Friday, October 25, 2019
The Law Enforcement Profession :: essays research papers
 The Law Enforcement Profession    Abstract         In order to understand comptemporary law enforcemment, we should  recognize the conditions that impact our profession. It is agreed upon by many  scholars that major changes in law enforcement occur every five years. Policing  is sometimes characterize"... like a sandbar in a river, subject to being  changed continuously by the currents in which it is immersed..." (Swanson,  Territo and Taylor, p. 2). However, in recent years some major changes have  occurred in a shorter time period.    Innovations in law enforcement         During the past two decades, I have observed major changes in the  viewpoint of society towards police officer's as the symbol of trust and dignity,  the technological advances of communication and information systems in law  enforcement, and the revision of selection and hiring practices for police  officers. Organizational change occurs both as a result of internal and  external agents (Swanson, Territo and Taylor, p. 664). These changes have  manifested both positive and negative reverberations in the way we perform our  job.         Police officials have contemplated for years over the key to maintaining  a positive image for their organization. Unfortunately, several incidents in  the past years have altered society's perception of police in some communities.  Police in America are no longer strangers to innovation born of scandal. Law  enforcement agencies nationwide have repeatedly been shaken by controversy and  forced to make undesirable concessions. Has law enforcement failed to maintain  the high standards required by the profession? The cost of public trust is high.  It increases each time faith must be regain.         Historically, law enforcement agencies throughout the nation have  experienced periods of low confidence in communities preceding episodes deemed  to be a breach of trust. Early pioneers in law enforcement history such as  August Vollmer (1902 - 1932). Berkeley Police Department and J. Edgar Hoover  (1924) the Federal Bureau of Investigation made numerous advancements towards  improving the professionalism of law enforcement (Anderson and Newman, p. 119 -  120). Other attempts were made in 1956 by the International Association of  Chiefs of Police adopted "The Law Enforcement Code Of Ethics" (Wilson and  McClaren, p.8)       Examples of several historical events locally have attributed to  society's decline in respect for police. For example, nine members of a Los  Angeles County Sheriff's Department special narcotics squad were charged with  misappropriating tens of thousands of dollars confiscated in drug raids (L. A.  Times, p. 4, Sept. 9, 1989). Another local incident involved 80 Los Angeles  police officers stormed and wrecked an apartment and allegedly beat several  residents on "Dalton Street." The city was forced to settled in a civil law  suit by the resident with a settlement of $3 million dollars of taxpayers money    					    
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