Credit: Dren Pozhegu.

When Terrence M. Cunningham, the chief of police in Wellesley, Mass., and president of America’s largest police management organization, issued a formal apology earlier this week to the nation’s minority population “for the actions of the past and the role that our profession has played in society’s historical mistreatment of communities of color,” he was making a long-overdue gesture. 

Frank Serpico writes about the need to break the police brotherhood and "code of silence," and how recent words by the head of the International Association of Chiefs of Police help.
↩︎ Politico Magazine
Oct 25, 2016

Unions Prefer to Segregate

Perhaps it's not shocking, given the history of black people and police in America, that many major cities have mutiple police unions or fraternal organizations that are divided along racial lines.

During the 1960s, when police organizations were often being created to combat the demands of people of color—an end to brutality, equal rule of law, name tags, civilian oversight—the few black police officers in Chicago banded together to form the Afro-American Patrolmen's League. It was one of the first black police unions. "King had been assassinated, Malcolm X had been assassinated. What it pointed out was the need for the black community to be protected. We saw all this killing going on," said Edward Palmer, the AAPL's founder.

In most major American cities, these divisions still exist. As recently as 2014, the black then-chief of the Dallas Police Department proposed doing away with the segregated system, only to be shouted down by the city's various unions. Many black police unions have publicly disavowed the endorsement of Trump made by the National Fraternal Order of Police, the largest police union in the country with "lodges" in Chicago, Philadelphia, Dallas, Miami, and Newark.

Sep 23, 2016

Police unions representing sheriff's deputies in Florida and California have threatened to stop providing security to football players in retaliation for some of the players peacefully protesting the National Anthem. “I respect their right to have freedom of speech. However, in certain organizations and certain jobs you give up that right of your freedom of speech temporary while you serve that job or while you play in an NFL game,” said the head of the Broward County union. (To which we say, really? Are football players equivalent to CIA agents now?) The Santa Clara union was forced to walk back their strongly-worded statement just days later.

Something About the Whole Life/Death Thing Sets Them Apart

A review of over 80 big-city police union contracts and 13 state "police bills of rights" by activist group Campaign Zero found that nearly 90 percent contain language barring police officers from true accountability in some way.

As the New Yorker's James Surowiecki writes, "All labor unions represent the interests of the workers against the bosses. But police officers are not like other workers: they have state-sanctioned power of life and death over fellow-citizens."

Related: Chicago's police union is particularly bad. The contract includes language making it incredibly difficult to fire officers, even for heinous acts, and hamstrings police oversight agencies. As TMN's Sam Stecklow reported earlier this year, the Chicago Fraternal Order of Police until recently regularly distributed misinformation about the victims of police shootings from the scene of the crime, to stave off lawsuits from families and charges from prosecutors, and have been at the center of efforts to destroy police misconduct files dating back to 1967.

Sep 23, 2016
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