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OPINION
Why Police Lie Under Oath
By MICHELLE ALEXANDER
Published: February 2, 2013

THOUSANDS of people plead guilty to crimes every year in the United States because they know that the odds of a jury’s believing their word over a police officer’s 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 they’re 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.”

But are police officers necessarily more trustworthy than alleged criminals? I think not. Not just because the police have a special inclination toward confabulation, but because, disturbingly, they have an incentive to lie. In this era of mass incarceration, the police shouldn’t be trusted any more than any other witness, perhaps less so.

That may sound harsh, but numerous law enforcement officials have put the matter more bluntly.  Peter Keane, a former San Francisco Police commissioner, wrote an article in The San Francisco Chronicle decrying a police culture that treats lying as the norm: “Police officer perjury in court to justify illegal dope searches is commonplace. One of the dirty little not-so-secret secrets of the criminal justice system is undercover narcotics officers intentionally lying under oath. It is a perversion of the American justice system that strikes directly at the rule of law. Yet it is the routine way of doing business in courtrooms everywhere in America.”

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 department’s 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.”

Remarkably, New York City officers have been found to engage in patterns of deceit in cases involving charges as minor as trespass. In September it was reported that the Bronx district attorney’s office was so alarmed by police lying that it decided to stop prosecuting people who were stopped and arrested for trespassing at public housing projects, unless prosecutors first interviewed the arresting officer to ensure the arrest was actually warranted. Jeannette Rucker, the chief of arraignments for the Bronx district attorney, explained in a letter that it had become apparent that the police were arresting people even when there was convincing evidence that they were innocent. To justify the arrests, Ms. Rucker claimed, police officers provided false written statements, and in depositions, the arresting officers gave false testimony.

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.

All true, but there is more to the story than that.


Police departments have been rewarded in recent years for the sheer numbers of stops, searches and arrests. In the war on drugs, federal grant programs like the Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant Program have encouraged state and local law enforcement agencies to boost drug arrests in order to compete for millions of dollars in funding. Agencies receive cash rewards for arresting high numbers of people for drug offenses, no matter how minor the offenses or how weak the evidence. Law enforcement has increasingly become a numbers game. And as it has, police officers’ tendency to regard procedural rules as optional and to lie and distort the facts has grown as well. Numerous scandals involving police officers lying or planting drugs — in Tulia, Tex. and Oakland, Calif., for example — have been linked to federally funded drug task forces eager to keep the cash rolling in.

THE pressure to boost arrest numbers is not limited to drug law enforcement. Even where no clear financial incentives exist, the “get tough” movement has warped police culture to such a degree that police chiefs and individual officers feel pressured to meet stop-and-frisk or arrest quotas in order to prove their “productivity.”

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 Center’s 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 number’s there. So our choice is to come up with the number.”

Exposing police lying is difficult largely because it is rare for the police to admit their own lies or to acknowledge the lies of other officers. This reluctance derives partly from the code of silence that governs police practice and from the ways in which the system of mass incarceration is structured to reward dishonesty. But it’s also because police officers are human.

Research shows that ordinary human beings lie a lot — multiple times a day — even when there’s no clear benefit to lying. Generally, humans lie about relatively minor things like “I lost your phone number; that’s why I didn’t call” or “No, really, you don’t look fat.” But humans can also be persuaded to lie about far more important matters, especially if the lie will enhance or protect their reputation or standing in a group.

The natural tendency to lie makes quota systems and financial incentives that reward the police for the sheer numbers of people stopped, frisked or arrested especially dangerous. One lie can destroy a life, resulting in the loss of employment, a prison term and relegation to permanent second-class status. The fact that our legal system has become so tolerant of police lying indicates how corrupted our criminal justice system has become by declarations of war, “get tough” mantras, and a seemingly insatiable appetite for locking up and locking out the poorest and darkest among us.

And, no, I’m not crazy for thinking so.



 


Comments

Rich Hertz
02/03/2013 10:26am

Thank you Michelle! The worst part of our "justice" system is that pigs lie. They lie to judges to get warrants, they lie to the federal government to get grants, they lie to the media, and yes, they lie to juries when under oath. They justify their lying as "part of doing their job," and that is what defines their corruption. They also falsify evidence, and that is just another lie. Cheating and stealing are common for these "law enforcement officers," and that is why they are known as pigs. They ruin peoples lives without remorse, because they are brainwashed to think they are above it all.

They also lie to themselves, which is really pathetic. The actual law is sometimes ignored, if they don't agree with it, and then they do what they please. That is not law enforcement, it is corruption, plain and simple. More citizens are realizing that police are not to be respected or trusted, and that is what makes our society so dangerous.

Thanks again for an excellent article.

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02/03/2013 12:04pm

Rich,

I didn't write this, I just posted it. I'm working on the Coalition for Cannabis Policy Reform and I'm using this blog as a way to focus attention on cannabis sativa and why it needs to be not only legal but identified as the wonderful plant that it is! Here is Michelle's facebook link: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Michelle-Alexander/168304409924191

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D Laurier Beaulieu
02/03/2013 10:59am

Pigs lie all the time.
Their lies are used to justify attrocitys and abominations beyond human comprehension.
We need to stand up and fight back. We need to start taking the war back to them.

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02/03/2013 12:00pm

I had a cop, who is friends with a cop that I filed a complaint against, follow me and pull me over out of his jurisdiction to sexually harass me. I went to file a complaint against him the next week and I was told that I couldn't file a complaint against him because he had just retired and you can't file a complaint against a retired officer!

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02/03/2013 12:41pm

I was in jail overnight for having a few grams in my possession AFTER paying the state over $300 to be a legal patient... all because I sent a letter to our Sheriff Joe Arpio demanding justice be served after having my skull crushed and insisting he prevent the man from having a reported 4th reported domestic abuse case against my attacker. Our politicans would rather keep trained lethal weapons on the street and lock patients up for healing naturally... we put them in office!!! I hope we vote them out next election!!! http://www.jailbase.com/en/arrested/az-mcso/2012-08-30/tammy-jane-desocio-p899608

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02/03/2013 1:52pm

Sadly everything Michelle Alexander has said is true. Law enforcers have been trained to fight the “war on drugs,” a terrible metaphor for policing in a democratic society. When police fight a war they have to have an enemy and that enemy becomes everyone but us. During the five years before the drug war started, the US averaged about 60,000 arrests per year for nonviolent drug offenses. Across the 42 years since, the US has averaged nearly 1,100,000 of those arrests per year. Arrests have become a numbers-game that law enforcement officials know will never reduce the amount of drug abusers by so much as one person. DEA estimated that at the start of the drug war 2% of the population of the US above the age of twelve had used an illegal drug; today the estimate that 46% of that population has used an illegal drug.

This kind of police corruption does not have to continue. These acts of police perjury are driven by the drug war. Ending that war by legalizing and regulating all drugs will not only remove the drugs from the control of criminals, thereby ending the violence, it will reduce death, disease, crime, and addiction, while saving billions of tax dollars. An additional benefit is that it will cut police lying dramatically.

My name is Jack Cole. I am I am a retired detective lieutenant—26 years with the New Jersey State Police and 14 in their Narcotic Bureau, mostly undercover. I bear witness to the abject failure of the U.S. war on drugs and to the horrors produced by this self-perpetuating, constantly expanding policy disaster. I’m also the co-founder and Board chair of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP) an international nonprofit educational organization representing a 100,000 police, judges, prosecutors, prison wardens, federal agents, and supporters in 120 countries, who know a system of legalized regulation of drugs is more efficient and ethical than a system of prohibition. We are the organization with the credibility to convince the public, the media, and the policymakers to end the drug war.

Join us at www.leap.cc. When we are a million strong we will go to Congress and force a change in these terrible destructive policies.

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02/03/2013 2:09pm

Jack, thank you for commenting on my blog! I'm honored. I got LEAP a booth at the High Times Cup this month! I'm working with Jim Gray on hemp legalization and Diane Goldstein on CCPR. Send me your artwork for your logo and I'll put it on my donate page. Susan@Cannabration.com

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