The reasons for being pro-police are many and should be obvious


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TheeBadOne
February 6, 2003, 05:56 PM
http://www.thecitizennews.com/main/archive-030103/opinion/op-01.html

I had an unpleasant dream the other night. In the dream, I happened to overhear two people who were discussing one of my newspaper columns. One of them said to the other, "You know that the guy who writes this stuff is anti-police, don't you?" Though I was in the midst of a deep sleep, this comment in the dream disturbed me enough to wake me up. In that misty haze between stupor and alertness that sometimes occurs in the middle of the night, I tried to determine why the man in my dream would say such a thing.

I have never been accused of being anti-law enforcement, although some who have read my columns have written me to argue that I am too pro-police. At a recent law enforcement Christmas dinner, at which I was to offer the obligatory prayer and blessing, the chief of police introduced me and said during his remarks, "In his heart, Father Epps is a cop." He paid me a great compliment.

Actually, I am a cop. In 1989, a local pastor introduced me to the world of law enforcement chaplaincy and, in 1992, I attended and graduated from the police academy in Fulton County. In January 1993, I was sworn in as a reserve deputy sheriff and was later sworn as a reserve police officer in a certain town. As a result, I received state certification as a peace officer in Georgia.

I love cops. I have two sons who have served as police officers and have another son who serves in the military. To me, cops are the peacetime domestic warriors who stand between the average citizen and anarchy. I have been on patrol with cops since 1989 and have come to a vivid personal awareness that the job they do is dangerous, thankless, and unappreciated. Both of my two older sons have been injured on the job and the eldest required four surgeries for injuries sustained during an arrest.

By the way, only a police officer can get by with calling another police officer a "cop." Don't use this term when you are pulled over for a traffic violation.

The average citizen sees police officers as a necessity to deal with "those other people," whomever they may be. But these same people do not want to encounter a police officer unless someone is breaking down their door or assaulting their daughter. Firemen are the post 9/11 heroes, as they should be. There's something dramatic and heroic about firefighters rushing into a building risking life and limb to rescue people. Over 300 firefighters died Sept. 11, 2001. They were true heroes. But 72 police officers also died rushing into those same buildings. In fact, every year, of the 470,000 men and women serving as cops of one kind or another, 61,000 police officers are assaulted and 19,000 are injured. Every single year, in America, a police officer is killed in the line of duty every 53 hours. For every officer killed, 400 more are assaulted and 145 are injured.

Did you know that, in 1998, felons sentenced to state prison received an average sentence of five years but were out on the streets again in less than two and a half years? Did you know that almost one third of convicted felons are released on probation without serving any prison time at all? And did you know that, in one recent ten-year period, 163 cop killers were out on parole or probation at the time they murdered a police officer? Ninety-nine of those cop killers were under the age of eighteen.

So, yes, I am pro-cop. Police officers face the unknown every day for little pay. In fact, most cops have to take second jobs to make ends meet. They deal, on a daily basis, with contentious, argumentative citizens who are not at all shy about telling the cop that he should be out arresting drug dealers and child rapists instead of handing out tickets for going 25 miles an hour over the speed limit.

Why do they do it? Why do they become police officers? One FBI agent told me that a study revealed that law enforcement officers and minister, priests, and rabbis had almost the same exact personality traits. One difference was that the cops tended to lean toward justice while the ministers leaned in the direction of mercy. The short answer is that men and women become police officers to make a positive difference, to affect their community and nation. They see themselves as serving the good and standing in the gap against the evil. They believe in such a thing as right and wrong and they believe in such concepts as valor, and courage, and honor. And that is why I love cops and respect them, for who they are and what they do. It is also why I cry when one dies in the line of duty. One cop said, "We face what other fear," and that is so very correct.

A spokesperson for the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund wrote, "There is no challenge too difficult, no danger too great for our nation's law enforcement officers. If you need help, they will come." How could anyone not be pro-cop? Unless, of course, you are a criminal.

[Father David Epps is rector of Christ the King Charismatic Episcopal Church, which meets at 10 a.m. Sundays at 4881 E. Hwy 34. He may be contacted at 770-252-2428, at FatherDavidEpps@aol.com or at www.ctkcec.org.]

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DeltaElite
February 6, 2003, 07:15 PM
Nice article, the only thing I take exception with is......
I don't mind being called a "cop", in fact it's one of the nicer things people call me on the streets. :D

TallPine
February 6, 2003, 08:35 PM
By the way, only a police officer can get by with calling another police officer a "cop." Don't use this term when you are pulled over for a traffic violation.

My understanding was that the origin of this term was from the British "Constable On Patrol" or C.O.P.

=================

One FBI agent told me that a study revealed that law enforcement officers and minister, priests, and rabbis had almost the same exact personality traits

That's really scary, considering some the experiences I have had with so-called "men of the cloth". I suppose both professions attract the same mixture of good (servants) and bad (controllers). We've all heard about the wolves in sheep's clothing.

TheeBadOne
February 6, 2003, 09:02 PM
D.E. I guess that the general public thinks most Cops don't like being called "Cop". I've yet to meet one who cares. I think the author was just talking about being respectful or curtious, a too rare quality these days.

Azrael256
February 6, 2003, 09:22 PM
TallPine, I heard a different story. What I heard was that the first police dept. in the U.S. (New York City) used the cheapest material they could find for their officer's badges, which happened to be roofing copper... you can guess where it goes from there. IIRC, this came from the history channel, so there is actually a decent chance that it's flat-out wrong.By the way, only a police officer can get by with calling another police officer a "cop." Don't use this term when you are pulled over for a traffic violation. I tend to use the word "Sir" or "Officer" when I address a LEO, but I've gotten away with "cop" a few zillion times without them batting an eyelash.One FBI agent told me that a study revealed that law enforcement officers and minister, priests, and rabbis had almost the same exact personality traits. Hogwash. I was raised by a cop, and I got home at 6 from work at a Methodist church. My friends include a youth-ministry major and a criminal justice major. While they are not opposites, there is very little similarity between their personalities.The short answer is that men and women become police officers to make a positive difference, to affect their community and nation. They see themselves as serving the good and standing in the gap against the evil. This tripped my BS detector that I tuned carefully in the Northeast substation of the Dallas PD. The rookies were there mostly because they thought it would be fun. I know that the VAST majority of them did have some feelings of duty and honor, but it was mostly for fun. After that, it became a job that they just did every day. After awhile, they were so deep into the job that they really couldn't do anything else anymore. I certainly can't speak for any officer, and I do not believe that this applies to all of them, but it is the predominant reason I observed.The average citizen sees police officers as a necessity to deal with "those other people," I guess this means I'm not an average citizen. I see cops as the people who make it official. I deal with my own problems, whoever that may include.Police officers face the unknown every day for little pay. Now, THAT I will agree with wholeheartedly. I know the four of us had a hard time on dad's salary. If you want better law enforcement, you have to pay for it. It's not that police will work better for better pay, it's that you will attract higher-caliber people, and a whole lot more of them, if you can promise competitive pay.

Matthew Courtney
February 6, 2003, 09:26 PM
Why do many people assume that you are anti-cop because you are pro-freedom?

For the record I am pro-freedom and pro-cop. I am especially fond of pro-freedom cops!

Hkmp5sd
February 6, 2003, 09:39 PM
I have a great deal of respect for LEO's. As a gun owner, I make it a point to make friends with LEO's. Most rank and file LEO's are very pro-2nd Amendment and I think it is important to reinforce that viewpoint. It is also a good way to dispell some of the firearm propaganda they have learned and believed.

It is sometimes amazing exactly how little a LEO knows about firearms and firearm laws. Many LEO's actually believe that "Assault Weapons" are really machineguns or believe that civilians cannot own real machineguns.

By spending a little time educating junior LEO's, in 10-15 years when they are in supervisory positions, we have an ally to offset the Chiefs/Sheriffs that for political purposes spout the anti-gun rhetoric. If we're really lucky, they actually become Chiefs and Sheriffs.

DeltaElite
February 6, 2003, 09:59 PM
I am not very used to politeness, I guess that is what seemed odd about it.
I was raised to say Maam, Sir, Mr, Miss, Mrs.... I still practice that today, even when it is Mr Crackhead. :D

I am pro cop, what a shock, but more as a whole than on an individual level.
I find a great deal wrong with the individuals I work with, most are just very poorly trained and poorly supervised. Good people who need proper training and direction.
So I am very critical of their actions, but I am even more critical of my actions or inactions. Just ask my shrink. :eek:

I see more and more freedoms legislated away around the country and it greatly disturbs me.
I find I am ignoring more and more of what I term "garbage laws" that are being enacted.
Thank God I am over half way to my pension.
I might just make it out alive. :scrutiny:

CZ-75
February 6, 2003, 10:33 PM
You may make it out alive, but w/o the pension should a "superior" ever find out about your selective enforcement.

Common sense neither required nor asked for, per the official job description. ;)

You are expected to enforce ALL the laws, including those banning bathing on Sunday or ice cream sodas (and you just thought recent laws were stupid). :rolleyes:

labgrade
February 6, 2003, 11:06 PM
I found the article chock full of allegory, outright lies, & "Oh, how I wish(es)!"

" ... this comment in the dream disturbed me enough to wake me up."

Bet it didn't. There was no dream, nor did it wake him up. Pure literary license, betcha - 10:1 & the rest goes down from there.

"Actually, I am a cop. "

BS. I don't care if you have been "christened," you are not a cop unless you've gone out there, been puked upon, cradled the head of one you'd just as soon see dead, watched the ebb & flow of "humanity" ... yes, & cried, but not at one dying in the line of duty, but perhaps at the insanity of it all.

Yon gent has no idea of what anarchy is. He's as much as "I wish things to be as I want" than anyone Hollyweird.

I was a cop - I did so due to pure humanitarian reasons.

I found that my main "enemy," if you could call it as such was "the system," & too, my own heirarchy.

I'm not pro-cop per se, but am pro-society. Cops do have a job that most wouldn't take, or if so, wouldn't last long & my hat is so seriously off to those good ones. We've a couple on this board - the more astute know them by name.

But I must ask.

What conflict must exist in those good cops who've sworn to "uphold & defend" while enforcing laws they know in their hearts to be illegal according to that they swore to uphold & defend?

My own selective enforement was to require a severe butting of heads - it already did.

After some soul-searching, I found myself in such a dilema & so bailed.

Med 10
February 7, 2003, 02:14 PM
All that would be nice to believe but the ones I come across on duty seem apathetic, moody, arrogant, and LAZY!

I have pointed out gross violations of the law during certain EMS calls in which the LEO's on scene basically told me to mind my own buisness.

Oh well, I guess it just depends on where you are at. People are different from place to place.

cordex
February 7, 2003, 02:37 PM
One FBI agent told me that a study revealed that law enforcement officers and minister, priests, and rabbis had almost the same exact personality traits.
Most of the police that I've met have been great guys regardless of whether I met them in social situations or while they were actively on duty. Have yet to run into a real control freak.

That said, my former psychology professor told our class that most police actually had similar personality profiles to that of most criminals.
Not sure how accurate this is, but for what it's worth, he had worked for many years at a correctional institution as the prison psycholgist.

Bob Locke
February 8, 2003, 12:08 AM
Like I've heard Ken Hamblin say numerous times about being pro-police:

Consider the alternative!

I'm all in favor of law enforcement, but I seriously wish there were quite a bit fewer laws to be enforced.

roscoe
February 8, 2003, 02:17 AM
I always heard that cops were called cops because of their copper buttons (on the old double-breasted uniforms).

There are few things better than a good cop, and few things worse than a bad one.

4 eyed six shooter
February 8, 2003, 02:52 AM
Bob Locke's reply about too many laws was a good one. I was a LEO in Kalifornia. Talk about a state with laws against everything!
Lots of laws can be a good tool when you really need to find a reason to get someone off the streets. The problem is when you get a LEO who only wants stats. Most good officers know the differance between the letter of the law and the spirit of the law and will enforce a law only when needed. The problem is that I have seen too many people get arrested because the officer wanted to make his or her arrest record look "good". Thank God that most officers are fair. Being respectful to an officer goes a long way towards good will. Being a police officer is most of the time a thankless job. It does have it's rewards just the same.
A good officer looks at each situation and makes an arrest based on good judgement. As an example, I was sent to a call of a person throwing a brick thru the window of a moving vehicle. In Calif, that is a felony. It turns out that a young guy in a hot rod chevy was racing up and down a residential street that had been sanded. He almost hit a young child and the father came out of the house and yelled at the kid in the chevy. The kid raced by a couple more times giving the father a one fingered salute. The third time by, the father threw a brick thru the windshield. Sounded reasonable to me, but the kid wanted to put the man under citizens arrest. I told the kid that the father was going to place him under arrest for wreckless driving and that I was going to impound his car if he had me arrest the father. This made the kid think twice and after offering to pay for the windsheild the kid decided to leave well enough alone. Yes, the father did break the law, but I did not wish to see him arrested for a felony for defending his child. The letter of the law vs. the spirit of the law.
Most LEO's are good people, treat them with respect and most of the time they will show you the same. I miss being a LEO, but have gotten older and broken. It was worth it, and if I had to do it all over again, would gladly but the uniform, badge and gun back on.

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