AP In a yearlong investigation of sexual misconduct by U.S. law enforcement, The Associated Press
uncovered about 1,000 officers who lost their badges in a six-year
period for rape, sodomy and other sexual assault; sex crimes that
included possession of child pornography; or sexual misconduct such as
propositioning citizens or having consensual but prohibited on-duty
intercourse.
The
number is unquestionably an undercount because it represents only those
officers whose licenses to work in law enforcement were revoked, and
not all states take such action. California and New York — with several
of the nation's largest law enforcement agencies — offered no records
because they have no statewide system to decertify officers for
misconduct. And even among states that provided records, some reported
no officers removed for sexual misdeeds even though cases were
identified via news stories or court records.
"It's happening probably in every law enforcement agency across the country," said Chief Bernadette DiPino of the Sarasota Police Department in Florida, who helped study the problem for the International Association of Chiefs of Police.
"It's so underreported and people are scared that if they call and
complain about a police officer, they think every other police officer
is going to be then out to get them."
Even
as cases around the country have sparked a national conversation about
excessive force by police, sexual misconduct by officers has largely
escaped widespread notice due to a patchwork of laws, piecemeal
reporting and victims frequently reluctant to come forward because of
their vulnerabilities — they often are young, poor, struggling with
addiction or plagued by their own checkered pasts.
In
interviews, lawyers and even police chiefs told the AP that some
departments also stay quiet about improprieties to limit liability,
allowing bad officers to quietly resign, keep their certification and
sometimes jump to other jobs.
The
officers involved in such wrongdoing represent a tiny fraction of the
hundreds of thousands whose jobs are to serve and protect. But their
actions have an outsized impact — miring departments in litigation that
leads to costly settlements, crippling relationships with an already
wary public and scarring victims with a special brand of fear. [...]
Victims
included unsuspecting motorists, schoolchildren ordered to raise their
shirts in a supposed search for drugs, police interns taken advantage
of, women with legal troubles who succumbed to performing sex acts for
promised help, and prison inmates forced to have sex with guards.
The
AP's findings, coupled with other research and interviews with experts,
suggest that sexual misconduct is among the most prevalent type of
complaint against law officers. Phil Stinson, a researcher at Bowling Green State University,
analyzed news articles between 2005 and 2011 and found 6,724 arrests
involving more than 5,500 officers. Sex-related cases were the
third-most common, behind violence and profit-motivated crimes. Cato Institute reports released in 2009 and 2010 found sex misconduct the No. 2 complaint against officers, behind excessive force. [...]
Victims
of sexual violence at the hands of officers know the power their
attackers have, and so the trauma can carry an especially crippling
fear.[....]
Experts
said it isn't just threats of retaliation that deter victims from
reporting the crimes, but also skepticism about the ability of officers
and prosecutors to investigate their colleagues.
Milwaukee
Police Officer Ladmarald Cates was sentenced to 24 years in prison in
2012 for raping a woman he was dispatched to help. Despite screaming "He
raped me!" repeatedly to other officers present, she was accused of
assaulting an officer and jailed for four days, her lawyer said. The
district attorney, citing a lack of evidence, declined to prosecute
Cates. Only after a federal investigation was he tried and convicted. [...]
This sexual misconduct among police is far worse and far more prevelent than even the sex abuse among Catholic Priests.
ReplyDeleteI remember a case about fifteenen years ago, a BY girl was raped by a NY cop in BP (13 ave and 54 st) his partner turned him in, and the 'askanim' decided they needed to be on the good side of NYPD, so they decided she's only a russian with no 'protekzia', and they let the cop plead guilty in a civil internal NYPD trial and the cop was just fined a few days pay, and case closed.
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