for whom they let in the door. That means police recruiting needs to change.
First, police departments must consciously cultivate candidates who are more likely to be the kind of cops a community needs. A guide published by the National Center for Women and Policing notes: “Some law enforcement agencies have failed to redefine skills, experience, and background qualifications they are seeking in law enforcement officers to reflect contemporary community policing values. This has seriously compromised recruiting and hiring practices in those agencies. In other words, law enforcement agencies are frequently looking for the ‘wrong’ type of person in the ‘wrong’ types of places.”
It further states, “To date, there are a number of studies demonstrating that female officers utilize a less authoritarian style of policing that relies less on physical force — despite research showing women respond to similar calls and encounter similar dangers on duty and are as effective as their male counterparts in performing police duties.” It also concludes, “It is clear that women are significantly less likely to be involved in employing both deadly force and excessive force.”
In an article about the hiring practices of the Boston Police Department, reporter Bill Walczak wrote in the Dorchester Reporter in July: “The ability of police officers to be successful in ensuring peace and safety depends on characteristics like judgment, empathy, being unbiased, and able to handle people in crisis. Indeed, much of policing is about dealing with behavioral issues like drug/alcohol abuse, domestic violence, suicidal ideation, and violent tendencies, so you might assume that rank in the ‘eligible’ list would include a higher position for those who are social workers or from a human service background. But you would be wrong.”
Boston's department, like most others, determines eligibility ranking by emphasizing military veteran status. Veterans go to the top of the list. Veteran preference honors the service of our troops — but should it be one of the defining factors in selecting cops?
Walczak cited a 2017 study by the Marshall Project and USA Today that noted that veteran preference makes it more difficult to hire women and minorities on police forces. The study includes census data showing more than 90 percent of Massachusetts veterans are “non-Hispanic White” and 95 percent are male. The most favored status for veterans also makes it difficult to hire staff competent in dealing with behavioral issues.
In the study, former Boston Police Commissioner Kathleen O’Toole noted that veteran preference makes it hard to change the police culture, saying: “I want to attract people with very different skill sets. We are facing complicated issues with people who are in crisis every day. Why wouldn’t I want people who majored in human services? Or psychology or sociology?”
The Marshall Project report also noted that “in Boston, for every 100 cops with some military service, there were more than 28 complaints of excessive force from 2010 to 2015. For every 100 cops with no military service, there were fewer than 17 complaints.”
Not far from Boston, another department has been putting in an effort to conduct smarter recruitment. A 2016 report from the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and the Justice Department noted that in Worcester, Massachusetts, the police department takes a community outreach approach to recruitment, specifically targeting communities that have been historically underrepresented in the police force, including "religious and faith-based organizations, local colleges, veterans, and minority-owned businesses, and community-based social service agencies."
These efforts appear to work: In 2015, the department reported that "out of all men who took the civil service exam, 37 percent were men of color; out of all women who took the exam, 56 percent were women of color." The report highlights a number of other police department recruitment initiatives, from Miami-Dade, Florida, to Madison, Wisconsin.
Second, just as policing should be community-based, so should candidate interview panels and selection committees. The Women and Policing guide recommends that police candidate interview panels include representatives from organizations and businesses that primarily serve minorities and women. The EEOC points to some departments like Minnesota's St. Paul Police Department, which created an interview panel that included such community members.
Third, candidate vetting processes must be redesigned to proactively identify and weed out those who are more likely to default to hate-based violence or anti-government extremist violence. Social media analysis should be a part of each background investigation. At a minimum, candidates should be required to demonstrate tangible evidence in their lives of real engagement with an understanding of diverse cultures, ethnicities and races.
One nascent and promising initiative involves two polygraph exams designed by an organization founded by former FBI polygraph examiners called Justice Is Equal. These tests are intended to be added to existing pre-employment tests currently used by police agencies.
One of the tests helps determine whether applicants harbor prejudices or biases against several legally recognized protected classes and, if so, whether they have committed acts based on those biases. The second test is designed to identify recruits affiliated with white supremacists, violent extremists or anti-government groups. Art Acevedo, the Houston police chief, recently announced that he will expand that department's polygraph testing to include anti-government views.
"...departments like Minnesota's St. Paul Police Department, which created an interview panel that included such community members..."
ReplyDeleteAbout 15 years ago as a reporter in Minnesota, I interviewed St. Paul's police chief at the time, Bill Finney.
St. Paul's police department has had a much better image than the Minneapolis department.
I asked why their public face is better than Minneapolis' as well as his hiring practices.
He answered his department prioritized candidates with human services mindsets and experience.
He said it's easier to train a social worker to be a cop than to train a cop to be a social worker.