Posted on Sep 8, 2014
SCPO Intelligence Specialist
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This is a nice overview of a 50 years in the making issue (personally, I though SWAT originated in the '70s): http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/08/us/the-rise-of-the-swat-team-in-american-policing.html?src=se&_r=0
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CMC Robert Young
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Edited >1 y ago
As somebody who has worked in law enforcement, civilian and military, for 30 plus years now, the change has been a gradual evolution that parallels an escalation of violence in society from the criminal element. My personal observation is that violent assaults against police officers; complexity of defenses established at drug houses; enhanced access to military grade weapons by criminals (generally stolen from legal owners or imported from outside the country), and the rise of both foreign and domestic terrorism has led to the need for a more robust police response. Law enforcement reacts to the threat in society, not creates it.

As somebody who has responded to more than my fair share of violent events (the most recent being last month - a drive by shooting involving drug dealers using SKS rifles - a total of two police officers in our little drug infested town along with three sheriff's deputies against two rival drug gangs); made 12 trips to emergency room for injuries sustained in the line of duty; and witnessed an increasingly violent criminal element arise in our country, the M4 in the front seat of my cruiser isn't militarization. It's a survival tool.

It's nice to think that Officer Friendly can walk along calling everybody on their beat by name, and that all disputes will be settled with a kind word; but the world doesn't work that way anymore. I liked it much more when as a rookie cop walking my little corner of the world everybody offered a kind word in return, but the world has changed in the last 30 years (and not for the better). I, and those like me, are increasingly the target of criminal aggression. There was a time when people would kill you to escape custody; now they will kill you just because you're a cop.

I would offer that while there are clearly misapplications of equipment and technique, the vast majority of law enforcement people are genuinely committed professionals just trying to do a good job. Unfortunately the one bad apple who finds his/her way to CNN makes us all look like cowboys. And to the uninformed and those not thoroughly educated about the dangerous realities of doing the job, it all looks like overkill.

And finally, the public has always wanted the police out of sight and out of mind until something really bad happens. Then there aren't enough of us and we didn't get three fast enough. Sounds jaded I'm sure, but maybe when society stops making war on its police, the police will be able to step back from the more robust posture required just to survive these days.
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MAJ Robert (Bob) Petrarca
MAJ Robert (Bob) Petrarca
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Very nicely put, CMC Robert Young.
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SPC Robert Coventry
SPC Robert Coventry
7 y
Civilian Government Contractor are providing more and more Police Services, my company transports detainees for various government agencies USMS, HSI, FBI, DEA, IRS and Fish & Wildlife
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SFC Michael Hasbun
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I don't blame them. The proliferation of assault weapons in our country has forced the police to respond in kind. It does no good to have to have a police force armed with six shooters when the average gang banger has an AK 47...

Offense and defense, an arms race as old as time...
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SGT Kevin Hughes
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Read the thread...don't agree at all. All valid points , and I understand your point of view.
I would just ask you a simple question...who knows how to buy, ship, distribute and launder money that is worth Billions. I guarantee it isn't some Dude in Detroit, or LA with Tats.
It isn't the bottom that stinks....it is the top. Being a Cop doesn't have the same duty or history as being a Soldier...but the wannabes have gotten to dress and carry what we trained with.
And then their mind shifts to a very subtle philosophy...the General Public, people they don't agree with, and any other grievance that they might have...forces them to accept those people as "The Enemy."
And the second, and more pernicious philosophy that creeps into their minds is they forget the rule of law, and become the law. Put on a mask, and a badge...and your accountability is over, and your future is decided by a guy who never met you...but has a gun.
So opinion, becomes...Law.
No. I love you guys...but I cannot agree.
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