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Police
as Volunteers:
An Investment Returned
by
Ron Buckner
For
the past ten years, participants in both
the Supervision School and Management College
have frequently been given the opportunity
to engage in some sort of volunteer activity
as part of the course. Following is an essay
outlining a volunteer experience at the
Arlington Night Shelter in Arlington, Texas:
Volunteerism
by law enforcement officers represents a
logical component of what the profession
stands for. When a police department supports
the involvement of employees in volunteer
activities it profits in a number of ways
including improved delivery of services
to community, and enhanced employee interpersonal
skills. Obviously, benefits are also realized
by the community at large, for volunteers
are the life blood of most service organizations.
By lending of their time and talents, police
volunteers (and their departments) can expect
to gain considerable benefit. Here are a
few.
First,
balance or stability in an officer's life
is enhanced through volunteering. Encountering
others through volunteer service gives participants
an opportunity to reassess their own personal
problems, trials and conflicts. A by-product
of such interaction is genuine empathy.
A recent volunteer experience at a local
homeless shelter reminded me of this, as
I observed families much like my own dealing
with problems that I have never faced.
Second,
the perspective gained in service to others
can help diminish stereotypes held by some
officers. For example, the belief that only
certain groups of people ever avail themselves
of these types of services quickly vanishes.
Officers, as volunteers, find the majority
of clients, patients, or victims are people
like themselves, each seeking some type
of independence. Of the clients I served,
each was trying to change some aspect of
their individual situations. Officers' biases,
often reinforced by repeated interaction
with people at their worst, are replaced
by factual perspective. In turn, those served
have the opportunity to reassess the stereotypes
they may hold about police
officers.
Third,
service to the community through volunteer
work reinforces the deep-seated motivation
the desire to serve that bring
many, if not most, officers to the profession
in the first place. Volunteer service, as
opposed to the more rigid professional services
usually delivered by officers, allows a
spirit of altruism to infuse one's life,
resulting in pride, confidence, and a positive
self-image. My personal experience not only
filled me with a sense of accomplishment;
it also gave me the knowledge that the service
I provided, in some small way, touched someone's
life that night.
Education
is the fourth benefit for the volunteering
officer. Interaction with people of different
ages, ethnicity, gender, socio-economic
background, and even those with disabilities,
gives an officer insight on a broad range
of issues facing society. For example,
working with the children of homeless clients
gave me a glimpse of the stress their parents
experience, and reminded me of the pressures
they face among their peers. Such knowledge
will enhance an officer's ability to provide
informed and sensitive professional services
to the citizens of their community.
Clearly,
benefits are available to the department
that encourages and supports volunteerism
and the volunteering officer. In a world
where neighbors don't know each other and
throwing money at a problem is easier than
giving of oneself, service to our fellow
man is sorely needed. I became a police
officer 20 years ago because I wanted to
help others. Now, 20 years later, it would
be easy to allow my views to become jaded
and my desire to serve to become dulled.
Participating as a volunteer helps ensure
that will not happen.
Ron
Buckner is a sergeant with the Longview,
Texas, Police Department. He is a graduate
of the 74th School of Police Supervision.
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Labeled
for Life
By
Dan Carlson
Have
you ever noticed how some people just can't
seem to let certain things go? You can be
talking with someone and all of a sudden
... completely out of left field ... an
issue comes up that you thought had been
put to rest years ago. What's that all about?
Harry,
a former police officer, had retired from
his police department and moved across the
country more than fifteen years ago. As
he sorted through his e-mail one recent
evening, he came across a message from Richard,
a colleague with whom he had worked some
thirty-five years earlier as they were both
starting their careers. Richard had come
across Harry's e-mail address about a year
ago, and since then they had exchanged pleasant
correspondence on two or three occasions.
When
Harry opened the e-mail that evening, he
was interested to learn that Richard had
been talking to Mike, another of his former
co-workers from many years past; but the
message and question sent along from Mike
made Harry sit back and sigh deeply. Mike
wanted to know "... if it was you that
arrested Captain Mike Miller?"
As
a matter of fact, the answer was "yes."
Harry had moved from his original department
after several years to join a state police
agency, and when on patrol one morning at
about 3:00am, he witnessed a vehicle drive
off the road and strike another car in a
diner parking lot. As the dust settled,
a crowd of bystanders watched the operator
open his door and fall out onto the pavement.
Sitting at his computer almost thirty years
later, Harry could recall two things with
great clarity from that long-ago early-morning
incident. First, was the shock he felt when
he saw the operator was a drunken Mike Miller.
Second, were the words he uttered next:
"Captain, this is one of the most unpleasant
things I've ever had to do as a cop, but
you are under arrest."
When
two people reestablish contact after a lengthy
separation, there are many questions that
could be asked to help each catch up on
things: How have you been? How's the family?
Where are you living now? Where are you
working? How's your health? How many grandchildren
do you have? But Mike didn't ask any of
those questions of Harry ... all he sought
was confirmation of a drunk driving arrest
he vaguely remembered from three decades
ago.
In
the midst of a recent ethics training program,
a twenty-year veteran officer raised his
hand and asked to speak. When he did, he
outlined a series of events in which he
recently found himself embroiled, including
his decision to "wear a wire"
to help his agency make a criminal case
against a corrupt police officer. His recitation
of the details was straightforward and articulate,
but he became emotional as he described
the reaction of some fellow officers and
supervisors when they learned of the role
he played in assisting Internal Affairs.
"I couldn't believe it," he said.
"Even though this cop pleaded guilty
to his crimes, I was ostracized ... shunned
... by a number of other cops and even command
personnel. It's been a very painful experience."
Let's
face it. Most police officers are altruistic
and ethical individuals who have chosen
a complex and dangerous profession for their
life's work; for them, it is heartbreaking
to hear someone relate a story like the
one shared in class. But for that multitude
of upstanding people of good will who daily
struggle to create an open and supportive
culture of policing, there is both good
news and bad news. The good news is that
the numbers of nefarious officers who would
heap scorn upon a peer for doing the right
thing seem to be declining. The bad news
is that once you have been "blackballed"
by that small group of individuals who represent
the dark side of policing, you bear that
distinction for the rest of your life. Just
ask Harry.
| "If
you are neutral in situations
of injustice, you have chosen
the side of the oppressor. If
an elephant has its foot on the
tail of a mouse and you say that
you are neutral, the mouse will
not appreciate your neutrality."
--Bishop
Desmond Tutu
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Wanted:
Honest Employees
If
you are involved in the recruitment and
screening process for new employees, you
know the job of finding qualified candidates
gets more complicated every day. But when
it comes to selecting a quality police recruit
a job for which honesty is an essential
requirement how much faith do you have in
what the candidate tells you about his background
and accomplishments? If recent experience
in the private sector is any indicator,
you should be very careful.
As
several recent high-profile instances of
resume fraud have shown, the problem with
inflated credentials is not confined solely
to new employees. George O'Leary, for example,
was forced to resign as head coach at Notre
Dame when it was learned that he had lied
about his athletic and academic accomplishments.
Joseph Ellis, a Pulitzer Prize-winning historian
who often related stories about his wartime
exploits, was suspended by Mount Holyoke
College when it was learned he had never
served in Vietnam. And Sandra Baldwin resigned
as president of the US Olympic Committee
after acknowledging lying about her academic
credentials.
In
late 2001, Christian & Timbers, a national
leadership search firm, surveyed 7,000 resumes
and found almost one quarter of executives
had misrepresented their accomplishments
(Fort Worth Star Telegram, April 16, 2002).
For example, 71% of applicants misrepresented
the number of years in a job, 64% exaggerated
accomplishments, and 60% overstated the
size of the organization. Others listed
a degree which was only partially completed
(52%), overstated their compensation (48%),
or simply omitted previous jobs (41%).
Thankfully,
sudden and uncontrollable bursts of honesty
sometimes cause questionable police applicants
to screen themselves out of the hiring process.
For example, one candidate for a north-eastern
police agency earlier this year asked a
background investigator if the hiring process
could be expedited since he was going to
be "unavailable for a few months."
When asked where he was going to be, the
"honest" applicant said he was
going to be in another state "serving
90 days in jail for impersonating a police
officer."
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